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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75266 ***
+
+
+ [Cover Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ TRIAL
+ OF
+ THE MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS
+
+ BEFORE
+
+ THE INTERNATIONAL
+ MILITARY TRIBUNAL
+
+ _NUREMBERG_
+ 14 NOVEMBER 1945—1 OCTOBER 1946
+
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ _PUBLISHED AT NUREMBERG, GERMANY_
+ _1948_
+
+
+
+
+ This volume is published in accordance with the
+ direction of the International Military Tribunal by
+ the Secretariat of the Tribunal, under the jurisdiction
+ of the Allied Control Authority for Germany.
+
+
+
+
+ VOLUME XVIII
+
+
+
+ _OFFICIAL TEXT_
+
+ _IN THE_
+
+ ENGLISH LANGUAGE
+
+
+
+ _PROCEEDINGS_
+
+ 9 July 1946—18 July 1946
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ One Hundred and Seventy-fourth Day, Tuesday, 9 July 1946,
+ Morning Session 1
+ Afternoon Session 48
+
+ One Hundred and Seventy-fifth Day, Wednesday, 10 July 1946,
+ Morning Session 89
+
+ One Hundred and Seventy-sixth Day, Thursday, 11 July 1946,
+ Morning Session 129
+ Afternoon Session 164
+
+ One Hundred and Seventy-seventh Day, Friday, 12 July 1946,
+ Morning Session 193
+ Afternoon Session 227
+
+ One Hundred and Seventy-eighth Day, Monday, 15 July 1946,
+ Morning Session 253
+ Afternoon Session 287
+
+ One Hundred and Seventy-ninth Day, Tuesday, 16 July 1946,
+ Morning Session 325
+ Afternoon Session 364
+
+ One Hundred and Eightieth Day, Wednesday, 17 July 1946,
+ Morning Session 403
+
+ One Hundred and Eighty-first Day, Thursday, 18 July 1946,
+ Morning Session 442
+ Afternoon Session 468
+
+
+
+
+ Editor’s Note: _In respect to the presentation of the final
+ pleas by Counsel for the Defense, the Tribunal in several
+ instances directed that written speeches of excessive length be
+ shortened for oral presentation in Court and that notice would
+ be taken by the Tribunal of the paragraphs omitted. In the
+ sessions to follow such passages have been reproduced in small
+ type._
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED
+ AND SEVENTY-FOURTH DAY
+ Tuesday, 9 July 1946
+
+
+ _Morning Session_
+
+MARSHAL (Lieutenant Colonel James R. Gifford): May it please the
+Tribunal, the Defendants Hess and Fritzsche are absent.
+
+THE PRESIDENT (Lord Justice Sir Geoffrey Lawrence): I have an order to
+read. The Tribunal orders:
+
+ 1. Applications for witnesses for organizations to be heard by
+ the Tribunal in open court in accordance with Paragraph 5 of the
+ Tribunal’s order of 13 March 1946 should be made to the General
+ Secretary as soon as possible, and in any case not later than 20
+ July.
+
+ 2. The Tribunal believes that so much evidence has already been
+ taken, and so wide a field has been covered, that only a very
+ few witnesses need be called for each organization. That is all.
+
+DR. OTTO NELTE (Counsel for Defendant Keitel): Mr. President, Gentlemen
+of the Tribunal, yesterday I dealt with the problem of Keitel and the
+Russian campaign. Now I recall to you what Keitel said in the witness
+box concerning the so-called ideological orders:
+
+ “I knew their content. In spite of my personal misgivings I
+ passed them on without letting myself be deterred by the
+ possibility of serious consequences.”
+
+I wanted to point that out in order to make what I have to say now
+comprehensible, above all, in its extent. In the course of time the
+opinion arose and was disseminated throughout the Army, that Field
+Marshal Keitel was a “yes man,” a tool of Hitler’s and that he was
+betraying the interests of the Armed Forces. These generals did not see,
+nor were they interested in the fact that this man was fighting a
+constant battle, day after day, in every possible field, with Hitler and
+the forces which were influencing him on all sides. The effects of this
+distorted picture shown here in detail, which definitely did not apply
+to Keitel, especially not in the sphere of strategic operations,
+planning, and execution, made themselves still felt even in this Trial;
+perhaps not without the fault of the Defendant Keitel himself. As to the
+justification of his conception of duty there can in principle be no
+argument. It has also been confirmed here by the witness Admiral
+Schulte-Mönting for the Defendant Grossadmiral Raeder. There can be no
+doubt that the rest of the admirals and generals were in principle of
+the same point of view, that it is impossible in military spheres to
+criticize before subordinates the decision of a superior as expressed in
+an order, even if one has misgivings about the order.
+
+One may say that every principle, every basic rule must be interpreted
+and applied in a reasonable way, that every exaggeration of a good
+principle detracts from it. In the case of Keitel this objection affects
+the problem of his responsibility and guilt.
+
+Does nonrecognition of the point where a principle, correct in itself,
+is being carried to excess and thus endangers the object for the
+protection of which it has been established, constitute guilt? In the
+case of Keitel we must consider this crucial question from the point of
+view of a soldier. The thoughts and ideas which the Defendant Keitel had
+in this connection were the following:
+
+It is incontestable that the principle of obedience is necessary for
+every army; one might say that obedience—in civilian life a virtue and
+therefore more or less unstable in its application—must be the
+essential element of a soldier’s character, because without this
+principle of obedience the aim which is to be accomplished by the army
+could not be achieved. This aim—the security of the country, the
+protection of the people, the maintenance of the most precious national
+possessions—is so sacred that the importance of the principle of
+obedience cannot be valued highly enough. Hence, the duty of those
+called upon to preserve that national institution, the Armed Forces, in
+the sense of its higher task, is to emphasize the importance of
+obedience. But what the general demands of the soldier, because it is
+indispensable, must hold good for himself too. This also applies to the
+principle of obedience.
+
+It would be dangerous to weaken an order, still less an essential
+principle, by mentioning exaggerations and taking them into
+consideration at the outset. That would leave the principle of decision
+to the individual, that is, to his judgment. There may be cases where
+the decision depends, or must be made dependent, on actual
+circumstances. In theory, that would lead to a devaluation or even to an
+abrogation of the principle. In order to forestall this danger and to
+eliminate any doubt as to its absolute importance, the principle of
+obedience has been changed in military life into one of “absolute
+obedience,” and embodied in the oath of allegiance. This is equally
+valid for the general as for the common soldier.
+
+The Defendant Keitel not only grew up in this school of thought, but
+during the 37 years of his military service, up to 1938, including the
+first World War, he had become convinced that this principle of
+obedience is the strongest pillar upon which the Armed Forces, and
+thereby the security of the country, rests.
+
+Deeply imbued with the importance of his profession, he had served the
+Kaiser, Ebert, and Von Hindenburg in accordance with this principle. As
+representatives of the State, they had to a certain extent an impersonal
+and symbolic effect on Keitel; Hitler, from 1934, at first appeared in
+the same light to him, that is, merely as representing the State,
+without any personal connection, in spite of the fact that his name was
+mentioned in the oath of allegiance. In 1938 Keitel as Chief of the OKW
+came into the immediate circle and the personal sphere of Hitler. It
+appears important for further explanation and in assessing the
+personality of Keitel to bear in mind that Keitel, as the result of his
+highly-developed soldierly conception of duty described above, and the
+pronounced feeling of soldierly obedience, was now exposed to the direct
+effects of Hitler’s personality.
+
+I am inclined to assume that Hitler had clearly realized, in the
+preliminary discussions with Keitel which led to the Führer Order of 4
+February 1938, that Keitel was the type of person he was including in
+his calculations: A man upon whom he could rely as a soldier at any
+time; who was devoted to him with sincere soldierly loyalty; whose
+bearing fitted him to be a worthy representative for the Armed Forces in
+his sphere; and who in the opinion of his superiors was an
+extraordinarily able organizer as shown by the report of Field Marshal
+Von Blomberg. Keitel himself has admitted that he sincerely admired
+Hitler, and that the latter subsequently attained a strong influence
+over him and brought him completely under his spell.
+
+This must be borne in mind if we wish to understand how Keitel could
+have made out and transmitted orders from Hitler which were
+irreconcilable with the traditional conceptions of a German officer,
+such as, for instance, orders C-50, 447-PS, et cetera, submitted by the
+Soviet Russian Prosecution.
+
+By exploiting the willingness to fight for Germany, which might be taken
+for granted in the case of every German general, Hitler was able to
+camouflage his party political aims with the pretext of defending the
+national interests and to present the impending struggle with the Soviet
+Union as a dispute which must inevitably be settled—even as a war of
+defense, the necessity for which was made clear by definite information
+which had been received and on which depended the existence of Germany.
+
+In this way Hitler broached the fateful question. General Jodl has
+testified here to the fact that, as an officer of long standing,
+Keitel’s conscience pricked him nevertheless; and that he repeatedly,
+but unsuccessfully, raised objections and suggested alternatives to the
+orders drafted.
+
+During his cross-examination by the representative of the American
+Prosecution, the Defendant Keitel has openly declared that he was aware
+of the illegal nature of these orders, but that he believed that he
+could not refuse to obey the orders of the Supreme Commander of the
+Armed Forces and head of the State, whose final pronouncement in the
+case of all objections was: “I do not know why you are worrying; after
+all, it is not your responsibility. I myself am solely responsible to
+the German people.”
+
+This is a reasoned analysis of Keitel’s attitude toward the so-called
+ideologically-based orders of Hitler.
+
+Keitel’s last hope, which in many cases proved to be justified, was that
+the commanders-in-chief and subordinate commanders of the Armed Forces
+would at their discretion and within the scope of their responsibility
+either fail altogether to apply these harsh, inhuman orders, or would
+apply them only to a limited degree. In view of his position, Keitel had
+only the choice between military disobedience by refusing to transmit
+the orders, or complying with the instructions to forward them. I shall
+investigate in another connection the question of what alternative cases
+of action might have been open to him. The problem here is to show how
+Keitel came to forward orders which indisputably violated the laws of
+warfare and humanity and why, by reason of his duty to obey, his sworn
+loyalty to the Supreme Commander, and the fact that he saw in the order
+of the head of the State the absolution of his own responsibility, he
+failed to recognize the point at which even the soldier’s strict duty of
+obedience must end.
+
+Every soldier who has appeared here as a defendant or as a witness has
+mentioned the duty of allegiance. All of them, when they sooner or later
+realized that Hitler had drawn them and the Armed Forces into his
+egocentric gamble for the highest stakes, have considered their oath of
+allegiance as rendered to their country and have believed that they must
+continue to do their duty in circumstances which to us and even to
+themselves, when they realized the extent of resulting disaster, appear
+inconceivable. Not only soldiers such as Raeder, Dönitz, and Jodl, but
+Paulus as well, kept their positions and remained at their posts, and we
+have heard the same from other defendants. The statements of the
+Defendants Speer and Jodl in this connection were deeply moving.
+
+The question of whether these facts relieve the Defendant Keitel of
+guilty responsibility requires investigation. Keitel does not deny that
+he bears a heavy moral responsibility. He realizes that no one who
+played even the smallest part in this terrible drama can feel himself
+devoid of the moral guilt in which he was entangled.
+
+If I nevertheless emphasize the legal point of view, I am doing so
+because Justice Jackson, in his speech on behalf of the Prosecution,
+expressly referred to the law as being the basis of your verdict—to
+international law, the law of individual states, and the law which the
+victorious powers have embodied in the Charter.
+
+I assume that the Defendant Keitel has recognized that some of Hitler’s
+orders violated international law. The Charter says that a soldier
+cannot clear himself by referring to orders given by his superiors or by
+his government. At the beginning of my argument I asked you to determine
+whether, independently of the terms of the Charter, the principle is
+unimpeachable that the standard determining right or wrong cannot but
+depend on a national concept.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Nelte, I see that in the next few pages you pass into
+the realm of metaphysics. Don’t you think that part you might leave for
+the Tribunal to read?
+
+You must remember that you began your speech yesterday before the
+morning adjournment, and you have got over seventy pages left of your
+speech to read.
+
+DR. NELTE: I have limited it and shall be through by noon.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Very well. Do you think it is necessary to read these
+passages about metaphysics?
+
+DR. NELTE: I want to show in these pages that they are not metaphysical
+forces, and that the individual is not in a position to free himself
+through metaphysical forces. I shall—well, I think I shall continue on
+Page 121, immediately following my reference to Hitler’s character.
+
+Perhaps I may just read from Page 120 at the bottom.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Very well, if you tell the Tribunal that you have limited
+your presentation. I think you began yesterday at a quarter past 12. Go
+on then. Take your own course, but do your best to limit it, and go to
+Page 120 now.
+
+[sm type begins]DR. NELTE: The French prosecutor, M. De Menthon, has
+pointed to the “demoniacal” undertaking of Hitler and therewith
+pronounced a word which had necessarily to be brought up in a discussion
+which is dedicated to the investigation of events forming the background
+of these Trials. It is the natural endeavor of intelligent people to
+analyze the reasons for events which have deeply touched the fate of
+mankind in these days. If these events deviate from the regular
+happenings and the natural course of things so much that they sharpen
+our imagination, we take our refuge in metaphysical powers. I ask you
+not to consider the pointing to such metaphysical forces as an attempt
+to evade responsibility. We are all still under the impression of the
+attempt by a single man to lead the world from its course. I should not
+care to be misunderstood: The “demoniacal” is an incomprehensible yet
+extremely real power. Many call it “fate.” If I speak of fateful,
+metaphysical powers, I do not mean the fate of antiquity and of
+pre-Christian Germanism to which even the gods are necessarily
+subject.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]I should like to make this quite clear: The demoniacal
+about which I am talking in this connection does not exclude the
+capacity of man to discern evil; of course, I believe that the
+demoniacal, should it become effective, does limit the capacity for
+perception. Principiis obsta. The old German maxim says: “Resist from
+the very start, the remedy will be prepared too late.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Fate and guilt are not phenomena excluding one another,
+but rather circles which overlap, so that there are sections of life
+when both power groups are operative. I can only indicate here in a few
+words what things may be considered as being governed by fate:
+nationality, historical and traditional conditions of existence,
+individual origin, professional surroundings.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Mankind today cannot yet recognize the difference
+between the fateful, that is, the metaphysical powers which have become
+operative, and the persons who have appeared as tools of these powers;
+therefore the people who made their appearance as actors on the stage of
+this terrible drama are “guilty people” to them. The further removed
+mankind is from the events, the less it sees or feels the consequences,
+the more objective does judgment—divested of actuality and subjective
+instincts—become within the framework of the history of human
+development. In this way the active figures and their share in the
+events will be better recognized. But as long as we are under the recent
+impression of the events, we do, it is true, realize the border line
+between guilt and fate, but we cannot yet recognize it clearly.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]No less a person than Marshal Stalin has pointed out in
+February 1946 that the second World War was not so much the result of
+mistakes of individual statesmen, but rather the consequence of a
+development of economic and political tension on the basis of the
+existing capitalist economic system.[sm type ends]
+
+I am now beginning Paragraph 3 on Page 120.
+
+Hitler was the exponent of an idea. He was not only the representative
+of a Party political program, but also of a philosophy which separated
+him and the German people from the ideology of the rest of the world. As
+a convinced enemy of parliamentary democracy, and obsessed with the
+conviction that this was the true ideology, he was devoid of tolerance
+and the spirit of compromise. This produced an egocentric ideology which
+recognized as right only his own ideas and his own decisions. It led to
+the “Führer State,” in which he was enthroned on a lonely height as the
+incarnation of this faith, blind and deaf to all misgivings and
+objections, suspicious of all those who he thought might constitute a
+threat to his power, and brutal to everything that crossed his
+ideological path.
+
+This outline of his character, which has been verified by the evidence,
+is incompatible with the Prosecution’s assumption that a partnership of
+interests might have existed between Hitler and the defendant. There was
+no partnership of interests and no common planning between Hitler and
+the men who were supposed to be his advisers. The hierarchy of the
+Führer State, in connection with the Führer Order Number 1, which gives
+the crudest expression to the separation of work, can only admit of the
+conclusion that the so-called co-workers were merely mouthpieces or
+tools of an overwhelming will, and not men who translated their own will
+into deeds. The only question, therefore, which can be raised is whether
+these men were guilty in putting themselves at the disposal of such a
+system and in submitting to the will of a man like Hitler.
+
+This problem requires special examination in the case of soldiers,
+because this submission to the will of some person, which is contrary to
+the nature of a free man, is for the soldier the basic element of his
+profession, and of the duties of obedience and allegiance which exist
+for the soldier in all political systems.
+
+The legal problem of conspiracy in the sense of the Indictment has been
+dealt with by my colleague Dr. Stahmer and by Dr. Horn. In the specific
+case of the Defendant Keitel I should only like to refer to two
+sentences of the speech as the starting point of my statements:
+
+ (1) “It is not sufficient that the plan be common to them all;
+ they must know that it is common to all of them, and each one of
+ them must of his own accord accept the plan as his own.
+
+ (2) “That is why a conspiracy with a dictator at the head is a
+ contradiction in itself. The dictator does not enter into a
+ conspiracy with his followers; he concludes no agreement with
+ them; he dictates.”
+
+Dr. Stahmer has pointed out that no one acting under or on account of
+pressure can therefore be a conspirator. I should like to modify this
+for the circle to which the Defendant Keitel belonged. To say that the
+defendants belonging to the military branch acted on account of or under
+pressure, does not accurately represent the real circumstances. It is
+correct to say that soldiers do not act voluntarily, that is, of their
+own free will. They must do what they are ordered, regardless of whether
+or not they approve of it. Accordingly, when soldiers engage in any
+action, their will is disregarded, or at least not taken into
+consideration; it will in fact always be disregarded because of the
+nature of the military profession, and in applying the Leadership
+Principle in the Armed Forces it cannot appear as a causal factor in the
+initiation and execution of orders. In this military sphere, therefore,
+we are not dealing with an abstract and thus theoretical deduction, but
+with a conclusion which is bound to result from the nature and practice
+of the military profession, when we maintain that the function of the
+Defendant Keitel was based on military orders. The activity of the
+Defendant Keitel with regard to the initiation of orders, decrees, and
+other measures by Hitler, even insofar as they are criminal, cannot
+therefore be considered as common work, that is, as the result of a
+common plan within the meaning of the term “conspiracy.” Keitel’s
+activity in regard to the execution of orders consists in the proper
+transmission of orders in the operations sector and in the proper
+execution of orders concerning the administration of the war, that is,
+in the so-called ministerial sector.
+
+No matter how this activity in itself might be qualified in terms of the
+penal code, the Prosecution have not, I think, so far submitted anything
+which could refute this train of thought as to the conspiracy.
+
+This is a soldierly principle, and is valid wherever the military
+command system exists. The significance of this statement is
+particularly important in the case of the Defendant Keitel. For the
+validity of such evidence might be questioned by saying that Keitel’s
+functions were not those of a soldier, or at least not only those of a
+soldier; and that he is therefore not entitled to claim consideration
+purely on the grounds of the existing system of command. The unfortunate
+nature of his position and the many and varied assignments, not all of
+which can be fitted into the framework of a system, which fell to him as
+Chief of the OKW, tend to obscure for us the primary factor with regard
+to the Defendant Keitel, namely, that no matter what Keitel did, or with
+what authority or organization he negotiated or was in contact, he was
+always motivated by his function as a soldier and by some general or
+particular order issued by Hitler.
+
+The existence of a conspiracy seems to me incompatible with the theory
+of a soldier’s functions and with Keitel’s position as head of the OKW,
+and cannot logically be derived therefrom. In all cases in which the
+Prosecution has claimed conspiracy to be prejudice, the purpose of this
+conspiracy is an activity indulged in by the members in perpetrating
+acts which differ from their normal private activity. The _ex contrario_
+proposition is that the activity which a man must practice because it
+belongs to his profession or office cannot be termed a conspiracy. It
+may be added that the soldier does not act on his own initiative, but on
+orders received. A soldier may therefore take part in a conspiracy aimed
+against the duties he has undertaken as a soldier; but his activity
+within the scope of his military functions can on no account be termed a
+conspiracy.
+
+The OKW, including the Armed Forces Operations Staff, was relatively
+little affected by the conduct of the war in the East. By the OKW I mean
+the staff of the OKW. It is well known that Hitler himself as Supreme
+Commander of the Armed Forces, dealt with all matters concerning the
+conduct of this—his own—ideological war and took a hand in it. The
+Army was in command; but Hitler was in close and constant collaboration
+with the Commander-in-Chief of the Army and his Chief of General Staff
+up to December 1941 when, after taking over the supreme command of the
+Army, he also took over its direct leadership.
+
+This union in one person of the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces
+and Commander-in-Chief of the Army was evidently the cause of the
+numerous mistakes which led to the severe incrimination of the OKW as
+staff OKW, and of its Chief of Staff, Keitel.
+
+Keitel feels himself to be gravely incriminated by the frank statements
+he made in the witness box on the whole question of the Russian war. It
+is, therefore, not only an understandable proceeding on the part of the
+defense, but in fact its duty, to clarify the extent to which Keitel
+bears the responsibility for these entire conditions of most frightful
+atrocity and unimaginable degeneration.
+
+To make these matters of competency, which are frequently extremely
+complicated, easier of understanding, I refer to the Defendant Keitel’s
+affidavit Number K-10, which was submitted to the Tribunal. It seems to
+me essential just to emphasize the fact that the war against the Soviet
+Union was from the first subject to three effective factors: (1)
+Operations and command: High Command of the Army; (2) Economics: The
+Four Year Plan; (3) Ideological: The SS Organizations.
+
+These three factors were outside the competency of the OKW, which was
+not empowered to issue orders affecting them. It is true, nevertheless,
+that as a result of Hitler’s practically anarchic methods, by which he
+himself retained entire control of the Government in his own hands, the
+OKW and Keitel were sometimes used to transmit Hitler’s orders; but this
+fact cannot in itself deflect the basic responsibility.
+
+In view of the mass of material presented by the Soviet Prosecution, I
+can refer within the scope of my statement to only a comparatively small
+number of the documents. I shall give a brief summary of the documents
+which have been dealt with separately, Pages 126 to 136.
+
+To begin with, I referred to Documents USSR-90, 386, 364, 366, 106, and
+407, and tried to prove in detail that the charges made against the OKW
+and Keitel as the guilty parties have no value as evidence as far as
+these documents are concerned.
+
+Then, on Page 130, I referred to a category of documents with which I
+have dealt earlier in Part 2 of my presentation on the subject of
+official documents. If I refer in this connection to the official
+reports of the Investigation Commission, I do so not because of their
+actual contents, but because, although they were submitted in order to
+implicate Keitel, they are in themselves proof that the charges made
+against Keitel and the OKW are not justified as far as these grave
+indictments are concerned.
+
+Out of the large number of documents in this connection I have dealt
+with USSR-40, 35, and 38. These official reports, which implicate the
+High Command of the Armed Forces, do not contain a single concrete fact
+referring to the Staff of the OKW—that is, Keitel—as the perpetrator
+or instigator of these atrocities.
+
+I make no comment on the contents of the documents; I merely point out
+that Keitel in his official position, had neither the authority nor the
+opportunity to give orders which resulted in the crimes alleged.
+
+[sm type begins]First of all I shall deal with the Documents USSR-90,
+386, 364, 366, 106, 407, submitted by the Prosecution for the specific
+purpose of establishing Keitel’s responsibility.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]They will show that not in a single case are they
+orders, decrees, or regulations issued by the German High Command of the
+Armed Forces and that it has not been proved that the latter was even
+informed thereof.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](1) The document Exhibit USSR-90 is a court-martial
+sentence against the German Generals Bernhardt and Hamann, and includes
+the following sentence:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“During the temporary occupation of the Orlova
+ area ... German Fascist intruders committed bestial crimes in
+ huge numbers against the peaceful populations and prisoners of
+ war on direct orders of the rapacious Hitler Government and the
+ command of the Armed Forces, thus violating the rules of warfare
+ established by international law....”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The argumentation leading up to the verdict does not
+reveal proof of the claim that the “German Armed Forces command”—if
+this means the OKW and the Defendant Keitel—ordered the crimes with
+which the court-martial verdict is dealing. This is another of the
+frequent confusions as to the status of the High Command of the Army and
+the High Command of the Armed Forces. Statements on Page 2 of the
+verdict seem to indicate this; it is said there:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“The defendant, Lieutenant General Bernhardt ...
+ acted according to plans and instructions of the
+ Commander-in-Chief of the Army ...”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]This document, therefore, cannot furnish proof for the
+Prosecution’s contention that the Defendant Keitel is connected with the
+crime which is described in Document USSR-90.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](2) In connection with the facts in the case dealing
+with “compulsory labor,” the Prosecution submitted in proof of its
+charge against Keitel Document USSR-36, a letter by Reich Marshal
+Göring, in whom Hitler had vested general powers within the framework of
+the Four Year Plan for this essential project—Plan
+Barbarossa-Oldenburg—as shown in the Green File.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](3) Nor does the report or discussion of the Economic
+Staff East (Wirtschaftsstab Ost) of 7 November 1941 (USSR-386) touch
+upon the competency and responsibility of OKW, because the Economic
+Staff East had nothing to do with the OKW and the Defendant Keitel.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]This is also proved by the Green File, the Thomas
+Document 2353-PS, and Keitel’s affidavit, Keitel Document Book 2,
+Exhibit Number Keitel-11.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The conclusion drawn by the Soviet Russian Prosecution
+that “Proof is established of the OKW commander having been primarily
+responsible for the mobilization of labor in the Reich” is erroneous, if
+the argument is to establish responsibility on the part of the Defendant
+Keitel. If, on the other hand, reference as commander of the OKW is made
+to Hitler, this cannot be contradicted.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](4) Document USSR-364 is a document from the OKH (High
+Command of the Army), signed by the Quartermaster General of the Army,
+Wagner. It can be seen from the distribution of the document that the
+OKW was not even informed through the usual channels.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](5) Document USSR-366 mentions the name of the defendant
+as having complained because: “OT (Organization Todt) units operating in
+the vicinity of Lvov paid local laborers a daily wage of 25 rubles and
+because OT availed itself of the services of local factories.”[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The Prosecution’s argument runs that “Keitel writes to
+Minister Todt ...” The document which was submitted does not reveal
+this, because it does not make any mention of such a letter. Inasmuch as
+the entire economic administration and the exploitation of the Eastern
+Territories had been transferred to the Four Year Plan, OKW had no
+relevant office for this problem.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]This becomes evident from the Green File just referred
+to, and from the Führer order for the “Barbarossa-Oldenburg Plan.”
+Presumably, after discussion of the basic question during the conference
+on the situation, Keitel once again received orders from Hitler to get
+into touch with Reich Minister Todt. This would then be one of the
+instances where the defendant merely served as an instrument for the
+transmission of a Hitler order to the competent office without the
+matter being in any way within the competency of the OKW. In any case,
+the information conveyed by the document does not show in how far this
+problem should be a charge on Keitel.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](6) Document USSR-106 is a Führer Order of 8 September
+1942, dealing with the employment of prisoners of war and the
+construction of field fortifications behind the front. The heading of
+the Führer order reads:[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]“The Führer.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]“OKH: General Staff of the Army Operations Section
+1.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The order was sighed by the Army General Staff and
+issued by Halder. This proves conclusively that the Defendant Keitel or
+the OKW was not involved.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](7) Nor is it possible to refer to Document USSR-407 for
+the establishment of the defendant’s participation. This document deals
+with the order given by a local commander, who refers to alleged OKW
+instructions.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It has already been emphasized on several occasions that
+the OKW does not mean Keitel. It may however be quite possible, as no
+date of the alleged OKW order is mentioned in Document USSR-407, that
+this is one of the numerous cases of confusion, especially since even in
+Armed Forces circles the exact conception of the OKW was not known.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In any case the conclusion by the Soviet Russian
+Prosecution, after submission of this document, that “OKW and Keitel
+have not only ordered the mobilization of labor from the occupied part
+of Russia, but have worked directly in the execution of this order” is
+incorrect and has not been proved.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Now there is still a category of documentary evidence
+which contains official communiqués of the Extraordinary Commission for
+the determination and investigation of War Crimes and Crimes against
+Humanity. I already some time ago dealt with the importance of official
+documents in the presentation of evidence, and pointed out their limited
+value as evidence.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]If in this connection I discuss the official reports of
+the investigating commissions, then I do so because ostensibly they have
+been presented in order to incriminate Keitel, while in actual fact they
+furnish proof that the accusations against Keitel and the OKW Staff are
+not based on any reasoning in these very weighty Prosecution charges.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]From the large number of documents concerning this I
+would refer to the following:[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Document USSR-4 has been submitted to show that the
+Soviet-Russian population was exterminated through intentional infection
+with typhus, and that this was a case of a planned spreading of
+typhus-epidemics among the Soviet population. For this the following,
+among others, are named as the culprits (Page 10 of the document); “The
+Hitler Government and the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces.”[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Once again it cannot be seen from the document itself on
+what concrete facts the commission supports the guilt of the “Supreme
+Command of the German Armed Forces” and what military agency is thereby
+described. There is no mention made of an order of the “Supreme Command
+of the German Armed Forces” in any part of this lengthy document.
+However, since the Prosecution have presented this document as proof of
+the guilt of the Defendant Keitel and the OKW, I establish that this
+document cannot be valid as evidence for an accusation against Keitel in
+this horrible charge.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Document USSR-9 bears the heading:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Report of the Extraordinary State Commission
+ for the determination and investigation of the atrocities of the
+ Fascist German invaders and the damage caused to citizens,
+ collective enterprises, social organizations, State plants and
+ institutions of the Soviet Union.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Regarding the demolitions and bestialities
+ which the German Fascist invaders have committed in Kiev.”[sm
+ type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]On Page 4 it is stated: By order of the German High
+Command German Army units looted, blew up, and destroyed the old
+cultural monument, the Lavra of Kiev. The following are described as
+responsible: “The German Government and the German High Command and all
+officers and officials listed by name.” From the speech of the
+representative of the Prosecution and from the term, “the German
+Government and the German High Command” it can be seen that the High
+Command of the Armed Forces and Keitel are to be accused as having been
+responsible. This document lacks any positive statement on which the
+Investigating Commission supports this judgment.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It is also shown here that the judgment of the
+investigating commission—in any case with reference to the Defendant
+Keitel—is not basically supported.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Document USSR-35 is a report “regarding the material
+damage which the Fascist German invaders inflicted on State plants and
+institutions, collective industries, and citizens of the Soviet
+Union.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]This document states:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“The German armies and occupation authorities
+ which carried out the directives of the criminal Hitler
+ Government and the High Command of the Armed Forces, destroyed
+ and looted the Soviet cities occupied by them....”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]To this it must be stated:[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](1) The contents of this document do not show one single
+concrete “directive” issued by the OKW or Keitel.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](2) The OKW had no authority to give orders, and
+therefore could not issue directives.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](3) Therefore the findings of the State investigation
+commission, which for formal reasons would not be binding for the
+Tribunal, cannot be considered as justified insofar as the OKW and
+Keitel are concerned.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](4) No opinion is going to be expressed as to the
+remaining contents of the reports.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Document USSR-38 is entitled:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Communication of the Extraordinary State
+ Commission for the Determination and Investigation of the
+ Atrocities of the Fascist German invaders and their Accomplices.
+ Regarding atrocities of the Fascist German invaders in the city
+ of Minsk.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In this document it is stated on Page 1:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Following instructions, which were issued
+ directly by the German Government, the Hitlerite military
+ authorities destroyed without any limitation scientific research
+ institutes, et cetera ... they exterminated thousands of
+ peace-loving Soviet citizens and also prisoners of war.”[sm type
+ ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Page 13 states:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Responsible for the crimes committed by the
+ Germans at Minsk ... are the Hitler Government and the High
+ Command of the Armed Forces.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Nowhere in this document have either concrete or
+verifiable instructions or orders by the Defendant Keitel or from the
+OKW been given.[sm type ends]
+
+Then, on Page 134, Paragraph 1:
+
+In the documents previously quoted, either Keitel or the OKW is named as
+the responsible party. However, during the Prosecution’s presentation
+many such official reports were quoted as evidence for Keitel’s guilt,
+which do not even mention either the name of the defendant or the OKW.
+In this connection, I draw your attention to Documents USSR-8, 39, 45,
+46, and 63. I only ask the Tribunal to examine the remaining documents
+with equal care in order to ascertain whether, if submitted in
+connection with Keitel and the OKW, they allow Keitel’s guilt to be
+concluded or whether that is not the case. In this connection I should
+like to add that I am not going to read, and am not referring to, the
+remarks at the bottom of Page 134 (USSR-3).
+
+I beg the Tribunal to take note of my statements on the economic
+exploitation of the occupied territories—Pages 137 to 142—without my
+reading them. Since Reich Marshal Göring’s defense counsel has already
+dealt with this problem and has clarified the spheres of competency and
+responsibility, it would mainly be repetition for me to speak on it.
+However, I wish to draw attention to this part of my presentation and
+beg the Tribunal to take judicial notice of it.
+
+[sm type begins]In the war against Poland as well as later in the West,
+extended on the basis of experiences in Poland, expert personnel trained
+in military economy were detached from the Armed Forces Economic Office
+in the form of small staffs and units to the Army Groups and Army High
+Commands as expert advisers and assistants in all military economic
+questions which resulted from the conquest and occupation of
+economically and industrially valuable territories. The Economic
+Armament Office, together with the OKW, prepared the organization of
+these groups of experts and technical detachments.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]By and large, they consisted of: (a) Expert advisers
+with the unit staffs (at first known as liaison officers of the OKH
+Economic Armament Office); (b) Reconnaissance Staffs for factories and
+raw materials important to war economy: (c) technical detachments and
+formations for security, repairs, and protection from destruction of
+essential and vital plants and supply installations.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]This organization was prepared by the OKW (Economic
+Armament Office) because it relied on expert research personnel from all
+three branches of the Armed Forces and civilian economy with the
+“technical emergency aid” (Technische Nothilfe). The Army completed the
+set-up itself.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The organization was subordinated to the senior troop
+commanders in charge. Their employment took place exclusively on the
+orders of the troop command, for which each adviser submitted
+suggestions from time to time to the unit staffs (the General Staff Ib
+or the Chief Quartermaster).[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The missions of these technical detachments were: (a)
+Advising the command concerning the importance and significance of
+industrial plants and supply installations (fuel, water, electric
+current, repair plants, mines, et cetera); (b) Protection of these
+installations from destruction by the enemy and our own forces and the
+civilian population; (c) Utilization for the purpose of Germany’s
+conduct of the war for troops and population; (d) Examination of
+essential and vital plants and establishment of their productive
+capacity for German use; (e) Establishment of raw material supplies of
+metals, ore, coal, fuel, et cetera, for reindustrialization or Germany’s
+conduct of the war.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]All functions, with the exception of those mentioned
+under (d) and (e), served exclusively to supply the fighting troops, the
+occupational troops, and the native population. The statistical
+collections (d) and (e) were reported, through military channels to the
+competent offices at home (Plenipotentiary for Economy, Four Year Plan,
+Minister of Armaments) who had to make disposition concerning use and
+utilization. The Armed Forces itself had no independent right of
+action.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It is correct that (according to the Thomas book,
+2353-PS) raw materials and also machines were removed to Germany for the
+production of implements of war as the Prosecution charges, since both
+had served the enemy’s conduct of the war and had necessarily gone out
+of production. No military agency could order the removal to Germany,
+because it had no right at all to dispose of “booty” of this sort. Only
+the three highest Reich authorities mentioned could effect such a
+removal on the basis of a general authority by the Führer or a special
+order by him to the Commander-in-Chief of the Army. The OKW and the
+Chief of the OKW, as well as the Economic Armament Office, had no right
+of disposition and command outside of their own fields, nor did any
+separate chain of command exist from the OKW Economic Armament Office to
+these detachments, et cetera. The communications and report chain ran
+via the unit staffs to the OKH Quartermaster General, with whom the
+highest Reich authorities (Food, Economy, Armament Ministry, Four Year
+Plan) had representatives who reported to their departmental chiefs.
+Orders by the Defendant Keitel as Chief of the OKW concerning
+utilization, use, or seizure of economic goods have not been given; this
+follows from Document 2353-PS.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The unified leadership of the entire war economy in
+France and Belgium was then centered in Reich Marshal Göring as Delegate
+of the Four Year Plan by the Führer Decree of 16 June 1940.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]For determining the responsibility it is of significance
+that the staff of the Economic Armament Office examined the problems
+which concerned the armament economy and utilization of economy in the
+occupied territories. Their appraisals, which in this respect were
+regarded as decisive, are collected in Document EC-344, coming from the
+Foreign Department in the OKW (headed by Admiral Canaris).[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]With reference to Articles 52, 53, 54, and 56 of the
+Hague Convention of Land Warfare, it is explained therein in connection
+with total warfare that “economic rearmament” must be regarded as
+forming part of the “belligerent enterprise,” and accordingly all
+industrial supplies of raw materials, semifinished and manufactured
+goods as well as machinery, et cetera, are to be regarded as serving the
+war effort. Therefore, according to the viewpoint of the author of this
+opinion, all these goods are liable to be seized and used against
+compensation after the conclusion of peace. Furthermore, the problem of
+the need for war is examined and Germany’s state of economic difficulty
+at that time is already affirmed. For the judgment of the Defendant
+Keitel this opinion is of significance insofar as the well-known Foreign
+Department under the responsible leadership of Admiral Canaris as late
+as November 1941 gave vent to an opinion which justified the economic
+utilization of the occupied countries. That was the office which
+concerned itself with problems of international law and on which the
+Defendant Keitel based his confidence.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]An organization for all economic requirements and
+intended to supersede the former organization was created for Russia on
+the basis of experiences in the West by Reich Marshal Göring by virtue
+of a general delegation of authority by the Führer.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The chief of the Economic Armament Office together with
+State Secretary Körner drew up this organization for Reich Marshal
+Göring without participation by the Chief of the OKW. The Chief of the
+OKW for this purpose put General Thomas at the disposal of Reich Marshal
+Göring. The Chief of the OKW did not acquire any influence at all on
+this organization, and severed his own and the OKW’s connection with it
+after Reich Marshal Göring had received full powers and the OKW had put
+General Thomas at his disposal. General Thomas thus acted solely on
+instructions by Reich Marshal Göring. The OKW and the Defendant Keitel
+were never under Reich Marshal Göring’s orders nor were they bound by
+his instructions. The Defendant Keitel was not represented in Göring’s
+Economic Staff and had nothing to do with the Eastern Economic Staff
+(See Thomas book, Page 366).[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The execution of the work was centrally directed by the
+Economic Operations Staff in Berlin as part of the Four Year Plan. The
+local higher command in the Eastern district was under the Eastern
+Economic Staff. To this organization was also attached the troops’
+supply department. The OKW, and the Defendant Keitel as Chief of the
+OKW, never issued orders concerning the exploitation, administration, or
+confiscation of economic property in occupied territory. This is
+revealed in the book submitted by the Prosecution, Document 2353-PS. On
+Page 386 of this document, Thomas, in summarizing, correctly stated as
+follows:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“The Eastern Economic Operations Staff under the
+ Reich Marshal or State Secretary Körner was responsible for the
+ whole economic direction of the Eastern area; the state
+ secretaries were responsible for departmental instructions; the
+ Economic Armament Office was responsible for the reconstruction
+ of the economic organization; the Eastern Economic Operations
+ Staff was responsible for the execution of all measures.”[sm
+ type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The same is shown by Document USSR-10:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Directives (of Reich Marshal Göring) for the
+ unified conduct of economic management in the zone of operations
+ and in political administrative areas to be subsequently
+ established.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]This ought to prove that the OKW and Keitel are clear of
+any responsibility for the consequences attendant upon carrying out the
+measures within the scope of the Barbarossa-Oldenburg operation.[sm type
+ends]
+
+I now come to Page 143 and following pages, where I refer to the
+assertion made by the French Prosecution regarding the participation of
+the OKW and Keitel in the cases of Oradour and Tulle.
+
+The French Prosecution have charged the Defendant Keitel in person with
+the commission of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The accusation
+concerns in particular the execution of French civilians without a
+trial. In this connection the cases of Oradour and Tulle received
+special emphasis. They are recorded in a report made by the French
+Government—Document F-236. The French Prosecution stated: “Keitel’s
+guilt in all these things is certain.”
+
+In this connection it is not my task to discuss the frightful events of
+Oradour and Tulle. As defense counsel for the Defendant Keitel I have to
+examine whether the Prosecution’s assertion that the Defendant Keitel
+bears any guilt or responsibility for these atrocious happenings has any
+foundation.
+
+You will understand that the Defendant Keitel attaches particular
+importance to the production of evidence to the effect that he is not
+responsible for these terrible occurrences, and, further, that when such
+things came to his knowledge he took steps to have them cleared up in
+order that the actual offenders might be brought to account. It is an
+indisputable fact that Keitel had no direct part in these crimes. Any
+responsibility and guilt attaching to the defendant can therefore be
+derived only from his official position. No orders of any kind bearing
+Keitel’s signature have been submitted by the Prosecution, so that,
+whoever is guilty, Keitel is not, at any rate, among those directly
+responsible.
+
+The terrible sufferings inflicted on a large number of French villages
+are recorded in the notes of General Bérard dated 6 July and 3 August
+1944. I pointed out, when this document was submitted, that the
+submission of these complaints alone—that is, unaccompanied by the
+replies, which are also in the hands of the Prosecution—cannot convey
+an objective picture of the actual facts, on which to base a
+pronouncement on the guilt of the Defendant Keitel. As the Defendant
+Keitel, not being empowered to issue orders in the matter, cannot
+possibly be taken into consideration as the originator of the orders
+which led to the complaint, any responsibility and guilt on Keitel’s
+part can therefore be based only on the fact that he did not cause the
+necessary steps to be taken on receiving information from the German
+Armistice Commission. What Keitel did or did not do can be gathered only
+from the reply notes and from the directives issued by the OKW to the
+German Armistice Commission.
+
+Here, too, the Defendant Keitel would have been unable to provide proof
+to the contrary, had not the French Prosecution themselves submitted a
+document, F-673, which was intended to furnish proof of Keitel’s
+individual guilt. This document was already read by the French
+Prosecution at the session of 31 January 1946:
+
+ [sm type begins]“High Command of the Armed Forces; F. H. Qu., 5
+ March 1945; Secret.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“WFST./Qu. 2 (I) No. 01487/45 g.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Subject: Alleged Killing of French Nationals
+ without Trial.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“German Armistice Commission; Group Wa/Ib No.
+ 5/45 g.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“1) German Armistice Commission; 2)
+ Commander-in-chief West.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Received: 17 March 1945.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“In August 1944 the French delegation of the
+ German Armistice Commission addressed a memorandum to D. W. St.
+ K. (German Armistice Commission) describing in detail incidents
+ leading to the alleged shooting without justification of
+ Frenchmen during the period of 9 to 23 June 1944. Statements
+ made in the French note were almost entirely made in such detail
+ that an examination by Germany was possible without any
+ difficulty.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“On 26 September 1944 the High Command of the
+ Armed Forces charged the German Armistice Commission with the
+ handling of the case. Thereupon, the German Armistice Commission
+ asked the Commander-in-Chief West to investigate the incidents
+ and to take action with regard to the representation of facts
+ given in the French memorandum.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“On 12 February 1945 the German Armistice
+ Commission was informed by the Judge of Army Group B that since
+ November 1944 the case was in the hands of Army Judge of Pz.
+ AOK/6 (6th Armored Army Command) and that Pz. AOK/6 and 2. SS
+ Pz. Division ‘Das Reich’ (2nd Armored SS Division ‘Das Reich’)
+ had in the meantime separated from the Army Group.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Handling of this matter calls for the following
+ remarks:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“The Frenchmen, and the delegation of the Vichy
+ Government, have made the grave charge against the German Armed
+ Forces of numerous cases of unjustified killing of French
+ nationals, in other words, of murder. Germany’s interest
+ demanded a reply to this charge at the earliest possible moment.
+ Considering the length of time which has elapsed since receipt
+ of the French memorandum, it should have been possible to take
+ up at least some of the charges and to refute them through
+ actual investigation, irrespective of subsequent development in
+ military matters and the transfer of troops incidental thereto.
+ If even a portion of the charges made had been refuted at once,
+ the French people would have been shown that their whole subject
+ matter is based on doubtful material; but because nothing was
+ undertaken by the Germans, the opponents’ impression must be
+ that we are not in a position to answer these charges.[sm type
+ ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“The manner in which this case was handled
+ indicates that there possibly still exists a great deal of
+ ignorance as to the importance to be attached to all reproaches
+ against the German Armed Forces, to counteract any enemy
+ propaganda, and to refute immediately any purported German acts
+ of atrocity.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“The German Armistice Commission is hereby
+ instructed to continue to devote to this matter all possible
+ energy. It is requested to render any assistance possible, and
+ particularly to take all steps for expediting matters within its
+ own sphere of action. The fact that Pz. AOK/6 (6th Armored Army
+ Command) no longer forms part of the forces of the
+ Commander-in-Chief West is no reason to hold up the necessary
+ investigations in order to clarify and refute the French
+ charges.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“For information: Army General Staff (Gen. St.
+ d. H.); Headquarters Gen./Qu.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“(signed) Keitel.”[sm type ends]
+
+This document of the OKW, signed by Keitel, shows that:
+
+1. On receiving the French complaint of 26 September 1944, the OKW
+issued orders to the German Armistice Commission to investigate and deal
+with the matter.
+
+2. The German Armistice Commission thereupon instructed
+Commander-in-Chief West to investigate the incidents.
+
+3. On receiving a letter from Army Group B, the OKW expressed itself as
+follows:
+
+ “It was in the German interest to answer these charges at the
+ earliest possible moment.
+
+ “This case shows that there is still widespread ignorance as to
+ the importance of combating all imputations made against the
+ German Armed Forces and all enemy propaganda, and of refuting
+ immediately any alleged acts of atrocity on the part of the
+ Germans.
+
+ “The German Armistice Commission is hereby instructed to
+ continue to pursue their investigations as energetically as
+ possible. It is requested that every possible assistance be
+ rendered to the commission and that all possible steps be taken
+ to expedite matters in your own sphere of action. The fact that
+ Pz. AOK/6 is no longer under the jurisdiction of
+ Commander-in-Chief West is no reason for discontinuing the
+ necessary investigation in order to clarify and refute the
+ French charges.”
+
+It may therefore be considered as proved that in this case the Defendant
+Keitel, on receiving information, took energetic steps in accordance
+with the range of his competency as Chief of the OKW, and as far as he
+was in a position to do so. This eliminates the charge made by the
+Prosecution insofar as the Defendant Keitel is concerned. At the same
+time, however, the way in which the Defendant Keitel handled this case
+suggests that he acted in similar manner in other cases.
+
+Mr. President, before dealing with the problem of hostages which I may
+discuss later, I should like to discuss the grave evidence on the Night
+and Fog Decree on Page 154.
+
+[sm type begins]War, which is frightful even under orderly international
+law, becomes atrocious when the last restraints are removed. Many
+terrible things have happened during this war and it is impossible to
+tell which chapter of this book of sorrows and tears is the saddest;
+but, in any case, one of the most lamentable chapters is that of the
+treatment of hostages. In international law the question of treatment of
+hostages is controversial. The taking of hostages is almost generally
+admitted. Doubtless, although taking hostages is assumed to be
+admissible under international law, that has as yet no bearing on their
+treatment. The treatment, even more than the seizure, of hostages must
+be subject on the one hand to the law of absolute military necessity
+which cannot otherwise be met, and, on the other, to the application of
+all possible guarantees to prevent the indiscriminate shooting of
+hostages as a principle. Any primitive and brutal handling of this very
+institution, which is doubtful under international law and is apt to
+affect the absolutely innocent, must be rejected.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Unfortunately, this problem which seldom arose in
+previous wars between civilized people, acquired considerable importance
+during World Wars I and II. The cases previously taken into
+consideration and also explained in the Army Manual 2g (H. Dv. 2g)
+(Document Book 1, Exhibit Number Keitel-7) resulted from military
+necessity of troops in operation. As happened with so many things in
+this war, but especially due to the change-over from theater of
+operations to rear area, there finally developed a broadening and
+degeneration in the application of a principle which originally was
+indisputable according to international law.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The immediate connection with military necessity was
+absent, that is to say, with military action; its place was taken by
+interests which naturally included military safeguards, particularly of
+lines of communications between the front zone and home.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It must be said that this fundamental change ought to
+have been recognized, and ought to have been taken into consideration in
+the handling of the existing rules governing hostages. The degeneration
+in the treatment of hostages was decisively influenced by the fact that
+civil administrative and police organizations claimed for themselves one
+of the extreme means of soldierly warfare and often made use of it
+arbitrarily, wherever they wanted to break resistance, by arresting
+people without concrete individual or even presumptive guilt and by
+treating them from the viewpoint of reprisals. Collective arrests for
+individual offenses come into this category.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]All these cases have nothing to do with the original
+facts in the cases of hostages; but since the word “hostage” is used for
+all these cases, the Prosecution in many cases has placed on the Armed
+Forces a responsibility which they should not bear.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]I request the Tribunal, when judging this complex and
+when examining the responsibility of the Defendant Keitel, to take into
+consideration:[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](1) The concept of hostages, the basic conditions
+governing the taking of hostages end their treatment had become known to
+all authorities in command and their offices in the Armed Forces by the
+Army manual regulations (H. Dv. 2g) before the war, especially before
+the campaign in the West. The Documents 1585-PS, submitted by the
+Prosecution itself (discussions of the hostage question with the
+Luftwaffe), and 877-PS (operation orders of the Army for “Case Yellow”
+and the attack in the West, dated 29 October 1939) reveal that special
+regulations had originally been issued for the seizure of hostages.
+Their application was justifiably transferred to the Army offices and
+later to the military commanders who were subordinate to the Army, never
+to the Armed Forces High Command (OKW).[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](2) Nobody could be in doubt, according to existing
+regulations (H. Dv. 2g), as to what authority Army commanders had and as
+to who had to make a decision on a possible shooting of hostages. No
+supplementary order or supplementary regulation was ever issued by the
+Armed Forces High Command (OKW). The letter from Falkenhausen (Military
+Commander in Belgium), dated 16 September 1942 (Document 1594-PS),
+mentioned by the Prosecution, and the report of this military commander
+(1587-PS) are not addressed to Keitel, but quite correctly to his
+superior office, the Army High Command (OKH) Quartermaster General;
+Keitel received neither the letter nor the report. Whether Hitler
+received them in his capacity of Supreme Commander of the Army and
+military superior of the military commanders, Keitel does not know.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](3) The OKW was not informed of the cases in which
+inhabitants of the occupied territories were mistakenly and falsely
+described as hostages and treated without legal procedures.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins](4) Whenever hostages, without being connected with the
+plots and terror acts against the occupying power, were held responsible
+for them without local or material connection, such practice is contrary
+to service regulations.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](5) Insofar as the OKW or the Defendant Keitel was
+approached by military agencies in individual cases referring to hostage
+problems, for example by the Military Commanders in France and Belgium,
+the evidence has shown that the “hostages” to be shot were to be
+selected from the circle of persons already sentenced to death by virtue
+of the law. However, so that this should not be outwardly
+recognized—for producing the desired deterrent effect—it was to be
+announced that hostages had been shot.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The French Prosecution has cited the OKW and Keitel in
+connection with this complex by means of Document 389-PS, which is the
+same as UK-25, a Führer order of 16 September 1941 drawn up by Keitel.
+This document, whose contents are monstrous, does not, however, have
+anything to do with the question of taking hostages and the treatment of
+hostages. The word “hostages” does not appear in the text. From the
+subject and from the contents it can be seen that this is an order
+designed to combat the resistance movement in the eastern and
+southeastern war theaters, and therefore is related to the basic
+principles of the so-called ideological war against the Soviet Union,
+which has been already dealt with at another place, and condemned. When
+the communication of 16 September 1941 was addressed to the Military
+Commander in France by the High Command of the Army for information
+purposes the latter had already decreed the so-called “Hostages Law”
+(Document Number 1588-PS). Accordingly no causal connection existed, as
+the French Prosecution has assumed, between the directives signed by
+Keitel and ordered by Hitler in Document 389-PS, and the hostage
+legislation in the West. The latter had been decreed without
+collaboration or consultation of the OKW. The agency to which the
+Military Commanders in France and in Belgium were subordinated was the
+High Command of the Army (OKH), and not the OKW; the agency which
+specialized in this matter was the Quartermaster General (in the OKH).
+With regard to this it must also be considered that at this period of
+time Hitler himself was the Commander-in-Chief of the Army, which
+explains the above-mentioned references to the OKW. In reality, they
+were not references to the OKW, but to Hitler as Supreme Commander of
+the Armed Forces and Commander-in-Chief of the Army, which were
+partially routed through Hitler’s working staff (the OKW). This however
+establishes no competence and thereby no responsibility of the OKW and
+the Defendant Keitel as Chief of the OKW.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In conclusion I request permission to hand in some
+literature to the Tribunal demonstrating present-day opinions pertaining
+to international law with regard to the question of hostages for
+consideration in the examination of these facts in the case. I limit
+myself to reading the summarization of expert opinions and military
+practices:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“In summarizing it must be said, concerning the
+ question of taking hostages and the execution of hostages, that
+ according to existing practices and probably also according to
+ existing rules of international law, the taking of hostages in
+ occupied territory is permissible under international law
+ insofar as hostages are taken in order to guarantee the proper
+ legal behavior of the enemy civilian population. According to
+ the commentary by Waltzog, which is standard for the German
+ conduct of warfare, it is also a formal requirement, whenever
+ hostages are taken according to unwritten international law
+ (common law), that such taking of hostages, the reasons
+ therefor, and in particular the threat of their execution must
+ be brought to the knowledge of those for whose lawful behavior
+ the hostages are to go bail. The question as to whether it is
+ permissible to execute hostages cannot be interpreted
+ unequivocally. The German jurisprudents of international law,
+ like Meurer, the Englishman, Spaight, and the Frenchmen, Sorel
+ and Funck, consider this permissible in the extremes of
+ emergency, and therefore not contrary to international law.”[sm
+ type ends]
+
+During the whole course of this Trial, no order made such a deep
+impression on the mind of the public as did the Night and Fog Decree.
+This was an order which originated during the fight waged against acts
+of sabotage and against the resistance movement in France. As a result
+of the withdrawal of troops in connection with the campaign against the
+Soviet Union, the number of plots aimed against the security of German
+troops stationed in France, and in particular the acts of sabotage aimed
+at the destruction of all means of communication increased daily. This
+necessitated increased activity on the part of the counterintelligence
+offices, which in its turn led to proceedings being taken and sentences
+being passed by military courts against members of the resistance
+movement and their accomplices. These sentences were very severe. In
+addition to a large proportion of death sentences, sentences of
+imprisonment were also passed. The reports made almost daily during the
+situation conferences led to violent disputes in which Hitler, in
+accordance with his usual habit, tried to find someone on whom to put
+the blame; in this instance he fixed upon the far too cumbersome
+handling of military justice. In his spontaneous and explosive way, he
+ordered directives to be worked out for a rapid, effective, and lasting
+intimidation of the population. He declared that imprisonment could not
+be considered an effective means of intimidation. To Keitel’s objection
+that it was impossible to sentence everyone to death and that military
+courts would, in any case, refuse to co-operate, he replied that he did
+not care. Offenses found sufficiently grave to necessitate the
+imposition of capital punishment without very lengthy court proceedings
+would continue to be dealt with as before—that is, by the courts—but
+where this was not the case, he would order the suspected persons to be
+brought secretly to Germany and all news of their fate to be withheld,
+since the publication of prison sentences in occupied territory was
+robbed of its intimidating effect by the prospect of the amnesty to be
+expected at the end of the war.
+
+The Defendant Keitel thereupon consulted the chief of the Judge
+Advocate’s Office of the Armed Forces and the chief of the
+counterintelligence office (Canaris), who is also the originator of the
+letter of 2 February 1942, Document UK-35, on the procedure to be
+followed. When repeated applications made to Hitler to refrain from this
+procedure, or at least not to insist upon complete secrecy, had no
+effect, they finally submitted a draft which we have before us in the
+well-known decree of 7 December 1941.
+
+The staff of experts and the Defendant Keitel had succeeded in
+establishing the competency of the Reich Administration of Justice for
+the persons removed to Germany (see last paragraph of directives of 7
+December 1941). Keitel had guaranteed this stipulation by means of the
+first Enactment Decree governing the directives, in which he specified
+(last sentence in Paragraph I, IV) that unless orders to the contrary
+were issued by the OKW, the case would be turned over to the civil
+authorities in accordance with Section 3, Paragraph 2, second sentence,
+of the Articles of War. The defendant believed that in this way he had
+at least made certain that the persons concerned would have the benefit
+of regular court proceedings and that in accordance with the German
+regulations for the accommodation and treatment of prisoners on trial
+and prisoners serving a sentence, there would be no danger to life and
+limb. Keitel and his staff of experts reassured themselves by the fact
+that however cruel the suffering and suspense endured by those concerned
+might be, the lives of the deported persons had at least been saved.
+
+In this connection, allusion is also made to the text of the covering
+letter of 12 December 1941. As the Codefendant General Jodl stated
+during his examination, a certain wording was regularly adopted to
+indicate that the signatory did not agree with the order submitted. The
+covering letter begins with the words: “It is the carefully considered
+desire of the Führer ...”
+
+The closing sentence runs: “The attached directives ... represent the
+Führer’s views.”
+
+Persons who received such letters knew from that wording that here was
+another order of the Führer which could not be evaded, and concluded
+that the order should be applied as leniently as possible.
+
+The letter of 2 February 1942 originated with the counterintelligence
+office (Amt Ausland Abwehr), and the original which is before you must
+have been signed by Canaris. At that time the defendant was not in
+Berlin where, after promulgation of the decree of 7 December 1941, the
+matter was dealt with further. Keitel, at the Führer’s headquarters, was
+not informed of the contents of the letter. In connection with the above
+remarks, the possibility of leniency in application, which might be
+deduced from the wording of the letter, resided in the fact that
+counterintelligence offices were directed “to insure as far as possible
+before making the arrest that they were in possession of sufficient
+evidence to justify a conviction of the offender.” The competent
+military court had also to be approached before the arrest took place
+with a view to ascertaining whether the evidence was adequate.
+
+In Germany the persons concerned were to be handed over to the Reich
+Administration of Justice. The correctness of the Defendant Keitel’s
+assumption in this respect is borne out by the fact that Canaris, in
+view of his attitude with which the Tribunal is familiar, would never
+have ordered a prisoner to be handed over to the Gestapo. As already
+stated, the Defendant Keitel did not know of the letter of 2 February
+1942.
+
+Although the Defendant Keitel believed that he had succeeded as far as
+possible in safeguarding those in question, the Night and Fog Decree, as
+it was later called, weighed heavily on his mind. Keitel does not deny
+that this decree is incompatible with international law and that he knew
+that.
+
+What Keitel denies, however, is that he knew—or that prior to the
+Nuremberg Trial he knew—that on arrival in the Reich the persons
+involved were imprisoned by the Police and then transferred to
+concentration camps. This was contrary to the meaning and purpose of the
+decree. The Defendant Keitel could not know of this because in cases
+which did not involve proceedings by a military court, the competency of
+the Armed Forces only extended to turning over the persons concerned
+through the competent military court officials to the Police to be
+transferred to Germany and there turned over to the Administration of
+Justice. The Defendant Keitel is unable to say from his own knowledge
+why so many persons were brought into concentration camps and there
+subjected to the treatment known as “Night and Fog,” as described by
+witnesses who have appeared here. The evidence presented to this
+Tribunal must lead to the conclusion that all political suspects who, as
+a result of political measures, were removed from the occupied
+territories to Germany for detention in concentration camps were without
+the knowledge of the military authorities designated “NN” prisoners by
+the Police, for according to the testimonies we have heard the majority
+of persons in “NN” camps had not been formally sentenced by military
+courts in occupied territories for transfer to Germany.
+
+It is evident therefore that Police authorities in the occupied
+territories made use of this decree as a universal and unrestricted
+_carte blanche_ for deportations, exceeding every conceivable limit and
+disregarding the exclusive rights exercised by the military authorities
+and the rules of procedure imposed upon them.
+
+Such a state of affairs in the occupied territories without the
+knowledge of the Armed Forces authorities can only be explained by the
+fact that as a result of the appointment of Higher SS and Police leaders
+the military commanders of the occupied territories no longer had
+executive powers in Police affairs and that these Higher SS and Police
+leaders received their orders from the Reichsführer SS.
+
+The Reichsführer SS and the Higher SS and Police leaders were never
+authorized by the OKW to apply this decree, which was intended as a
+police executive measure to be used only by the Armed Forces. The decree
+affected only those offices of the Armed Forces exercising judicial
+authority; and it is clear from the wording that it was restricted to
+these and drafted to apply to them.
+
+The German Armistice Commission’s letter of 10 August 1944 (Document
+843-PS) proves that the OKW really had no knowledge of this improper
+application of the decree of 7 December 1941. It says there:
+
+ “... that the basis for arrests seems to have undergone a
+ change, since in the early stages they were only made in
+ individual cases of attacks on the Reich or the occupation
+ forces; in other words, those elements were apprehended who had
+ played an active part in definite cases”—and who were liable to
+ punishment under those articles of the Hague Convention which
+ refer to land warfare—“whereas at present ... numerous persons
+ are also being deported to Germany who, on account of their
+ anti-German sentiments, are being removed from France as a
+ precautionary measure ...”
+
+Paragraph 4 of that letter contains the following passage:
+
+ “The above-mentioned decree is based on the condition that the
+ persons arrested will be made the subject of judicial
+ proceedings. There is reason to believe that on account of the
+ number of cases—especially those coming within the scope of
+ precautionary measures—such proceedings are now frequently
+ dispensed with and prisoners are no longer confined in the
+ detention or penal institutions of the German legal authorities,
+ but in concentration camps. In this respect, too, there has been
+ a considerable change as compared with the original provisions
+ of the decree ...”
+
+The OKW’s reply of 2 September 1944, which is signed by Dr. Lehmann,
+refers expressly to the directives of the Führer decree of 7 December
+1941, the so-called Night and Fog Decree. It contains no statement to
+the effect that the original conditions for deportation to Germany were
+changed by the OKW.
+
+This reply, however, was sent from Berlin without the knowledge of the
+Defendant Keitel; and the Armistice Commission’s letter was obviously
+also sent to Berlin, where the legal department of the Armed Forces was
+situated. Keitel himself was at the Führer’s headquarters and did not
+hear of the correspondence.
+
+It must be admitted that failure to reply immediately to the German
+Armistice Commission’s letter of 10 August 1944, with the explanation
+that this constituted an abuse of the decree of 7 December 1941 and the
+directives issued in connection with it, was a grave omission. An
+investigation should have been initiated at once in order to find and
+punish those responsible for this abuse. Insofar as the Tribunal should
+regard Hitler’s military staff as guilty, the Defendant Keitel accepts
+responsibility within the scope of his general responsibility as Chief
+of the OKW.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps this will be a convenient time to take a recess.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. NELTE: Mr. President, the Prosecution have charged the Defendant
+Keitel with participating in the deportations for the purpose of
+obtaining forced labor. In this connection Keitel declares that his
+competency did not cover the procurement, recruiting, and conscription
+of people in the occupied territories nor did it cover allocation of the
+labor forces procured in this way for the armament industry. The
+Codefendant Sauckel confirmed this in his testimony of 27 May 1946.
+
+Mr. President, I should like to have official notice taken of the
+following statements without my reading them. My colleague Dr.
+Servatius, according to our agreement, will explain the connection
+between the Armed Forces replacement and the procurement of manpower
+through the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor.
+
+[sm type begins]The Codefendant Sauckel gave the following testimony:[sm
+type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Question: You mean by that that the OKW and the
+ Defendant Keitel had no functions whatsoever appertaining to the
+ matter of procurement, recruiting, and conscription of labor in
+ the occupied territories?[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Answer: He had no function whatsoever
+ appertaining to this matter. I got in touch with Field Marshal
+ Keitel, because the Führer frequently charged me to ask Field
+ Marshal Keitel to transmit his orders by phone or by
+ instructions to the army groups.[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Question: Did the OKW, and in particular Keitel
+ as Chief of the OKW, have any function appertaining to the
+ question of labor allocation in the homeland?[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Answer: No; because the commitment of workers
+ took place in the economic branches for which they had been
+ requested. They had nothing to do with the OKW.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]During the cross-examination by General Alexandrov
+documents were presented which, according to the opinion of the
+Prosecution, should prove the participation of Keitel and the OKW. In
+this connection it must be examined whether and in what way the OKW and
+Keitel had participated in the sphere of duty of Defendant Sauckel as
+Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor (GBA). Document
+USSR-365, presented by the Prosecution, contains the basic provisions
+concerning spheres of tasks and powers of the GBA, the decree of 21
+March 1942 about the appointment of Sauckel as GBA, the order of Göring
+as Delegate for the Four Year Plan dated 27 March 1942, the program for
+labor allocation, and the task and solution as conceived by Sauckel.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]These documents give expression to the relationships and
+contacts of the GBA with many offices. These relationships and contacts
+vary in their nature.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The jurisdiction and the official channels in the sphere
+of tasks of the GBA are clear: He is the spokesman for the Four Year
+Plan (Order Number 3 of 27 March 1942) and he was therefore subordinate
+to Reich Marshal Göring and Hitler, who was identified with the Four
+Year Plan. The relationships and contacts of the OKW or Keitel with the
+GBA and his sphere of tasks, according to the outcome of the evidence
+(testimony of Keitel, Sauckel, and the documents) were as follows:[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The replacement system for the whole Armed Forces was
+under the jurisdiction of the Defendant Keitel in his capacity as Chief
+of Staff of the High Command of the Armed Forces (OKW). Losses at the
+front were reported to the OKW by each individual branch of the Armed
+Forces and at the same time replacements were requested.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]On the basis of these requests, Keitel submitted a
+report to the Führer, according to which replacements had to be procured
+for the troops of the various branches of the Armed Forces at certain
+designated times by the service commands through their replacement
+inspectorates.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The replacement inspectorates consequently called up the
+recruit year group, besides those draftees who had been deferred up to
+that time. With the war progressing, the result was almost invariable
+that, for instance, the Armament Ministry (for the deferred employees of
+the armament industry), the Ministry for Agriculture (for the deferred
+employees of agriculture), the Transportation Ministry (for the deferred
+employees working for the railroad), et cetera, made the greatest
+difficulties with regard to the demands of the replacement authorities,
+and protested against them.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]They pointed out that the tasks of the various
+departments would suffer dangerously if the deferred employees were
+removed without further ado. The competent ministers requested that
+before the release of deferred employees new workers should be procured
+to make up for those released.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Therefore, the matter was referred by way of the labor
+offices to the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor
+(GBA), whose task it was to procure the necessary manpower for the
+domestic labor allocation required. The Defendant Sauckel as the GBA,
+who as a special deputy personally did not have at his disposal an
+independent organization of his own for the recruiting, procurement, and
+possible conscription of labor, was therefore forced to get in touch
+with the competent authorities in the occupied territories for the
+execution of his task.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](a) In the occupied territories under civil
+administration (Holland, Norway, East), it was the Reich Commissioner
+who had to assist Sauckel.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](b) In the territories under military commanders
+(France, Belgium and the Balkans) it was the Quartermaster General of
+the Army.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](c) In Italy, in the highest instance, it was the
+Ambassador, Rahn.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]This is obvious from the decree of 27 March 1942.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Before Sauckel became active in the execution of his
+task in the various territories, he invariably turned to Hitler, whose
+subordinate he was with respect to the Four Year Plan, in order to
+obtain through his instructions the necessary backing by the local
+authorities. This was done in such a way that the order was issued to
+the local authorities to give Sauckel the assistance which he considered
+necessary for the execution of his task. The Defendant Keitel was not
+present at such discussions between Hitler and Sauckel, nor did he have
+any jurisdiction or competence in these questions. However, somebody had
+to inform the local authorities about Hitler’s orders, and the result
+was that Hitler, who did not recognize any difficulties of jurisdiction,
+told the next best man to inform the local authorities about Sauckel and
+to point out Hitler’s wish to grant him all the necessary assistance.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]These “next best” were Keitel, for the military
+administration of the occupied territories, or Dr. Lammers, for the
+territories under civilian administration.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Such was the contact which existed between Keitel and
+Sauckel in this matter. How the details of recruiting or otherwise
+procuring labor were carried out was not within the competence of the
+OKW, nor did they receive any reports on the matter. The interest of the
+OKW was limited to the fact that the required number of soldiers were
+placed at its disposal through induction by the replacement authorities.
+In particular, the OKW and the Defendant Keitel had nothing to do with
+the allocation of the labor procured by the Plenipotentiary General for
+the Allocation of Labor within war economy; this was solely the business
+of the labor offices, where firms requiring labor requested the workers
+deemed necessary.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](1) The name of Keitel stands at the beginning of
+Sauckel’s activity, as submitted by the Prosecution, because Keitel was
+cosignatory to the Führer decree concerning the Plenipotentiary General
+for the Allocation of Labor (Document USSR-365). From repeated
+references of the Prosecution to this fact the conclusion must be drawn
+that apparently it sees in this cosignatory act of the Defendant Keitel
+the beginning of a chain of developments, at the end of which stood such
+frightful happenings as were presented here.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In this connection I would refer to the significance,
+expounded elsewhere, of the cosignature by Keitel as Chief of the OKW on
+such decrees of the Führer. This fact, which penally cannot be
+considered as determinative, does not constitute guilt for the reason
+that all conception of the events occurring during the further course of
+developments was lacking.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](2) If the Führer’s decree of March 1942 provides the
+legal origin of the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor
+(GBA), the first step in the participation of this official is also
+connected with the name of Keitel as head of the OKW, as the personnel
+replacements matters were subordinated to him and he made his requests
+for replacement of losses at the front to the subordinate military
+replacement offices. Here also the same applies as in (1), as neither an
+appreciable determinative effect nor criminal guilt was involved.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins](3) Owing to the situation, as characterized by the
+shortage of manpower, there came into being a purely factual connection
+between the military personnel requirements and the requirements of the
+economic replacement of workers, without Keitel thereby coming in
+contact with the GBA either as regards competence or orders.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Sauckel confirmed the statement of Keitel that the OKW
+had nothing to do with the recruiting, levying, or any other
+mobilization of labor, nor with the allocation of the labor procured for
+German economy.[sm type ends]
+
+I have to refer to some documents which the French Prosecution have
+submitted to incriminate the OKW and Keitel on account of active
+participation in deportation. These are Documents 1292-PS, 3819-PS,
+814-PS, and 824-PS.
+
+The first document is a marginal note by the Chief of the Reich
+Chancellery, Dr. Lammers, on a conference with Hitler, at which the
+question of procuring labor for 1944 was discussed. The Defendant Keitel
+took part in this discussion. Annexed to this report is a copy of a
+letter from the Defendant Sauckel dated 5 January 1944, in which he sums
+up the results of the conference of 4 January and proposes a Führer
+decree. I quote the following passages:
+
+ “5. The Führer pointed out that all German offices in occupied
+ territories and countries within the Tripartite Agreement must
+ become convinced of the necessity of taking in foreign labor, in
+ order to be able to give uniform support to the Plenipotentiary
+ General for the Allocation of Labor in carrying out the required
+ organization, propaganda, and police measures.”
+
+I quote from the penultimate paragraph:
+
+ “In my opinion the decree should in the first place be sent to
+ the following offices ...
+
+ “3. The Chief of the OKW, Field Marshal Keitel, for the
+ information of the Military Commanders in France and Belgium,
+ the Military Commander Southeast, the General accredited to the
+ Fascist Republican Government of Italy, the chiefs of the army
+ groups in the East.”
+
+The document therefore proves that Field Marshal Keitel took part in a
+conference, without, however, stating his point of view on the problem
+of labor procurement; and that he was to be informed of the Führer
+decree so that the military commanders might be informed. This confirms
+what the Defendant Keitel stated in the passages which I have not read
+as to how he came to be concerned with this question. The second and
+third documents refer to a conference in the Reich Chancellery on 11
+July 1944, in which Field Marshal Keitel did not take part.
+
+Now the French prosecutor has made the statement that the teletype is an
+order issued by Field Marshal Keitel to the military commanders to carry
+out the decisions of the conference of 11 July. M. Herzog has said in
+this connection that Keitel’s order was dated 15 July 1944. A brief
+examination of the document, a photostat, shows it to be a teletype
+dated 9 July, containing an invitation from the Chief of the Reich
+Chancellery, Dr. Lammers, to a conference on 11 July, which invitation
+Keitel transmitted to the military commanders.
+
+This was, therefore, an error. The conclusions based by the Prosecution
+on this document are therefore also invalid, but the document is
+interesting from another point of view as well. It contains the
+following statement:
+
+ “The following directives will govern the attitude of military
+ commanders or their representatives:
+
+ “... I refer to my directives for the collaboration of the Armed
+ Forces in the procurement of labor from France (OKW/West/ku
+ (Verw. 1 u. 2 West) Nr. 05210/44 geh.).”
+
+The Defendant Keitel requested me to call the attention of the Court to
+this method of expression for the following reasons: Numerous documents
+bearing the signature “Keitel” have been submitted here. In accordance
+with his position, which has already been described and which excluded
+all powers of command, Keitel never used the first person in
+communications or transmissions of orders. Apart from this document,
+only one other teletype was submitted by the Prosecution in which the
+first person is used. In consideration of the large number of documents
+which bear out Keitel’s statement, his claim that he was transmitting an
+order from the Führer must be believed; and, indeed, the whole style of
+wording is that of a Führer order.
+
+General Warlimont (Document 3819-PS) also expressly refers during the
+conference of 11 July to a “recently issued Führer order,” the contents
+of which as reproduced by him are exactly as contained in the teletype
+directive bearing the signature “Keitel.”
+
+The newly-submitted Document F-824 (RF-1515) is also significant and
+confirms the evidence given by the Defendant Keitel. This is a letter
+written on 25 July 1944 by the Commander-in-Chief West, Von Rundstedt,
+who in the meantime had become the Chief of the Military Commanders in
+France and Belgium. It states that “by order of the Führer the demands
+of the GBA and of Speer are to be fulfilled”; further, that in the event
+of evacuation of the battle area measures must be taken to secure
+refugees for labor and finally, that reports on the measures taken must
+be sent to the OKW.
+
+This reference to the Führer’s order shortly after 11 July 1944 shows,
+as does Warlimont’s statement, that no directives from Keitel or the OKW
+existed. It may therefore be considered proved that neither Keitel
+himself nor the OKW had any part in measures for the recruitment or
+conscription of labor. The OKW was the office responsible for
+transmitting the orders which Hitler as Sauckel’s superior wished to
+forward to the military commanders; it had no competence and no legal
+responsibility.
+
+Nor is this complex in line with subjects within the ministerial scope
+of the OKW, where at least there functioned a team of experts providing
+an opportunity for voicing objections.
+
+In the sphere of labor procurement and labor commitment Keitel was in
+contact with Sauckel’s activities at the following points:
+
+(a) He was cosignatory of the Führer’s decree of 21 March 1942
+concerning the appointment of the GBA;
+
+(b) He transmitted Hitler’s orders to support the activities of the GBA
+by special instructions to the local military authorities in the
+occupied territories.
+
+Now, the French Prosecution, at the session of 2 February 1946, made the
+following statement in regard to the deportation of the Jews, within the
+scope of the Defendant Keitel’s responsibility:
+
+ “I shall discuss the order for the deportation of the Jews
+ later; and I shall prove that in the case of France this order
+ was the result of joint action on the part of the military
+ government, the diplomatic authorities, and the Security Police.
+ This leads to the conclusion that: (1) the Chief of the High
+ Command, _et cetera_; (2) the Reich Foreign Minister, and (3)
+ the Chief of the Security Police and Reich Security Main Office
+ (RSHA) must necessarily have been informed of and have agreed to
+ this action, for it is clear that through their official
+ functions they must have learned that such measures concerning
+ important matters were taken, and also that the decisions were
+ invariably made jointly by the staffs of three different
+ administrations. These three persons are therefore responsible
+ and guilty.”
+
+If you examine the very detailed treatment of this point of the
+Indictment you will find that the High Command of the Armed Forces is
+not mentioned and that no document is produced which originates either
+with the OKW or with the Defendant Keitel. It appears from the Keitel
+affidavit, Document Book 2, that the military commander for France, who
+is mentioned several times, was not subordinated to the OKW. In handling
+this question the Prosecution have attempted to prove that the “Army” as
+M. Faure says, co-operated with the Foreign Office and the Police, and
+is endeavoring to place responsibility for this co-operation upon the
+highest authorities, that is, in the case of the Army, on the OKW, and
+therefore on Keitel. This deduction is erroneous. In order to make that
+clear, I must point out that there was a military commander in France.
+This military commander was invested with civil and military authority
+and represented the defunct state authority, so that in addition to
+military tasks he had police and political functions. The military
+commanders were appointed by the OKH and received their orders from the
+latter. It follows that on this question they had no direct relations
+with the OKW. Since the Defendant Keitel as Chief of the OKW was not
+superior to the OKH, there is likewise no direct relation either of
+subordination or seniority.
+
+M. Faure’s statement in this connection is unfortunately true. In France
+there existed a large number of authorities who worked along different
+lines, contradicted each other, and frequently encroached upon each
+other’s spheres of competency. The OKW and the Defendant Keitel had
+actually nothing to do with the Jewish question in France or with the
+deportations to Auschwitz and other camps; they had no powers of command
+or control, and therefore no responsibility.
+
+The fact that the letter K in the telegram of 13 May 1942 (Document
+RF-1215) was interpreted to mean Keitel is characteristic of the
+attitude adopted by the prosecuting authorities, all of whom assumed
+that the Defendant Keitel was implicated. The French Prosecutor has
+fortunately cleared up the error.
+
+The Prisoner-of-War Question.
+
+The fate of prisoners of war has always aroused considerable feeling.
+All civilized nations have tried to alleviate the fate of soldiers who
+fell into the hands of the enemy as far as was possible without
+prejudicing the conduct of the war. The reaching of an agreement to be
+adhered to even when the nations were engaged in a life and death
+struggle has been considered one of the most important advances of
+civilization. The torturing uncertainty with regard to the fate of these
+soldiers seemed to be ended; their humane treatment guaranteed; the
+dignity of the disarmed opponent assured.
+
+Our belief in this achievement of human society has begun to waver, as
+in the case of so many other instances. Although the agreement was
+formally adhered to originally owing to the determined resistance of the
+general officers, we must nevertheless admit that a brutal policy
+oblivious of the nation’s own sons and of anything but its own striving
+after power, has in many cases disregarded the sanctity of the Red Cross
+and the unwritten laws of humanity.
+
+The treatment of the responsibility of the Defendant Keitel in the
+general complex of the prisoner-of-war system comprises the following
+separate problems:
+
+(1) The general organization of the treatment of prisoners of war, that
+is, the German legislation on the prisoner-of-war system; (2) the power
+of command over prisoner-of-war camps, which are classified under Oflag,
+Stalag, and Dulag; (3) the supervision and control of this legislation
+and its application; (4) the individual cases which have been brought
+before the Court in the course of the indictment.
+
+Since the organization of the prisoner-of-war system has been set forth
+as part of the presentation of evidence, I can restrict myself to
+stating that Keitel was, by order of Hitler and within the scope of his
+assignments as War Minister, in accordance with the decree of 4 February
+1938 competent and to that extent responsible: (a) for the material
+right to issue ordinances within the entire local and pertinent sphere,
+restricted in part by co-operation and co-responsibility regarding the
+utilization of prisoner-of-war labor; (b) for the general allocation of
+prisoners of war arriving in Germany to the corps area commander,
+without having powers of command over prisoner-of-war camps and
+prisoners of war themselves; (c) for the general supervision of the
+camps in the OKW area not including those within the zone of operations,
+the rear Army area, or the area of the military commanders, nor the Navy
+and Air Force prisoner-of-war camps.
+
+The competent office in the OKW was the “Chief of the Prisoner-of-War
+Organization,” who was several times made personally responsible by the
+Prosecution. The Defendant Keitel attaches importance to the fact that
+the Chief of the Prisoners of War Organization was his subordinate
+through the Armed Forces Department. Hence the responsibility of the
+Defendant Keitel in this domain is self-evident, even in those cases in
+which he did not personally sign orders and decrees.
+
+The basic regulations for the treatment of prisoners of war were: (1)
+The service regulations issued by the Chief of the OKW within the scope
+of normal preparations for mobilization, and laid down in a series of
+Army, Navy, and Air Force publications; (2) the stipulations of the
+Geneva Convention, to which special reference was made in the service
+regulations; (3) the general decrees and orders which became necessary
+from time to time in the course of events.
+
+Apart from the treatment of Soviet Russian prisoners of war who were
+subject to regulations on an entirely different basis, to which I shall
+later make particular reference, the provisions of the service
+regulations in accordance with international law, that is the Geneva
+Convention, held good. The OKW exercised supervision over the strict
+observance of these Army service regulations through an Inspector of the
+Prisoners of War Organization and, from 1943 on, through a further
+control agency, the Inspector General of the Prisoners of War
+Organization.
+
+The representatives of the protecting powers and the International Red
+Cross may be considered as constituting an additional control agency,
+which no doubt submitted to the various governments reports on
+inspections and visits to the camps, in accordance with the provisions
+of the Geneva Convention. No such reports have been submitted here by
+the Prosecution; I shall come back to the charges made here by the
+French prosecutor. But the fact that the British and American
+prosecutors, for instance, have not submitted such reports may well
+permit the conclusion that the protecting powers did not discover any
+serious violations with regard to the treatment of inmates of
+prisoner-of-war camps.
+
+The treatment of prisoners of war, which led to no serious complaints
+during the first few years of the war with the Western Powers—I except
+isolated cases like that of Dieppe—became more and more difficult for
+the OKW from year to year, because political and economic considerations
+gained a very strong influence in this sector. The Reichsführer SS tried
+to get the Prisoners of War Organization into his own hands. The
+resulting struggles for power caused Hitler to turn over the Prisoners
+of War Organization to Himmler from October 1944 on, the alleged reason
+being that the Armed Forces had shown itself to be too weak and allowed
+itself to be influenced by doubts based on international law. Another
+important factor was the influence exerted on Hitler, and through him on
+the OKW, by the labor authorities and the armament sector. This
+influence grew stronger as the labor shortage increased.
+
+The Party Chancellery, the German Labor Front, and the Propaganda
+Ministry also played a part in this question, which was in itself purely
+a military one. The OKW was engaged in a constant struggle with all
+these agencies, most of which had more influence than the OKW.
+
+All these circumstances must be taken into consideration in order
+properly to understand and evaluate the responsibility of the Defendant
+Keitel. As he himself had to carry out the functions “by order,” and
+since Hitler always kept the problem of the Prisoners of War
+Organization under his personal control for reasons previously
+described, the Defendant Keitel was scarcely ever in a position to voice
+his own, that is, military, objections against instructions and orders.
+
+The Treatment of French Prisoners of War.
+
+As a result of the agreement of Montoire, the keynote to apply to
+relations with French prisoners of war became “collaboration.” Their
+treatment moved in the direction indicated by this; and discussions with
+Ambassador Scapini brought about a considerable improvement for them. In
+this connection I refer to the affidavit of Ambassador Scapini, who
+states among other things:
+
+ “It is correct that General Reinecke examined the questions at
+ hand objectively and without hostility, and that he attempted to
+ regulate them reasonably when this depended on his authority
+ alone. He took a different attitude when the pressure exercised
+ on the OKW by the Labor Service—that is by the Allocation of
+ Labor—and sometimes by the Party made itself felt.”
+
+The prisoners of war used for labor were scarcely guarded, and those
+employed in the country had almost complete freedom of movement. By
+virtue of the direct understanding with the Vichy Government there were
+considerable alleviations in comparison with the rules of the Geneva
+Convention, after repatriation under the armistice provisions had very
+considerably lessened the number of the original prisoners of war.
+
+To mention just a few ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Nelte, is there anything very important in these next
+few pages, until you get to Page 183?
+
+DR. NELTE: It is the treatment of the French ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: If you would only deal with it in a very general way. I
+should have thought there was nothing very important until you get to
+Page 183 where you begin to deal with the accusation in reference to the
+Sagan case. You see, it is 12 o’clock now.
+
+DR. NELTE: I believe that by 1 o’clock I shall be through. Or am I to
+understand your remark to mean that you are limiting my speech to a
+certain time? I asked you to grant me 7 hours for my speech, and my
+request ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: That is what the Tribunal’s order was.
+
+DR. NELTE: I submitted my request to the Tribunal, and believed I could
+assume that in this particular case my request was granted, but if that
+is not the case ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Well, the Tribunal will give you until 12:30 on account
+of any interruptions which I may have made. But I again suggest to you
+that there is really nothing between 178 and 183 which is of any real
+importance.
+
+DR. NELTE: I hope, Mr. President, that that does not mean that these
+statements are to be considered irrelevant. I think my subjective
+opinions ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I said “of real importance.”
+
+[sm type begins]DR. NELTE: (1) Release of all prisoners of war born in
+or before 1900; (2) release of fathers of families with numerous
+children and widowers with children; (3) considerable alleviation of the
+mail and parcel facilities; increased German support for officers’ and
+enlisted personnel camps by establishing institutions for entertainment
+and physical welfare of the prisoners of war; (4) for officer
+candidates, facilitation of their further training in their civilian
+occupation and care by a French General, Didelet.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]As Ambassador Scapini himself has testified, he and the
+members of his delegation had complete freedom of correspondence with
+and access to all camps and labor detachments, except for special
+military reasons in isolated cases. The members of the delegation were
+able to speak to their prisoner comrades privately, like every
+representative of a protecting power, and they were particularly able to
+make detailed inquiries about conditions with the French camp leader or
+the trustees, who were elected by the prisoners of war themselves. In
+addition to this, officers who had been selected by him personally were
+placed at his disposal as his assistants.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The subsequent regrettable occurrences, as presented by
+the French Prosecution here, resulted from the deterioration of the
+political and military situation. One of these occurrences was the
+escape of General Giraud, which Hitler, in spite of all arguments
+brought by the OKW, used to have measures against the French generals
+and officers increased in severity. The second decisive incident was the
+Allied invasion of Africa, which led to general unrest and to numerous
+attempts at escape. Finally, at the time of the last stage of the war,
+measures were applied which can only be explained by the—I would call
+it catastrophic—morale.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In examining the responsibility of the Defendant Keitel
+it must be considered that he did not possess any direct influence on
+the occurrences in the camps and workshops. His responsibility can only
+be determined if it is proven that he had caused a lack of necessary
+supervision, or that no intervention had taken place after learning of
+such occurrences. In this respect, however, there is no proof of guilt
+of the OKW.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The French Prosecution, in the charges against the
+Defendant Keitel, have presented a note from Ambassador Scapini to the
+German Ambassador, Abetz, of 4 April 1941 under a collective number,
+F-668. This refers to the retaining of French civilians in Germany as
+prisoners of war. This document states on Page 5:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“In order to facilitate the examination of the
+ categories to be released, I am transmitting enclosed a
+ summarized chart. I am also enclosing a copy of the note of the
+ German Armistice Commission Number 178/41 of 20 January 1941,
+ which refers to the decision of the OKW to liberate all French
+ civilians who are being treated as prisoners of war.[sm type
+ ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“I hope that the execution of this decision will
+ be expedited through this report, which I have the honor to
+ submit to you.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]I have asked the French Prosecution to pass on to me the
+note of the German Armistice Commission Number 178/41 of 20 January
+1941, in which this decision of the OKW is mentioned. I believe that the
+copy of this note, which was attached to the communication of 4 April
+1941 (Document F-668) should have been handed over with this document,
+because it was part of this document. Unfortunately this has not been
+done.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]From the reference it can be seen that the OKW, and
+thereby the Defendant Keitel, held the view that things would have to be
+dealt with in a correct manner in accordance with the agreements with
+France, and that the OKW, which was the proper authority for these
+fundamental orders with regard to the prisoners of war, had decided to
+release all French civilians who were being treated as prisoners of
+war.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It is difficult to recognize how this document can serve
+as evidence of guilt of the Defendant Keitel. Rather will this document
+have to be regarded as symptomatic of the fact that the Defendant
+Keitel, when violations against existing agreements came to his
+knowledge, saw to it that they were stopped.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The Treatment of Soviet Russian Prisoners of War.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Hitler already regarded the prisoner-of-war problem as a
+personal domain of his legislation, and the more time passed, the less
+he regarded it from the points of view of international law and military
+needs, but rather from a political and economic angle. The problem in
+the treatment of Soviet Russian prisoners of war from the very beginning
+was also subject to ideological considerations which for him was the
+primary motive in the war against the Soviet Union. The fact that the
+Soviet Union was not a member of the Geneva Convention was exploited by
+Hitler, in order to obtain a free hand in the treatment of Soviet
+Russian prisoners of war.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]He stated to the generals that the Soviet Union felt
+equally free from all stipulations which had been created by the Geneva
+Convention for the protection of prisoners of war. One must read the
+decrees of 8 September 1941 (Document Number EC-338, Exhibit Number
+USSR-356) in order to understand clearly Hitler’s attitude. In the
+official document of the counterintelligence office (Amt Ausland Abwehr)
+of 15 September 1941, rules were laid down, which were to be observed
+according to international law, concerning the treatment of prisoners of
+war where the Geneva Convention did not apply between belligerents.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The Defendant Keitel has testified on the witness stand
+that he had accepted the viewpoints laid down in this document and had
+presented them to Hitler. The latter strictly refused to rescind the
+decree of 8 September 1941. He told Keitel:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“Your doubts originate from the soldierly
+ conception of a chivalrous war. Here we are concerned with the
+ destruction of an ideology.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Keitel noted this passage down word for word and added
+to his written statement of 15 September 1941: “I therefore approve and
+countenance these measures.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It was a typical example of Keitel expressing his doubts
+and Hitler taking his final decision. Keitel stood up for these
+decisions and did not let his subordinate offices know that he was of a
+different opinion. Such was his attitude. For this also he is, within
+the limits of his official position, taking responsibility.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]What Keitel actually thought is revealed in the excerpt
+submitted as Document Keitel-6, Document Book 1, from the book
+_Employment Conditions for Eastern Workers and Soviet Russian Prisoners
+of War_. The Codefendant Speer has testified in cross-examination that
+he over and over again told the Defendant Keitel that any employment of
+prisoners of war of any enemy country in enterprises prohibited by the
+Geneva Convention was out of the question. Speer further testified that
+Keitel several times rejected any attempt to employ prisoners of war of
+any western nation in actual war plants.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The defense counsel for the Defendant Speer will also
+deal with this question in detail.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In addition, I just want to submit certain individual
+cases charged against the Defendant Keitel personally by the
+Prosecution, that is to say, cases where, in the opinion of the
+Prosecution, he is supposed to have exceeded the limits of the general
+responsibility inherent in his position.[sm type ends]
+
+I should not like to omit that case which was repeatedly mentioned—and
+rightly so—in the course of the evidence, the case of the 50 Royal Air
+Force officers, the shameful case of Sagan.
+
+It particularly affects us as Germans, because it shows the utter lack
+of all restraint and proportion in the orders and the character of
+Hitler, who did not allow himself to be influenced for an instant in his
+explosive decisions by any thought of the honor of the German Armed
+Forces.
+
+The cross-examination of the Defendant Keitel by the representative of
+the British Prosecution has determined how far his name too has been
+implicated in these abominable facts. Although the evidence clearly
+establishes the fact that Keitel neither heard nor transmitted Hitler’s
+murderous order, that he and the Armed Forces had nothing to do with the
+execution of this order and, finally, that he did everything in his
+power to prevent the escaped officers from being handed over to Himmler
+and did at least succeed in saving the officers who were taken back to
+the camp, he is painfully conscious of his guilt in not realizing at the
+time the terrible blow which such a measure must inflict on German
+military prestige throughout the world. In connection with the treatment
+of the Sagan case the French Prosecution confronted the Defendant Keitel
+with Document 1650-PS, which deals with the treatment of escaped
+prisoners of war.
+
+This, Mr. President, is the so-called “Bullet Decree.” Considering the
+lack of time, I should like to deal shortly with this case, but I must
+deal with it because it is one of the most significant and gravest
+accusations against my client; I shall only summarize.
+
+During his cross-examination, Keitel made the following statement:
+
+ “This Document 1650-PS emanates from a police agency and
+ contains a reference to the OKW by the words: ‘The OKW has
+ decreed the following ...’”
+
+Keitel says:
+
+ “I have certainly neither signed this order of the OKW nor seen
+ it; there is no doubt about that.”
+
+He cannot explain it; he can only assume how this order came to be
+issued by the Reich Security Main Office.
+
+In his examination he mentions the various possibilities whereby such an
+order could have reached the office which issued it. Then he refers to
+another document, 1544-PS, which contains all the orders and directives
+concerning prisoners of war, but not this order referring to the escaped
+officers and noncommissioned officers.
+
+The witness Westhoff has confirmed that the concept “Stufe III” and its
+meaning were unknown to him and to the office of the OKW Prisoners of
+War Organization. He also stated that on assuming office on 1 April 1944
+he found no order of this nature, not even a file note.
+
+The meaning of that Bullet Decree was completely obscure. I believe this
+obscurity has been cleared up by the evidence given by the Codefendant
+Kaltenbrunner, who on his part had never before spoken to the Defendant
+Keitel on the matter.
+
+I pass on to Page 187, where Kaltenbrunner said:
+
+ “I had never heard of the Bullet Decree before I assumed the
+ office. It was an entirely new concept for me. Therefore I asked
+ what it meant. He answered that it was a Führer order; that was
+ all he knew. I was not satisfied with this information, and on
+ the same day I sent a teletype message to Himmler asking for
+ permission to look up a Führer order known as the Bullet
+ Decree.... A few days later, Müller came to see me on Himmler’s
+ orders and submitted to me a decree which, however, did not
+ originate with Hitler but with Himmler, and in which Himmler
+ stated that he was transmitting to me a verbal Führer order.”
+
+From this it is safe to assume that, without consulting Keitel and
+without the latter’s knowledge, Hitler must have given a verbal order to
+Himmler, as stated in Document 1650-PS which was submitted here.
+
+Now I come to Page 190 of my final plea:
+
+[sm type begins]This confirms the assumption which Keitel expressed in
+his interrogation, although Kaltenbrunner had not previously informed
+him that he knew of verbal orders given by the Führer.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]3) In another case also, the one dealing with the
+branding of Soviet prisoners, Keitel’s statement in the witness box has
+proved to be the simple truth.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The witness Roemer has confirmed in her supplementary
+affidavit that the order to mark Soviet prisoners of war by branding was
+cancelled immediately after being issued. A further statement of the
+Defendant Keitel is therefore also credible, according to which this
+order had been issued without his knowledge, although naturally Keitel’s
+responsibility for the acts of the party concerned is not thereby
+contested.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]4) In this connection I refer finally to Document 744-PS
+dated 8 July 1943, submitted in support of the charge against Keitel. It
+deals with the increased iron and steel program, for the execution of
+which the allocation of the necessary miners from among the prisoners of
+war was ordered. The first two paragraphs of the document read:[sm type
+ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“For the extension of the iron and steel program
+ the Führer on 7 July ordered the unqualified promotion of the
+ necessary coal production and the employment of prisoners of war
+ to cover the labor requirements. The Führer ordered the
+ following measures to be taken with all possible dispatch for
+ the ultimate purpose of assigning 300,000 additional workers to
+ the coal mining industry.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The last paragraph reads:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“In connection with the report to the Führer,
+ the Chief of Prisoner of War Affairs will advise every 10 days
+ concerning the progress of the drive. First report on 25 July
+ 1943, reference date: 20 July 1943.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]I submit this document, not because of its actual
+content, which will be taken up by the defense of the Defendant Speer,
+but because of its symptomatic evidential value for the answer of the
+Defendant Keitel, when he stated that Hitler was particularly interested
+in prisoner of war affairs and himself personally issued the principal
+orders and those he considered important.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]5) The cases also connected with this complex such as:
+Terror-fliers, lynch law, Commando tasks, combat against partisans, will
+be dealt with by other defense counsels. The Defendant Keitel has made
+his statement regarding these individual facts during his interrogation
+and cross-examination.[sm type ends]
+
+For the subjective facts of the alleged crimes one element is of special
+importance: the knowledge of them. Not only from the point of view of
+guilt, but also in view of the conclusions which the Prosecution have
+drawn, namely, acquiescence, toleration, and omission to take any
+counteraction. The fact of knowledge comprises: (1) Knowledge of the
+facts; (2) recognition of the aim; (3) recognition of the methods; (4)
+conception of, or possibility of conceiving the consequences.
+
+During the discussion of the question of how far the Defendant Keitel
+could possibly have drawn any conclusion as to the intention of
+realization by force from knowledge of the text of the National
+Socialist Party Program and from Hitler’s book, _Mein Kampf_, I have
+already demonstrated why Keitel did not have this recognition of a
+realization by force.
+
+Keitel denied any knowledge of the intended wars of aggression up to the
+time of the war against Poland, and his statement is confirmed by
+Grossadmiral Raeder. This comment is certainly a subjective truth
+inasmuch as Keitel did not seriously believe in a war with Poland, not
+to mention one involving intervention by France and England. This
+belief, held by Keitel and other high-ranking officers, was based on the
+fact that the military potential was insufficient, according to past
+experiences, to wage a war with any chance of victory, especially if it
+developed into a war on two fronts. This belief was strengthened by the
+nonaggression pact signed on 23 August 1939 with the U.S.S.R.
+
+However, that is not the core of the problem. The speeches which Hitler
+delivered before the generals, beginning with the conference of 5
+November 1937, at which Keitel was not present, made it increasingly
+clear that Hitler was determined to attain his goal by any means, that
+is, if peaceful negotiations did not succeed, he was prepared to fight,
+or at least to use the Armed Forces as an agent of pressure. There is no
+doubt about that. It is a debatable point whether the text of Hitler’s
+speeches, of which no official record is available, is altogether
+accurately reproduced. There is, however, no doubt at all that they
+allow Hitler’s intentions to be clearly recognized.
+
+A distinction must be made as to whether it was possible for his hearers
+merely to gather that a definite plan was to be carried out, or whether
+they could not but recognize the existence of a general aim of
+aggression. If they did not recognize this, the only explanation lies in
+the fact that the generals on principle did not include the question of
+war or peace in their considerations. From their point of view this was
+a political question which they did not consider themselves competent to
+judge since, as has been stated here, they were not acquainted with the
+reasons for such a decision and, as the Defendant Keitel has testified,
+the generals were bound to have confidence in the leadership of the
+State to the extent of believing that the latter would only undertake
+war for reasons of pressing emergency. That is a consequence of the
+traditional principle that although the Armed Forces was an instrument
+of the politicians it should not itself take part in politics—a
+principle which Hitler adopted in its full stringency. The Court must
+decide whether this may be accepted as an excuse. Keitel stated on the
+witness stand that he recognized the orders, directives, and
+instructions which had such terrible consequences, and that he drew them
+up and signed them without allowing himself to be deflected by any
+consequences which they might entail.
+
+This testimony leaves three questions undecided: (1) The question of the
+methods used to carry out the orders; (2) the question of the conception
+of the consequences which actually followed; (3) the question of the
+_dolus eventualis_.
+
+The Defendant Keitel, in his affidavit (Document Book Number 12), showed
+with reference to the so-called ideological orders how the SS and Police
+organizations influenced the conduct of the war, and how the Wehrmacht
+was drawn into events. The evidence has shown that on their own
+responsibility numerous Wehrmacht commanders failed to apply such
+terrible orders, or applied them in a milder form. Keitel, brought up in
+a certain military tradition, was unfamiliar with SS methods which made
+the effects of these orders so terrible, and they were therefore
+inconceivable to him. According to his testimony he did not learn of
+these effects in their full and terrible extent.
+
+The same is true of the Führer’s Night and Fog Decree which I have just
+discussed. If he did not allow himself to be deflected by the “possible”
+results when he transmitted the orders, the _dolus eventualis_ cannot be
+affirmed in regard to the results which took place. It must be assumed
+rather that if he had been able to recognize the horrible effects, he
+would, in spite of the ban on resignations, have drawn a conclusion
+which would have freed him from the pangs of conscience and would not
+have drawn him from month to month further and further into the
+whirlpool of events.
+
+This may be an hypothesis; but there are certain indications in the
+evidence which confirm it. The five attempts made by Keitel to leave his
+position, and the fact that he resolved to commit suicide, which General
+Jodl confirmed in his testimony, enable you to recognize the sincerity
+of Keitel’s wish.
+
+The fact that he did not succeed must be attributed to the circumstances
+which I have already presented: The unequivocal and, as Keitel says,
+unconditional duty of the soldier to do his duty obediently to the
+bitter end, true to his military oath.
+
+This concept is false when it is exaggerated to the extent of leading to
+crime. It must be remembered, however, that a soldier is accustomed to
+measure by other standards in war. When all high-ranking officers,
+including Field Marshal Paulus, represent the same point of view, the
+honesty of their convictions cannot be denied, although it may not be
+understood.
+
+In reply to the questions asked so often during this Trial—why he did
+not revolt against Hitler or refuse to obey his orders—the Defendant
+Keitel stated that he did not consider these questions even for a
+moment. His words and behavior show him to be unconditionally a soldier.
+
+Did he incriminate himself by such conduct? In general terms: May or
+must a general commit high treason if he realizes that by carrying out
+an order or measure he will be violating international law or the laws
+of humanity?
+
+The solution of this problem depends on whether the preliminary question
+is answered as to who is the “authority” which “permits or orders” such
+criminal high treason. This question seems to me important because the
+source of the authority must be established—the authority which can
+permit or order the general to commit high treason; which can “bind and
+absolve.”
+
+Since the existing state power, which in this case was represented by
+the Chief of State, who was identical with the Supreme Commander of the
+Armed Forces, can certainly not be this authority, we merely have to
+decide whether an authority exists above or beyond the authority of the
+particular state, which could “bind or absolve.” Since the struggle for
+power between Pope and Emperor, which dominated the Middle Ages, has no
+longer any significance in regard to constitutional law, such a power
+can only be impersonal and moral. The German poet Schiller expresses the
+supreme commandment of the unwritten eternal law in the words: “The
+tyrant’s power yet one limit hath ...” That is only one of the manifold
+poetical revelations in world literature, which express the deep
+yearning for freedom felt by all peoples.
+
+If there is an unwritten law which indisputably expresses the conviction
+of all men, it is this, that with due consideration for the necessity of
+maintaining order in the state, there is a limit to the restriction of
+freedom. Where this is transgressed, a state of war will arise between
+the national order and the international power of world conscience.
+
+It is important to state that no such statute of international law has
+hitherto existed. This is understandable, since freedom is a relative
+conception, and the different conceptions existing in various states and
+the anxiety of all states for their sovereignty are irreconcilable with
+recognition of an international authority. The authority which “binds
+and absolves”—which absolves us of guilt before God and the people—is
+the universal conscience which becomes alive in every individual. He
+must act accordingly. The Defendant Keitel did not hear the warning
+voice of the universal conscience. The principles of his soldierly life
+were so deeply rooted, and governed his thoughts and actions so
+exclusively, that he was deaf to all considerations which might deflect
+him from the path of obedience and faithfulness, as he understood them.
+This is the really tragic role played by the Defendant Keitel in this
+most terrible drama of all times.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann—yes, go on, Dr. Kauffmann.
+
+DR. KURT KAUFFMANN (Counsel for Defendant Kaltenbrunner): Mr. President,
+may I first say that I have a few changes which I will announce when I
+come to them. I shall take about two hours altogether, Mr. President.
+
+May it please the Tribunal: The present Trial is world history—world
+history full of revolutionary tensions. The spirits conjured up by
+mankind are stronger than the cries of the tortured peoples for justice
+and peace. Since man was deified and God humiliated, chaos, as an
+inevitable consequence and punishment, has afflicted mankind with wars,
+revolutions, famine, and despair. Whatever the guilt borne by my
+country, it is now enduring—and permanently enduring—the greatest
+penance ever endured by any people.
+
+The means adopted to restore longed-for prosperity are wrong, because
+they are second-rate. And none of my listeners can question the truth of
+my assertion that the present Trial was not begun at the end of a period
+of wrong, and in order to end it, but is surrounded by the surging waves
+of a furious torrent bearing on its surface the hopeless wreckage of a
+civilization guarded through the centuries, and in the demoniacal depths
+of which lurk those who hate the true God, who are the enemies of the
+Christian religion, and therefore opposed to all forms of justice.
+
+The European commonwealth of peoples, of which my country, if only
+because of its geographical position, was the very heart, is seriously
+afflicted. It suffers from the spirit of negation and humiliation of
+human dignity. Rousseau would have cursed his own maxims had he lived to
+see the radical refutation of his theories in this twentieth century.
+The peoples proclaimed the “liberty” of the great revolution, but in the
+course of a mere 150 years they have in the name of that same liberty
+created a monster of bondage, cruel slavery, and ungodliness, which
+contrived to elude earthly justice, but did not escape the living God.
+
+This Tribunal, conscious of its task and its mission, will some day have
+to submit to the searching eye of history. I do not doubt that the
+judges selected are striving to serve justice as they see it. But is not
+this task indeed impossible of solution? The American chief prosecutor
+stated that in his country important trials seldom begin until one or
+two years have elapsed. I do not need to elucidate the profound core of
+truth contained in this practice. Could human beings, torn between love
+and hate, justice and revenge, conduct a trial immediately after the
+greatest catastrophe humanity has ever known—and constantly harassed by
+the statutory demands for rapid and time-saving proceedings—in such a
+way as to earn the thanks of mankind when the waters of this second
+deluge have withdrawn into their old bed?
+
+Would it not have been better to allow for that very lapse of time
+between crime and atonement with regard to the present proceedings?
+
+Justice can be administered only when the Court possesses that inner
+liberty and independence which owes allegiance only to conscience and to
+God himself. Such a sacred activity had largely been forgotten in my
+country, above all, by the governing class of the nation; Hitler had
+prostituted the law. But this Tribunal intends to prove to the world
+that the welfare of the peoples is based on law alone. And no conception
+could arouse more joy and hope within the heart of people of good will
+than that of unselfish justice.
+
+I am not criticizing the provisions of the Charter; but I do ask whether
+any justice has ever been, or ever could be, found on earth if might
+submitted to reason so far as to grant its enemies regular trial, but
+could not see fit to crown this tribute to reason by appointing a
+genuinely international tribunal; for even though 19 nations have
+approved of the legal basis of the Charter it is far more difficult to
+administer the laws laid down.
+
+The American chief prosecutor has emphatically declared that he did not
+propose to hold the entire German nation guilty; but the records of this
+Tribunal, which history will some day scrutinize attentively,
+nevertheless contain many things which, to us Germans, appear to be
+false and, therefore, painful. Unfortunately they also contain numerous
+explicit questions on the part of the French Prosecution as to the
+extent to which, for instance, certain Crimes against Humanity committed
+both inside and outside Germany were known to the German people. Indeed,
+the French Prosecution have asked explicitly: “Could these atrocities
+remain, on the whole, unknown to the entire German nation, or were they
+aware of them?” These and similar questions are not conducive to the
+solution of such a difficult and tragic problem with even the slightest
+approach to the truth. Insofar as evil, which always grows and manifests
+itself organically, reigns supreme in a nation, every individual who has
+reached the age of reason will bear some guilt for his country’s
+disasters. Yet even this guilt, which is on the metaphysical plane,
+could never become the collective guilt of a nation unless every
+individual member of this nation has incurred a separate guilt. But who
+would be entitled to establish the existence of such a guilt without
+examining thousands of individual circumstances?
+
+The problem, however, becomes even more difficult if one should try—and
+this is the final aim—to establish the so-called national guilt for any
+past crimes against peace, humanity, and so forth, committed on the part
+of the omnipotent State, no matter through what agencies. One must bear
+in mind most carefully the condition of the Reich before 1933. This has
+been done sufficiently here and I shall not discuss it.
+
+Hitler claimed for himself alone such far-reaching concepts as the
+powerful German diligence, austerity, family affection, willingness to
+make sacrifices, aristocracy of labor, and a hundred more. Millions
+believed in this; millions of others did not. The best of them did not
+lose hope of being able to avert the tragedy which they foresaw. They
+flung themselves into the stream of events, assembled the good, and
+fought, visibly or invisibly, against the evil. Can the man in the
+street be blamed for not immediately refusing to believe in Hitler,
+considering the latter’s ability to pass as a seeker after the truth,
+and the fact that he constantly raised the palm of peace for the benefit
+of the peace lovers? Who knows whether he himself was not convinced at
+the outset that he could strengthen the Reich without going to war?
+After the assumption of power large sectors of the German people
+probably felt themselves to be at unison with many other peoples on
+earth. Therefore, it is not astonishing that gradually, and with the
+approval or tolerance of other countries, Hitler acquired the nimbus of
+a man unique in his century. Only a German who lived in Germany during
+the past few years and did not view Germany through a telescope from
+abroad, is competent to report on the historical facts of an almost
+impenetrable method of secrecy, the psychosis of fear, and the actual
+impossibility of changing the regime, and thus to comply with Ranke’s
+demand of historians to establish “how it was.”
+
+[sm type begins]Ought the artisans, peasants, merchants, or housewives
+categorically to have asked Hitler or Himmler for a change? I would be
+quite willing to let the Prosecution answer this, as I am of the opinion
+that there are living in my country no fewer idealistic and heroic
+people than in any other country.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It will never be possible to ascertain how large a
+number of Germans knew and approved of concentration camps, their terror
+and such like. Only if one could establish knowledge and approval in the
+soul of every individual German, considering general and particular
+conditions prevailing in the Germany of the last 12 years, which it is
+not now the moment to discuss, these, and only these, could be
+considered guilty.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Therefore I do not think it just to put, to a larger or
+smaller extent, the principle of collective guilt in the place of
+individual responsibility, as it is held valid in all civilized nations;
+it was unfortunately similarly applied by the National Socialist regime
+to a whole people, and almost led to its complete extermination. May
+there be no repetition of Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles, that
+portentous document of the twentieth century.[sm type ends]
+
+Let me say a few words about that secrecy. This Trial has shown clearly
+that the State itself managed to suppress such facts as would lower its
+prestige and betray its real intentions. Even the men indicted here, who
+have been termed conspirators, have been the victims of that carefully
+devised system of secrecy, or most of them at least.
+
+A special place in that system of secrecy is reserved to the
+plan—ordered by Hitler and executed by Himmler, Eichmann, and a circle
+of the initiated—for the biological destruction of the Jewish people,
+the ghastly aim of which was for years concealed by the term “final
+solution”—a term not immediately self-explicable. The problem of the
+Jewish question ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann, it seems to the Tribunal a very long
+preamble to the defense of the Defendant Kaltenbrunner, who has not been
+named at all yet in what you have said. Is it not time that you came to
+the case of the defendant whom you represent? We are not trying a charge
+against the German people. We are trying the charges against the
+defendant. That is all we are trying.
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, in the next few sentences I would have
+concluded that; but I ask you to appreciate that the important word
+“humanity” forms the core of my case. I believe that I am the only
+defense counsel who intends to go more deeply into that subject; and I
+request permission to make these few statements. I shall come to the
+case of Kaltenbrunner very soon.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: On Page 8 you have a headline which is, “The Development
+of the History of the Intellectual Pursuit in Europe.” That seems rather
+far from the matters which the Tribunal have got to consider.
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, may I remind you that this question was
+discussed by the Prosecution, and especially by M. de Menthon. I do not
+believe that I can carry out my task if I take these tremendous crimes
+only as facts. Some German must have an opportunity of giving a short
+description of the development—and it is very short. At the end of a
+few pages I return to the case of Kaltenbrunner; and my plea will in any
+case be the shortest one presented here.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann, the Tribunal proposes, as far as it can,
+to decide the cases which it has got to decide in accordance with law
+and not with the sort of very general, very vague and misty
+philosophical doctrine with which you appear to be dealing in the first
+12 pages of your speech, and, therefore, they would very much prefer
+that you should not read these passages. If you insist upon doing so,
+there it is; but the Tribunal, as I say, do not think that they are
+relevant to the case of the Defendant Kaltenbrunner. They would much
+prefer that you would begin at Page 13, where you really come to the
+defendant’s case.
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, it is, of course, extremely difficult for
+me to present a plea which is already very much condensed, and now to
+disrupt it even more. It is really difficult. I hope that the Tribunal
+will appreciate that.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Well, Dr. Kauffmann; there has been nothing condensed in
+what you have read up to the present. It has been all of the most
+general type.
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: In that case may I at least read a few sentences below
+the headline with regard to the defense? It starts ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Can you not summarize the general nature of what you wish
+to say before you come to the Defendant Kaltenbrunner?
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: Yes, I shall try. I shall read only a few sentences, for
+the sake of better understanding, from the short chapter dealing with
+the task of the Defense. I say there that the defense has been
+established by the Charter and ask how in the face of such excesses a
+defense can still identify its task. I then go on to say:
+
+In this Trial, error and truth are mysteriously mixed, probably more so
+than ever before in any great trial. To try to find the truth raises the
+counsel for the defense to the dignity of an assistant of the Court. Not
+only does it entitle the Defense to doubt the credibility of the
+witnesses but also that of the documents, in particular of the
+Government reports. It entitles the counsel for the defense to state
+that such reports, although they may be admitted by the Charter in
+evidence, can only be accepted under protest, because none of the
+defendants, defendants’ counsel, or neutral observers could have any
+influence on the way in which they originated.
+
+These testimonies were certainly made within the framework of the law,
+but also within the framework of power.
+
+The people, or a large part of the people, in their aspirations toward
+peace and happiness elevated the representative of a heretical doctrine
+to the position of their Führer, and this Führer abused the faith of his
+followers so that the people, no longer possessing the strength to offer
+a timely and open resistance, were engulfed in the gigantic abyss of the
+annihilation of their entire racial, political, spiritual, and economic
+existence. All of this is tragic in the truest sense of the word. Had
+the individual man in the street, the mother at home, and her sons and
+daughters, been asked to choose between peace or war, they would never
+voluntarily have chosen war. The unsatisfactory element in this Trial is
+the absence of the man ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Are you reading now from some part of your document?
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: I am reading a few sentences, Mr. President. This is at
+Page 7 of the German text.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Can you not summarize the argument you are presenting?
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, I would appreciate it if I could be told
+once more whether the Tribunal does not wish me to throw any light at
+all on the ideological background in the interests of an understanding
+of these crimes against humanity and peace. If the Tribunal states that
+it does not desire me to make any such statements, then of course I
+shall follow the wishes of the Tribunal. But such a phenomenon ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Well, Dr. Kauffmann, if you think it is necessary for you
+to read this passage you can do so; but, as I have indicated to you, the
+Tribunal think it is very remote indeed from any question which they
+have to consider.
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: Thank you very much. Then I shall skip a few pages and
+shall present only 4 or 5 pages, which will be very condensed, on the
+subject which I have just mentioned. That begins with the heading,
+“Outline of Intellectual Development.”
+
+The rise of Hitler, and his downfall, unique in its extent and
+consequences, may be viewed from any side—from the perspective of the
+historical spectacle afforded by the course of German history, the
+course of economic forces supposedly governed by irresistible laws, the
+sociological divisions of the nation, the peculiarities of race and
+character of the German people, or the mistakes committed in the
+political sphere by the other brothers and sisters of the family of
+nations living in the same house.
+
+All this certainly completes the picture of the analysis, but it brings
+to light only partial knowledge and partial truth. The deepest, and the
+fatal, reason for the Hitler phenomenon lies in the metaphysical domain.
+
+In the final analysis the second World War was unavoidable. Anyone,
+however, who regards the world and its phenomena only from the
+standpoint of economics may arrive at the conclusion that both world
+wars could have been avoided if the resources of the earth had been
+reasonably distributed. Economic factors alone can never change the face
+of the earth; therefore, the change in the German people’s standard of
+living, and the demoralization of the national soul by the Treaty of
+Versailles, inflation, serious unemployment, and other factors formed a
+foundation for the advent of Hitler. It is possible that catastrophes
+may be delayed for years or decades, if certain external living
+conditions make the relationship between different nations and peoples
+ostensibly happier. At no time, however, can a misguided idea be
+destroyed through economic measures alone, and deprived of its power to
+injure the individual and the nation, unless mankind can overcome such
+ideas and replace them by better ones.
+
+“In the way in which the name of God is used by the peoples and
+nations,” says the famous Donoso Cortes, “lies the solution of the
+most-feared problems.” Here we have the explanation of the providential
+mission of the separate nations and races, the great changes in history,
+the rise and fall of empires, conquests and wars, the different
+characteristics of the nations, and even their changing fortunes.
+
+M. de Menthon has tried to make an intellectual analysis of National
+Socialism. He speaks of the “sin against the spirit,” and sees the
+deeper causes of this system in estrangement from Christianity.
+
+I wish to add a few words. Hitler was not a meteor, the fall of which
+was incalculable and unpredictable. He was the exponent of an ideology
+which was in the last resort atheistic and materialistic.
+
+There is every reason to reflect that, although National Socialism is
+eliminated through the complete defeat of Germany, and although the
+world is now free of the German threat as proclaimed by all nations,
+there has been no decisive change for the better. No peace has filled
+our hearts, no rest has come to any corner of human existence. It is
+true that the collapse of a powerful state with all its physical and
+spiritual forces will be felt for a long time, just as the sea is
+stirred into motion when a rock is thrown into calm water. But something
+much more is happening at present in Europe and in the world—something
+quite different from the mere ebbing away of such a wave of events.
+
+To retain the comparison, the waves rise anew from the deep; they are
+fed by mysterious forces which constantly emerge anew. They are those
+restless ideas, aiming at the disaster of nations, of which I spoke. And
+nothing can disprove the truth of my words when I maintain that victor
+and vanquished alike live in the midst of a crisis which disturbs the
+conscience of individuals and of nations like a monstrous and apparently
+inevitable nightmare, and which causes us to look beyond the punishment
+of guilty individuals toward those ways and means which can spare
+humanity an even greater catastrophe.
+
+In the _Confessions of a Revolutionary_ the clear-sighted socialist
+Proudhon wrote the memorable words: “Every great political problem
+contains within itself a theological one.” He coined this phrase one
+hundred years ago. It is most timely that the American General
+MacArthur, at the signing of the Japanese capitulation, is said to have
+repeated the essential meaning of these profound words by saying: “If we
+do not create a better and greater system, death will be at our door.
+The problem is, fundamentally speaking, a religious one.”
+
+History is made by changes in religious values. They constitute the
+strongest motive power in the cultural progress of humanity. Permit me
+to show you in a few bold outlines the intellectual and historical
+forebears of National Socialism.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann, it is 1 o’clock, and I must say that the
+last two pages which you have read seem to me to have absolutely nothing
+to do with Crimes against Humanity, or with any case with which we have
+got to deal. I suggest to you that the next pages, headed “Renaissance,
+Subjectivism, French Revolution, Liberalism, National Socialism” are
+equally completely unlikely to have any influence at all upon the minds
+of the Tribunal.
+
+The Tribunal will now adjourn.
+
+ [_The Tribunal recessed until 1400 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ _Afternoon Session_
+
+DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, I am going to leave out the section headed
+“Renaissance, Subjectivism, French Revolution, Liberalism, National
+Socialism.” The gist of those remarks can be summarized in two or three
+sentences and I merely beg you to take cognizance of them. I have
+pointed out that the course of all these disastrous movements is the
+spiritual attitude which Jacques Maritain described as anthropocentric
+humanism.
+
+[sm type begins]The clamor of the great struggle between the Middle Ages
+and modern times has filled the last centuries until this very hour. Its
+victims include since 1914, for the first time, the women; since 1939,
+for the first time, the children. The apocalyptic battle is in full
+progress for the 2,000-year-old meaning of the Occident, the motherland
+of the material as well as the personal culture of humanity. Its object
+is the steadily growing anthropocentric humanism which makes the human
+being the measure of all things, the secularization of religion. It
+announces itself in the Renaissance, becomes completely clear in the
+enlightenment of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and in the
+intellectual movements of the nineteenth century. However good the
+reasons and motives were, the way over the Renaissance and the schism of
+the sixteenth century proved to be wrong. At its very end stands, for
+the present, the ideology of National Socialism. In the heads of its
+most extreme champions National Socialism culminated in the radical
+demand for the fight unto death against Christianity. Therefore this
+ideology was in its last analysis a philosophy without love; and because
+of this, it extinguished the light of reason in those addicted to it. To
+that extent the head himself of this heresy proclaimed a truth.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Goethe expressed this problem by saying: “World history
+is the struggle between belief and unbelief.” And I maintain, based on
+the declarations of the greatest minds in all camps of religious faiths,
+that the history of the nations, just as previously it was a struggle
+for the natural divine right of man, for 2,000 years has been a striving
+of human intellect for the Christian soul in man. These precepts are in
+fact such that one may not doubt them even for a short moment without
+the mind beginning to reel and vacillate helplessly between truth and
+error. It is cause for reflection that Hitler rejected the wonderful
+characteristic of a truly kind man that we call humility because he had
+decided in favor of Machiavelli and Nietzsche and that now the fate of
+the Germans is humiliation without precedent. One may also reflect upon
+the fact that Hitler denied the virtues of pity and mercy and that now
+millions of women and children wail with sorrow, while the law,
+seemingly extinct, again assumes enormous proportions, whereas Hitler
+surrounded himself with lawlessness. The real and last root of these
+calamitous modern movements which threaten state, society, and
+Christianity, is rootless liberalism in the meaning of that
+anthropocentric humanism, as Maritain calls it. Man and his autonomous
+reason become the criterion of everything. The question should impose
+itself upon every thinking person, why from the turn of the nineteenth
+century until the present such catastrophes of humanity have occurred
+which in history, I should almost like to say, find their parallel only
+in cosmic catastrophes. Two world wars, with revolutions in their wake,
+are never an accidental development but rather a predetermined evolution
+of the human race founded on some intellectual-religious error. Coming
+from England, rationalism found its way to France and on arrival there
+changed its physiognomy. I believe that the paganism of the ancient
+times knew hardly anything like Voltaire. No sooner had rationalism
+become the state religion of France, when the French Revolution burst
+into flames and wrote the idea of the emancipated human rights with
+flaming letters into the sky of Europe. In spite of the proclamation of
+the human rights, mankind waded through blood as if this was the way to
+freedom. Sarcastic and scornful laughter at everything sacred went
+through the raving masses. When the French Revolution had put into
+practice its state founded on reason, the new institutions did not prove
+quite so reasonable. The “brotherhood” was, compared with the glamorous
+promises of the rationalists, a bitterly disappointing caricature. Soon
+these ideas also conquered Germany; for Germany looked with amazement
+and awe toward France in this century. The manifestation of religion
+became a religion of pure humanity. The last step was taken by Kant; he
+drew the last consequence from the principle of free science. Hegel
+abolished the personal God and replaced him by the absolute reason. The
+state is everything; it is God, its will is God’s will, in all relations
+to it there are no natural rights; it creates religion, law, and
+morality by virtue of its own sovereignty. Hitler once more placed the
+sovereignty in the people as a race. Hegel’s disciples destroyed the
+last vestige of the moral fundaments of society, state, and law. Only
+the genius of a man like Leibnitz, in whom the intellect of the German
+nation seemed to concentrate for the last time, stood alone in a sea of
+the rational ideology. Voltaire ridiculed the German thinker, not only
+in France, but also in Berlin. The last stages are connected with the
+names of Nietzsche and others. Nietzsche has, as no other modern man,
+reasoned modern ideologies out to the end and proclaimed with dauntless
+logic whither the present development would inevitably lead. Thus the
+road leads from Caligula and Julian Apostate through many a genius,
+glorified by the whole world but truly destructive in their effects,
+directly to Hitler.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Ancient paganism or modern paganism, which of them is
+worse? As Donoso Cortes so wisely puts it, there will be no more hope
+for a society which has exchanged the stern cult of Christian quest of
+truth for the idolatry of reason. After the sophisms come the
+revolutions, and behind the sophist walk the executioners.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]When Hitler, returning from the first World War,
+decided, as he said, to become a politician, he declared that he had
+found the powers which could free Germany with its national and social
+elements from its misery. But fundamentally his ideology was only
+another step along the well-worn road to complete autonomy of so-called
+natural common sense, to which he so often referred. Naturally he had
+his teachers. The apotheosis of his own people traces back to Fichte,
+the ideal of the master-man to Nietzsche, the relativity of morals and
+right to Machiavelli, the cult of race to Darwin. We have witnessed
+their practical effect; for this road leads straight into the
+concentration camps, to the destruction of other races, to the
+persecution of Christians. But the outside enemies of National Socialism
+succumbed to the same ominous idea of “natural common sense” by killing
+with their bombs millions of noncombatant women and children and
+destroying so many dwellings in German villages and cities. The victor,
+even in a defensive war, must not try to excuse these events with
+“military necessities” in the meaning of the Charter. The cultural
+values of this very city in which this Tribunal is sitting, or of
+Dresden, Frankfurt, and many other cities, were the cultural property of
+the entire Occident. All this, and the terrible misery of the flood of
+refugees from the East, and the fate of the prisoners of war, is part of
+the theme of the intellectual and cultural analysis of National
+Socialism.[sm type ends]
+
+In the midst of this whole spiritual situation stands the figure of the
+Defendant Dr. Kaltenbrunner. The fatherland was already bleeding from a
+thousand wounds dealt at its sensitive soul and its gigantic power. Is
+this man guilty? He has denied his guilt and yet admitted it. Let us see
+what the truth is.
+
+As I have already emphasized, up to the year 1943 Kaltenbrunner was, by
+comparison with the other defendants at this Trial, hardly known in
+Germany; at any rate, he had hardly any associations with either the
+German public or the high officials of the regime. In those days, when
+the military, economic, and political fate of the German people was
+already swinging with great velocity toward the abyss, hate and
+abhorrence of the executive powers were at their peak, the more so as
+the paralyzing sensation of the hopelessness of any resistance against
+the terror of the regime began to disappear, for people had by then
+finally turned away from the legend of invincibility preached by
+propaganda. Up to that point Kaltenbrunner had led a retired life and,
+in spite of the Austrian Anschluss, his record was clear of offenses
+against international law. I should like to say here that he was an
+Austrian—I might almost say, a bona fide Austrian. Suddenly, so to
+speak, and not on account of any special aptitude, much less through any
+efforts of his own, he was drawn into the net of the greatest
+accomplices of the greatest murderer. Not of his own free will; on the
+contrary, he repeatedly attempted to resist and to have himself
+transferred to the fighting front.
+
+I can well understand that I might be told that I should, in view of the
+sea of blood and tears, refrain from illuminating the physiognomy of
+this man’s soul and character. But deep in my heart—and I beg you not
+to misunderstand me—while exercising my profession as counsel, even of
+such a man, I am moved by the universal thesis of the great Augustine,
+which is hardly intelligible to the present generation: “Hate error, but
+love man.” Love? Indeed, insofar as it should pervade justice; because
+justice without this virtue becomes simple revenge, which the
+Prosecution explicitly disavows. Therefore, for the sake of justice, I
+must show you that Kaltenbrunner is not the type of man repeatedly
+described by the Prosecution, namely, the “little Himmler,” his
+“confidant,” the “second Heydrich.”
+
+I do not believe that he is the cold-hearted being which the witness
+Gisevius described in such unfavorable terms, although only from
+hearsay. The Defendant Jodl has testified before you that Kaltenbrunner
+was not among those of Hitler’s confidants who always gathered around
+him after the daily situation conferences in the Führer’s headquarters.
+The witness Dr. Mildner, on the basis of direct observation, made the
+following statement, which was not shaken by the Prosecution:
+
+ “From my own observation I can confirm this: I know the
+ Defendant Kaltenbrunner personally. His private life was
+ irreproachable. In my opinion he was promoted from Higher SS and
+ Police Leader to Chief of the Security Police and of the SD
+ because Himmler, after the death of his principal rival Heydrich
+ in June 1942, did not want any man near him or under him who
+ might have endangered his own position. The Defendant
+ Kaltenbrunner was no doubt the least dangerous man for Himmler.
+ Kaltenbrunner had no ambition to bring his influence to bear
+ through special deeds and ultimately to push Himmler aside. He
+ was not hungry for power. It is wrong to call him the ‘little
+ Himmler.’”
+
+The witnesses Von Eberstein, Wanneck, and Dr. Hoettl have expressed
+themselves in a similar manner.
+
+And yet this man took over the Reich Security Main Office; indeed, he
+took it over to the fullest extent, despite his agreement with Himmler.
+I know that today this man is suffering a great deal in thinking of the
+catastrophe that has overtaken his people and from the uneasiness of his
+conscience; nothing is more understandable than that Dr. Kaltenbrunner,
+knowingly, can no longer face the fact that he actually was in charge of
+an office under the burden of which the very stones would have cried out
+if that had been possible. The personality and character of this man
+must be judged differently from the way the Prosecution has judged it.
+
+For the psychologist the question arises how a man, with, let us say, a
+normal citizen’s virtues, could take under his control an office which
+became the very symbol of human enslavement in the twentieth century, as
+far as Germany is concerned. Yet there may have been two reasons for
+taking over this office, nevertheless. One is based on the fact that Dr.
+Kaltenbrunner, although closely connected with the political and
+cultural interests of his Austrian homeland, supported National
+Socialism in its larger sense. For before he turned into the side path
+with its secrets, he marched with thousands and hundreds of thousands of
+other Germans, who desired nothing else than delivery from the unstable
+conditions prevailing at that time, on that wide road into which the
+eyes of the entire world had insight. Therefore, for example, he was
+without a doubt a disciple of anti-Semitism, however, only in the sense
+of the necessity of putting an end to the flooding of the German race
+with alien elements; but he condemned just as emphatically the mad crime
+of the physical annihilation of the Jewish race, as Dr. Hoettl
+definitely assures us.
+
+Certainly Kaltenbrunner also admired Hitler’s personality as long as it
+did not, little by little, give expression to its absolutely
+misanthropic and therefore un-German nature. Also, he approved in
+principle, as he himself admitted during his interrogation, of measures
+which implied more or less severe compulsion, for example, the
+organization of labor training camps. For this reason no sensible person
+will want to question the fact that he deemed the establishment of
+concentration camps fundamentally quite proper, at least as a
+provisional measure during the war, as had been the case for a long time
+beyond the German borders. _Sine ira et studio._
+
+The establishment of concentration camps, or whatever one wishes to call
+those places at the mention of which the listener involuntarily is
+reminded of the words of Dante, is unfortunately not unknown in many
+states. History knows of their existence in South Africa some decades
+ago, in Russia, England, and America during this war, for the admission,
+among others, of persons who for reasons of conscience do not want to
+serve with arms. In Bavaria, in the land in which the Tribunal at
+present sits, this sort of camp is also known; also known is the
+so-called “automatic arrest” category for certain groups of Germans.
+Under the heading “Political Principles,” in Point B-5 of the text of
+the mutual declaration of the three leading statesmen on the Potsdam
+Conference of 17 July 1945, the statement is contained that, among
+others, all persons who are a threat to the occupation or its aims shall
+be arrested or interned.
+
+The apparent necessity for camps of this sort is thereby recognized. I
+myself detest those institutions of human slavery; but I state openly
+that these institutions also lie on the road which, when followed to the
+end, can and does bring suffering to persons holding different views to
+those desired by the state. By this the crimes against humanity in the
+German concentration camps are not in the least to be minimized.
+
+As far as Kaltenbrunner is concerned, this man, in view of his character
+and attitude as apparent since 1943, according to my conviction and as
+can be affirmed by many witnesses, is basically a National Socialist
+leader who noted only with repugnance the general trend of the
+continually growing wave of terror and enslavement in Germany. For this
+reason I deem it important to point to the statement of the witness
+Eigruber to the effect that the claim of the Prosecution that
+Kaltenbrunner established Mauthausen is wrong.
+
+The second reason lies in the subject of the two conversations with
+Himmler, about which Kaltenbrunner testified. According to that
+Kaltenbrunner was prepared to take over the offices of the Domestic and
+Foreign Intelligence Service in the Reich Security Main Office with the
+promise of Himmler that he would be allowed to expand this service into
+a central agency, with the aim of absorbing the Political Intelligence
+Service and joining it with the hitherto military one of Admiral
+Canaris. No doubt it is true, as the witnesses Wanneck, Dr. Hoettl, Dr.
+Mildner, and Ohlendorf, and also the defendant himself have testified,
+that Himmler, with Kaltenbrunner’s wish in mind, after the murder of
+Heydrich, intervened in the executive realm so that nothing of any
+importance took place in any executive field in Germany without Himmler
+having the final word and thus issuing the decisive order.
+
+The witness Wanneck confirmed the subject of those two conversations of
+Kaltenbrunner with Himmler in the following words, which I shall quote
+because of their importance:
+
+ “When material problems arose Kaltenbrunner frequently remarked
+ that he had come to an understanding with Himmler to work rather
+ in the field of the Foreign Political Intelligence Service and
+ that Himmler himself wanted to exert more influence in executive
+ functions. To my knowledge Himmler agreed to these adjustments
+ all the more since he believed that he could depend on
+ Kaltenbrunner’s political instinct in foreign affairs, as was
+ apparent from various remarks made by Himmler.”
+
+Various witnesses have testified that Kaltenbrunner, predominantly and
+from inner conviction, did dedicate himself to the Domestic and Foreign
+Intelligence Service and more and more approached the influence on
+domestic and foreign politics he was hoping for. I call attention again
+to Wanneck and Dr. Hoettl, and then also to the Defendants Jodl,
+Seyss-Inquart, and Fritzsche. Dr. Hoettl testified:
+
+ “In my opinion Kaltenbrunner never was completely master of the
+ large Reich Security Main Office and, from lack of interest in
+ police and executive problems, occupied himself far more with
+ the Intelligence Service and with exerting influence on politics
+ as a whole. This he considered his real domain.”
+
+From the testimony by General Jodl I stress the following sentences:
+
+ “Before Kaltenbrunner took over the Intelligence Service from
+ Canaris he already sent to me, from time to time, very good
+ reports from the southeastern territory, through which I first
+ noticed his experience in the Intelligence Service ... I had the
+ impression that this man knew his business; I now received
+ constant reports from Kaltenbrunner, just as earlier from
+ Canaris; not only the actual reports from agents, but from time
+ to time he sent to me, I might almost say, a political survey on
+ the basis of his individual reports from agents. I noticed these
+ condensed reports on the entire political situation abroad
+ especially, because they revealed, with a frankness and sobriety
+ never possible under Canaris, the seriousness of our entire
+ military position.”
+
+The results therefore, which I must deduce from the evidence, are as
+follows: Kaltenbrunner, on the basis of the separation of the
+Intelligence Service from the executive police function in the Reich
+Security Main Office as desired by him, actually held a position, the
+main interest of which was the Intelligence Service and its continuous
+development. I should add that this Intelligence Service covered more
+than Europe; it went from the North Cape to Crete and Africa, from
+Stalingrad and Leningrad to the Pyrenees. Kaltenbrunner was the most
+zealous of all those in Germany who wished to feel the pulse of the
+enemy nations.
+
+That was the lifework of this man as he himself wished it to be for the
+duration of the war. Personally he lived in modest circumstances, and it
+is the truth when I say that he leaves the stage of political life just
+as poor as when he first entered it. The witness Wanneck once quoted a
+statement by Kaltenbrunner which is characteristic of him: That he,
+Kaltenbrunner, would retire completely from office after the war and
+return to the land as a farmer.
+
+Only with deep regret will the spectator see that under the pressure of
+political and military events this man did not observe the limitations
+desired by himself. His obedience to Hitler, and therefore also Himmler,
+submitted to the apparent necessity, in the years 1943-45, of
+guaranteeing the stability of conditions inside Germany through police
+compulsion. Thereby he became involved in guilt; for it is clear that he
+might count on a milder judgment on his guilt before the conscience of
+the world only if he could produce evidence that he actually effected a
+sharp separation from the unholy Amt IV of the Secret Police, if he had
+in no way participated in the ideas and methods, which I believe,
+eventually led to the institution of this whole Trial. I cannot deny
+that he did not undertake this separation. Nothing is clearly proved in
+this direction; even his own testimony speaks against him. Thus his
+statement at the beginning of his examination before the Tribunal may be
+explained, which I should like to define as the thesis of his guilt:
+
+ “Question: ‘You realize that a very special accusation has been
+ brought against you. The Prosecution accuses you of Crimes
+ against Peace as well as of your role of an intellectual
+ principal or of a participant in committing Crimes against
+ Humanity and against the rules of war. Finally the Prosecution
+ has connected your name with the terrorism of the Gestapo and
+ with the cruelties in the concentration camps. I now ask you: Do
+ you assume responsibility for these points of accusation as they
+ are outlined and familiar to you?’”
+
+And Kaltenbrunner answers:
+
+ “First of all I should like to state to the Court that I am
+ fully aware of the serious nature of the accusations brought
+ against me. I know that the hatred of the world is directed
+ against me, since I am the only one here to answer to the world
+ and to the Court, because a Himmler, a Müller, a Pohl are no
+ longer alive ... I want to state at the very beginning that I
+ assume responsibility for every wrong which from the time of my
+ appointment as Chief of the Reich Security Main Office was
+ committed within the jurisdiction of that office as far as it
+ occurred under my actual command, and I thus knew or should have
+ known of these occurrences.”
+
+Thus the duty of the Defense is automatically delineated by asking the
+questions:
+
+(1) What did Kaltenbrunner do, good and evil, after his appointment as
+Chief of the Reich Security Main Office on 1 February 1943?
+
+(2) To what extent is the statement justified that in the essential
+points he did not have sufficient knowledge of all the Crimes against
+Humanity and against the rules of war?
+
+(3) In how far can his guilt be established from the viewpoint that he
+should have known about the serious crimes against international law in
+which Amt IV of the Reich Security Main Office (Secret State Police) was
+directly or indirectly involved?
+
+What has Kaltenbrunner done? In this connection I am passing over the
+accusation brought against him by the Prosecution for his participation
+in the events surrounding the occupation of Austria and Czechoslovakia,
+for no matter with what energy he followed his goal of seeing his
+Austrian homeland incorporated into the German Reich and used the SS
+forces under his command for the realization of this end, this aim
+cannot have been a criminal one according to the world’s conscience.
+Just as little could one reach a verdict of criminal guilt because of
+the forcible means employed at that time to accomplish the annexation of
+Austria, which was the outcome of history and desired by millions.
+Kaltenbrunner was still much too insignificant a man for that. Economic
+distress—Anschluss movement—National Socialism: That was the path
+followed by the majority of the Austrian people, not the National
+Socialist ideology; for Hitler himself was, from the standpoint of
+Austrianism, a spiritual and political renegade. Yet the Austrian
+Anschluss movement was a people’s movement before National Socialism had
+reached any importance in Germany. Austria wanted to protect herself
+against the Versailles and St. Germain ruling, which forbade the
+Anschluss, by holding a plebiscite in each province. After 90 percent
+had voted in Tyrol and Salzburg, the victorious powers threatened to
+discontinue the shipment of food supplies. Hitler’s seizure of power
+paralyzed the desire for Anschluss among those not sympathizing with the
+Party, but the distress in Austria became still more acute and isolated
+the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg regime. Incorporation into the economic sphere
+of Greater Germany, where the removal of mass unemployment seemed to be
+the source of hope, appeared to the greatly distressed Austrian people
+as the only way out. The wave of enthusiasm which on 12 and 13 March
+1938 went through all Austria was real. To try to deny this today would
+be to falsify history. The Anschluss, not the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg
+Government, was based on democracy.
+
+Just as little can one, I believe, according to the reasons mentioned
+above, reach a verdict of guilt for Kaltenbrunner because of his alleged
+activity in the question of Czechoslovakia. In my opinion, the question
+of guilt and expiation arises only for the time after 1 February 1943.
+The indignation of the German people over one of the most infamous
+terroristic measures, the imposition of protective custody, had already
+become immense before this date. Is it correct to say that Kaltenbrunner
+himself, of whom many orders for protective custody bearing his
+signature are in evidence before the Court, inwardly abhorred this type
+of suppression of human liberties?
+
+May I refer to just a few sentences from his interrogations:
+
+ “Question: ‘Did you know that protective custody was at all
+ permissible and was used frequently?’
+
+ “Answer: ‘As I have stated, I discussed the idea of “protective
+ custody” with Himmler already in 1942. But I believe that
+ already before this time I had corresponded quite extensively on
+ this subject with him, as well as once also with Thierack. I
+ consider protective custody as applied in Germany only in a
+ smaller number of cases to be a necessity of state, or better, a
+ measure such as is justified by war. For the rest I often voiced
+ my opinion, well founded in legal history, against this
+ conception and against the application of protective custody in
+ principle. I had several discussions about it with Himmler and
+ with Hitler also. I publicly took my stand against it at a
+ meeting of public prosecutors, I think in 1944, because I have
+ always been of the opinion that a man’s freedom is one of his
+ highest possessions and only the lawful sentence of a regular
+ court of justice founded on the Constitution may limit or take
+ away this freedom.’”
+
+Here the same man expresses the right principles, the observance of
+which would have spared the German people and the world untold
+suffering, and the nonobservance of which constitutes the guilt of this
+man who in spite of his right views, suited his actions to the so-called
+necessity of state. He thereby, against his own will and knowledge,
+became subject to the principle of hatred, which sooner or later will
+always shake or shatter the foundations of the strongest state. “Right
+is what benefits the people,” Hitler had proclaimed. I well know that
+Kaltenbrunner today deeply regrets having adhered too long to that false
+maxim without putting up sufficient resistance ...
+
+Although the Prosecution has not been able to produce even one single
+original signature of Kaltenbrunner in connection with orders for
+protective custody, and I do not think it incredible when Kaltenbrunner
+deposes that he himself never put into effect such an order for
+protective custody by his signature, nevertheless, in view of the tragic
+results due to so many of these orders, I do not need to say even one
+word as to whether he is entirely blameless or is much less to blame
+because these orders had perhaps been signed without his knowledge;
+although of course the question arises immediately how this was possible
+in an office however large. Be that as it may; in affairs of such depth
+and such tragic outcome one’s feelings are inclined to make hardly any
+distinction between knowledge and ignorance due to negligence, because
+one wants to hold everyone occupying a post in an office responsible for
+what happens there. This recognition is also the meaning of
+Kaltenbrunner’s statement, cited above, regarding his fundamental
+responsibility. Where the happiness and fate of living men are involved,
+it is impossible to retreat under the pretext of ignorance in order to
+avoid punishment; at best mitigation of sentence can be asked for. The
+defendant knows this too. Orders for protective custody were the ominous
+harbingers of the concentration camp. And I am not revealing a secret
+when I say that the responsibility for issuing orders for protective
+custody includes the beginning of responsibility for the fate of those
+held in the concentration camps. I could never admit that Dr.
+Kaltenbrunner may have known of the excesses suffered by the thousands
+who languished in the camps; for, as soon as the gates of the
+concentration camps were closed, there began the exclusive influence of
+that other office, the frequently mentioned Central Office for Economy
+and Administration. Instead of referring to many statements of witnesses
+regarding this point, I refer only to the one of the witness Dr. Hoettl
+who, when asked about subordination in rank replied:
+
+ “The concentration camps were exclusively under the command of
+ the SS Central Office for Economy and Administration, hence not
+ under the Reich Security Main Office, and therefore not under
+ Kaltenbrunner. In this sphere he had no authority of command and
+ no competency.”
+
+Other witnesses have said that of necessity Kaltenbrunner should have
+had knowledge of the sad conditions in the concentration camps, but
+there is no doubt that the commandants of the concentration camps
+themselves deliberately concealed criminal excesses of the guards even
+from their superiors. It is furthermore a fact that the conditions found
+by the Allies upon their arrival were almost exclusively the results of
+the catastrophic military and economic situation during the last weeks
+of the war, which the world mistakenly identified with general
+conditions in former times as well. The above statement is fully
+verified by the statements of the camp commandant of Auschwitz, Hoess,
+who because of his later activity in the Concentration Camp Department
+of the Central Office for Economy and Administration, had an accurate
+over-all picture. Hoess has no ulterior motive whatsoever to give false
+testimony. A person like him, who sent millions of men to their deaths,
+no longer comes under the authority of human judges and considerations.
+Hoess stated:
+
+ “The so-called ill-treatment and tortures in the concentration
+ camps were not, as assumed, a policy. They were rather excesses
+ of individual leaders, subleaders, and men who laid violent
+ hands upon the inmates.”
+
+These people themselves were, according to the statement of Hoess, taken
+to task for that. I believe I need not go into any more details of how,
+according to various witnesses, visitors to concentration camps were
+impressed and surprised by the good condition, cleanliness, and order in
+the camps; and therefore no suspicion was aroused as to special
+sufferings of the inmates. But it would be in the worst taste if I
+contested the fact that a chief of the Intelligence Service, if only on
+the basis of foreign news of atrocities, should not have felt a
+responsibility, in the interest of humanity, to clear up any doubts
+arising in that sphere.
+
+The lack of knowledge seems to be confirmed by the statement of Dr.
+Meyer of the International Red Cross, since the permission to allow the
+International Red Cross to visit the Jewish Camp at Theresienstadt and
+to allow food and medical supplies to be sent in, coming from
+Kaltenbrunner, seems to be proof of the bad conditions in the camps
+during the last months of the war; nobody, however, would allow neutral
+or foreign observers to have insight into the camps if it had been known
+that crimes against humanity were, so to speak, scheduled daily in the
+camps, as is asserted by the Prosecution.
+
+In no case, therefore, do I come to the conclusion that Kaltenbrunner
+had full knowledge of the so-called “conditions” in the concentration
+camps, yet I do conclude that it was his duty to investigate the fate of
+those who were imprisoned. Kaltenbrunner might have found out then that
+a considerable number of the inmates were sent to the camps because they
+were criminals and that a much smaller portion was there because of
+their political or ideological viewpoints or because of their race but
+that he would then have found out about those primitive offenses against
+humanity, about those excesses and all the distress of these
+people—that I contest, in agreement with Kaltenbrunner.
+
+The way to arrive at the truth was immensely complicated in Germany, and
+even the Chief of the Reich Security Main Office found nearly
+insurmountable obstacles in the hierarchy of jurisdiction and authority
+of other offices and persons. The alleviation of the sad lot of the
+internees was, after 1943, a problem which could have been solved only
+through the dissolution of such camps. A Germany of the last 12 years
+without any concentration camps would, however, have been a utopia. On
+the whole, Kaltenbrunner was but a small cog in this machinery.
+
+Earlier I spoke about the orders for protective custody and of their
+effect. Dr. Kaltenbrunner has affirmed the necessity for work education
+camps, owing to—as stated by him during his examination—the conditions
+then prevailing in the Reich, to the shortcomings of the labor market,
+and to other reasons. And if I am not mistaken, no convincing proof was
+submitted of ill-treatment and cruelties in such camps. The reason may
+well lie in the fact that these camps were in some respects only related
+to, but not on equal footing with, concentration camps.
+
+With all available means of evidence, Kaltenbrunner has opposed the
+accusation of having confirmed orders of execution with his signature.
+The witnesses Hoess and Zutter stated that they saw such orders in
+isolated cases. The Prosecution, however, does not seem to me to have
+proved that any such orders were issued without judicial sentence or
+without reasons justifying death, with the exception of a particularly
+serious case reported from hearsay by the witness Zutter, adjutant of
+the camp commandant of Mauthausen. According to him, a teletype signed
+by Kaltenbrunner is said to have authorized the execution of
+parachutists in the spring of 1945. An original signature by
+Kaltenbrunner is entirely lacking. I add that Kaltenbrunner has
+contested having any knowledge or information about this matter. I think
+I may safely claim that he did not sign any such orders concerning life
+and death, because he was not authorized to do so. Dr. Hoettl as a
+witness stated:
+
+ “No, Kaltenbrunner did not issue such orders and could not, in
+ my opinion, give such orders”—for killing Jews—“on his own
+ initiative.”
+
+And Wanneck explicitly asserted the following:
+
+ “It is known to me that Himmler personally decided over life and
+ death and other punishment of inmates of concentration camps.”
+
+Thus the exclusive authority of Himmler in this sad sphere may be
+considered proved. I am not seriously disposed to deny the guilt of
+Kaltenbrunner completely on this point. If such orders were carried out
+against members of foreign powers, for example, based on the so-called
+“Commando Order” of Hitler of 18 October 1942, then there arises the
+question of the responsibility of that person whose signature was
+affixed to these orders, because misuse of his name by subordinates was
+possible. It is certain that Kaltenbrunner never exerted the least
+influence in originating the “Commando Order.” It can, however, hardly
+be doubted that this decree constituted a violation of international
+law. The development of the second World War into a total war inevitably
+created an abundance of new stratagems. Insofar as genuine soldiers were
+employed in their execution, even a motive of bitterness, humanly quite
+understandable—and I am now speaking about the conduct of the Commando
+troops concerned in violation of the laws of warfare and other
+things—could not justify the order. Fortunately but very few people
+fell victims to this order of Hitler, as the Defendant Jodl has
+testified.
+
+Perhaps one might ask me whether it is my duty, or whether I am
+permitted, to reiterate such points of incrimination as I have just
+done, since this seems to be the task of the Prosecution. To this I
+reply: If the Defense is so liberal as to admit the negative side of a
+personality, it surely is apt to be heard more readily when it
+approaches the Tribunal with the request to appraise the positive side
+in its full significance. However, is there a positive side at all in
+the case before us? I believe that I may answer that question in the
+affirmative. I already pointed out several facts which are connected
+with the time of the assumption of office by Kaltenbrunner. During his
+short 2 years of activity this man has made himself a bearer of
+decidedly fortunate and humane ideas. I wish to remind you of his
+attitude toward the lynch order of Hitler with respect to enemy aviators
+who were shot down. The witness, General of the Air Force Koller,
+described the decent conduct of Kaltenbrunner, which led to a total
+sabotage of this order. After first describing the contents of Hitler’s
+order and Hitler’s threat, pronounced during the situation conference at
+that time, namely, that any saboteur of this order should himself be
+shot, Koller goes on to repeat the statements of Kaltenbrunner. Permit
+me to quote a few sentences of the deposition of Koller. Koller says
+that Kaltenbrunner said:
+
+ “The tasks of the SD are always given a wrong interpretation.
+ Such matters are not the concern of the SD. Moreover, no German
+ soldier will do what the Führer commands. He does not kill
+ prisoners; and if a few fanatic partisans of Herr Bormann try to
+ do so, the German soldier will interfere ... Furthermore, I
+ myself, too, will do nothing in this matter ...”
+
+Koller and Kaltenbrunner, therefore, were fully agreed on that matter.
+This positive action of Kaltenbrunner, important for the judgment of the
+actual nature of his personality, does not stand alone. Dr. Hoettl
+confirmed the fact that, in questions of the future fate of Germany,
+Kaltenbrunner went, if not beyond, at least up to the borderline of high
+treason. This witness, for example, confirms that Kaltenbrunner in March
+1944 caused Hitler to moderate the plans concerning the Hungarian
+question and succeeded in preventing the entry of Romanian units into
+Hungary, that with his support also the planned Hungarian National
+Socialist Government was not set up for a long time.
+
+Dr. Hoettl then says literally:
+
+ “Since 1943 I told Kaltenbrunner that Germany must attempt to
+ end the war by a peace at any price. I informed him of my
+ connections with an American authority in Lisbon. I also
+ informed him that I had taken up new contacts with an American
+ authority abroad by way of the Austrian resistance movement. He
+ declared that he was prepared to go to Switzerland with me and
+ there to take up personally negotiations with the American
+ representative, in order to prevent further useless bloodshed.”
+
+The depositions of the witness Dr. Neubacher run along the same lines.
+But over and beyond that, this witness testified to a significant humane
+deed of Kaltenbrunner. Upon being questioned whether Kaltenbrunner had
+assisted the witness in moderating, as much as possible, the terror
+policies in Serbia, Dr. Neubacher answered; and I quote:
+
+ “Yes, in this field I owe much to the assistance of
+ Kaltenbrunner. The German Police agencies in Serbia knew from me
+ and from Kaltenbrunner that in his capacity as Chief of the
+ Foreign Intelligence Service he uncompromisingly supported my
+ policies in the southeastern territory. Thereby I succeeded in
+ exerting influence on the police offices. Kaltenbrunner’s
+ assistance was of value in my efforts to abolish the then
+ prevailing system of collective responsibility and reprisals
+ with the aid of intelligence officers.”
+
+I further mention the relief work of the Geneva Red Cross, which is due
+to the initiative of Kaltenbrunner. The activity of the defendant with
+respect to this was portrayed by the witnesses Professor Burckhardt, Dr.
+Bachmann, and Dr. Meyer. As a consequence many thousands were able to
+exchange their captivity for liberty.
+
+I should like to draw your attention to a few words stated by the
+Defendant Seyss-Inquart on two points. He mentioned that Kaltenbrunner
+advocated the complete autonomy of the Polish state as well as the
+reintroduction of the independence of both Christian Churches, and I
+might add that Dr. Hoettl testified that Kaltenbrunner defended his
+activity very energetically and met with most bitter resistance by
+Bormann. Kaltenbrunner tried to realize his humane intentions not only
+in this field. Therefore, it seems to me to be of significance also to
+point out his efforts to make the Austrian Gauleiter understand that any
+resistance against the troops of the Western powers would be senseless
+and that in view of this, irresponsible orders for resistance were not
+to be issued. This was confirmed by the witness Wanneck. The Prosecution
+held Kaltenbrunner responsible for the evacuation and planned
+destruction of certain concentration camps. I believe this evidence may
+not only be considered as inconclusive, but that the contrary has in
+fact been proved. Upon the question, addressed to Dr. Hoettl, whether
+Kaltenbrunner had instructed the commandant of the concentration camp
+Mauthausen to surrender the camp to the advancing troops, Dr. Hoettl
+answered:
+
+ “It is correct that Kaltenbrunner issued such an order. He
+ dictated it in my presence for transmission to the camp
+ commandant.”
+
+As a supplement Kaltenbrunner, during his personal examination, declared
+very logically: If the camp of Mauthausen, filled with criminals, could
+not be evacuated by his orders, an order to evacuate Dachau would have
+been devoid of any basis by reason of its—compared with
+Mauthausen—harmless inmates. According to the testimony of Freiherr Von
+Eberstein, the destruction of the concentration camp Dachau with its two
+secondary camps was the goal of the then Gauleiter of Munich, Giesler.
+
+Finally the witness Wanneck confirmed the fact that such an order of
+Kaltenbrunner had not become known to him; that, however, due to his
+position with Kaltenbrunner, he would have known if such an order had
+been issued by the latter or even the issuance of such an order
+considered. Who actually issued these orders can no longer be
+established with certainty. The witness Hoess, in his examination,
+mentioned an order of evacuation by Himmler, as well as one directly by
+Hitler.
+
+In this connection it seems appropriate to me to refer to
+Kaltenbrunner’s participation in the sad case of Sagan as charged by the
+Prosecution. With reference to Kaltenbrunner’s statement, confirmed by
+the examination of the witness Wielen, it appears to me to be a proven
+fact that this matter came to Kaltenbrunner’s attention for the first
+time only several weeks later, after the conclusion of this tragedy.
+
+It also appears doubtful to me whether the so-called Einsatzgruppen,
+introduced on the basis of Hitler’s “Commissar Order” of 1941, were
+still in existence and functioning after the appointment of
+Kaltenbrunner. Some facts speak for it, others against it. Kaltenbrunner
+denied the existence of these groups during his term as Chief of the
+Reich Security Main Office. I do not want to lose myself in details, but
+I should like to draw the attention of the Tribunal to these doubts. The
+same applies, for example, to the so-called “Bullet Decree.” Document
+1650-PS confirms that it was not Kaltenbrunner but Müller, the infamous
+Chief of Amt IV, who issued the instructions involved, while Document
+3844-PS mentions personal signatures of the defendant. It appears to me
+that the first document deserves preference. May I finally draw your
+attention to those documents which are of less value as evidence because
+they are based upon indirect observation. I believe that the Tribunal
+possesses sufficient experience in evaluating evidence so that I need
+not argue this any further.
+
+I have thus far openly conceded the negative, so that I may be the more
+justified in emphasizing the positive in Kaltenbrunner’s personality.
+How far, however, shall I be justified in stating that Kaltenbrunner had
+actually insufficient knowledge of many War Crimes and Crimes against
+Humanity which were committed with some kind of participation of Amt IV
+in the course of the last 2 years of the war? Would such a defense offer
+the prospect of essentially exculpating the Chief of the Reich Security
+Main Office?
+
+Dr. Kaltenbrunner admitted during his examination that it was only very
+late, in some cases as late as 1944 or 1945, that he obtained knowledge
+of orders, instructions, and directives, despite the fact that they
+originated much earlier—in some instances several years before he took
+office. And here I add—and I wish to emphasize this particularly at
+this point—that these orders, which are contrary to international
+ethics and humanity, all go back to a time during which Dr.
+Kaltenbrunner was still in Austria.
+
+I will not at this moment try to prove in detail all these statements of
+Kaltenbrunner’s. The Prosecution is interested exclusively in whether
+such orders, decrees, directives, and so forth, were also executed
+during the period of time in which the defendant was in office as Chief
+of the Reich Security Main Office. It is also often very difficult for a
+defense counsel to follow a defendant along the secret channels of his
+knowledge or his ignorance. Perhaps the defense counsel also sometimes
+lacks the necessary distance for a free and just judgment, in view of
+the hecatombs of victims spread out across a whole continent, and he is
+unfair to his client. Thus he leaves the nature of the defendant’s
+character to the later judgment of history, for even the defense counsel
+is not infallible when it comes to drawing a picture of the soul of his
+own client.
+
+During his examination before the Tribunal Kaltenbrunner once explained
+the difficult position he was in when he took over his office on 1
+February 1943, and I hope that nobody will misjudge this situation. The
+Reich was still fighting, and even in 1943 was still dangerous for any
+adversary colliding with it. But it was already a fight for a goal
+obviously remote and out of reach. Whoever tries to hold back the spokes
+of the wheels on a vehicle rolling into an abyss at top speed will
+perish all too easily. Coupled with these conditions, from which there
+was no way of escaping, there was an uncreative officiousness, caused by
+nervous insecurity, in all areas of private and public life.
+Kaltenbrunner said with regard to this situation:
+
+ “I beg you to put yourself into my situation. I came to Berlin
+ in the beginning of February 1943. I began my work in May 1943,
+ except for a few complimentary calls. In the fourth year of the
+ war the orders and decrees of the Reich also in the execution
+ sector had piled up by the thousands on the tables and in the
+ filing cabinets of the civil service. It was quite impossible
+ for a human being to read through all that, even in the course
+ of a year. Even if I had felt it to be my duty, I could never
+ possibly have made myself acquainted with all these orders.”
+
+In connection with this I remind you respectfully that, according to the
+evidence given by the witness Dr. Hoettl and others, the Reich Security
+Main Office in Berlin had 3,000 employees of all categories when
+Kaltenbrunner was in office and that according to the statement of the
+same witness Kaltenbrunner never controlled this office completely.
+
+Nobody will be able to deny that the question is justified whether it
+was not Kaltenbrunner’s duty to have himself informed in the shortest
+possible time at least about the most essential proceedings in all the
+departments of the Reich Security Main Office and whether he would not
+then very soon have obtained knowledge of, for example, Himmler’s and
+Eichmann’s anti-Jewish operation and many other serious terrorist
+measures. I may remind you that Kaltenbrunner declared repeatedly and
+emphatically, in answering my questions before this Tribunal, that he
+protested regularly every time he heard of such occurrences, addressing
+himself to Himmler and even to Hitler, but that he had but little
+success, and this only after a long while. The defendant, for example,
+traces back the cessation of the extermination of Jews, by an order of
+Hitler in October 1944, to his personal initiative. However difficult it
+may be to judge whether the power and influence of a single person would
+have been sufficient to bring about the suspension of a program of the
+extermination of a race, already in its final phase, I believe I may say
+without being open to correction that many tens of thousands of Jews owe
+it to this man that they escaped the hell of Auschwitz and can still see
+the light of the sun. From the statements of Dr. Bachmann and Dr. Meyer
+of the International Red Cross it appears that Kaltenbrunner asked the
+International Red Cross to organize relief shipments to a large Jewish
+nonpolitical camp at Unskirchen near Wels.
+
+Wanneck has characterized Kaltenbrunner’s attitude toward the question
+of Himmler’s Jewish policy as follows. He says:
+
+ “In the daily haste of our joint labors and discussions on
+ foreign policy, we no longer dwelt upon the problem of Jewish
+ policy. At the time Kaltenbrunner came into office this question
+ was already so far advanced that Kaltenbrunner could not have
+ had any more influence on it. If Kaltenbrunner expressed himself
+ at all on the subject, it was to the effect that mistakes had
+ been made here that could never be made good.”
+
+This witness then finally confirmed the fact that this operation was
+conducted independently through a direct channel of command from Himmler
+to Eichmann and said that the position of Eichmann, which already had
+been a dominating one when Heydrich was still alive, had increased
+steadily, so that eventually he had acted completely independently in
+the entire Jewish sphere.
+
+And here I add that, according to the statement of Hoess, the only man
+left alive who is familiar with this question, it is established that
+only about 200 or 300 people knew of that dreadful order of Himmler’s
+which was given during a conference which lasted for 10 or 15 minutes,
+on the basis of which more than four million people were exterminated.
+And I add that a large nation of 80 million had learned little or
+probably nothing about these things which happened in the Southeast of
+the Reich during the war. Professor Burckhardt states that
+Kaltenbrunner, when discussing the Jewish question, declared:
+
+ “It is the greatest nonsense; all the Jews should be released,
+ that is my personal opinion.”
+
+But in spite of all this, the fundamental question is raised for the
+problem of guilt: May a high official and the director of an influential
+office, whose subordinates in a far-reaching hierarchy continually
+commit crimes against humanity and against the rules of international
+law, assume such an office at all or remain in such an office, although
+he condemns these crimes? Or is it perhaps a different case if this man
+has the intention of doing all that is humanly possible to break the
+chain of crimes and thereby finally to become a benefactor of humanity?
+The last question is generally to be answered in the affirmative. It is
+to be appraised solely from the standpoint of the highest ethical
+principles.
+
+My further thought in this connection is the following: He who invokes
+such a philanthropic intention is free of guilt if from the first day of
+his taking over such an office he refuses to take any active part in the
+actual commitment of the crime, and, beyond this, avails himself of
+every conceivable possibility, even seeks it out, to achieve the
+elimination of evil orders and their execution through his never-ending
+resistance and every form of human cunning.
+
+The defendant himself has also sensed and clearly recognized all these
+things. On account of the importance of the question I should like to
+refer to his interrogation:
+
+ “Question: ‘I ask you whether there was a possibility that you
+ might have brought about a change after having gradually learned
+ the conditions in the Secret State Police and in the
+ concentration camps, _et cetera_. If this possibility existed,
+ will you then say that an alleviation, that is, an improvement,
+ was brought about in the conditions in these fields due to your
+ remaining in office?’”
+
+Kaltenbrunner says:
+
+ “I repeatedly applied for service at the front. But the most
+ burning question which I had to decide for myself was whether
+ the conditions would be thereby improved, alleviated, or
+ changed. Or was it my duty to do everything possible in this
+ position to change all the conditions that have been so severely
+ criticized here? Since my repeated demands to be sent to the
+ front were refused, all I could do was to make a personal
+ attempt to change a system, the ideological and legal
+ foundations of which I could no longer change, as has been
+ illustrated by all the orders presented here from the period
+ before I was in office; I could only try to moderate these
+ methods in order to help eliminate them for good.
+
+ “Question: ‘And so, did you consider it consistent with your
+ conscience to remain in spite of this?’
+
+ “Answer: ‘In view of the possibility of constantly using my
+ influence on Hitler, Himmler, and other people, I could not in
+ my opinion reconcile it with my conscience to give up this
+ position. I considered it my duty to take a personal stand
+ against injustice.’”
+
+As you see, the defendant refers to his conscience and you have to
+decide whether this conscience, taking into consideration duty toward
+one’s own country but also toward the community of mankind, has failed
+or not. The duty which I have just mentioned, to resist the orders of
+evil, exists in itself for every human being, regardless of his
+position. This duty is expressly affirmed by Kaltenbrunner also. He who
+holds a state office must in the first place be able to prove that he
+contributed toward abolishing the gigantic injustice which occurred in
+Europe as soon as he learned of it, if he does not want to become
+guilty. Has Dr. Kaltenbrunner presented sufficient proofs? The answer to
+this question I leave to your judgment. But one thing I should like to
+express as my opinion: This man was no conspirator; rather was he
+exclusively a person acting under orders and under compulsion. Himmler’s
+order was, despite all previous agreement, for him to take over the
+Reich Security Main Office. Is it right that an order should change the
+fundamental aspect of the problem? This question is of the highest
+importance. According to the Charter of this Tribunal one cannot plead
+higher orders for the purposes of avoiding punishment. The reasons given
+for this by the American chief prosecutor proceeded from the presumed
+knowledge of the crimes or their background in the minds of the higher
+leaders which, therefore, precluded them from pleading the existence of
+orders. Like a red thread the fact runs through this Trial that hardly
+one high official, in whatever position of public life he may have been,
+was put into office without the order of the highest representative of
+official authority; for in the last 3 years of the war the already
+clearly discernible inevitable destiny of the Reich meant for the holder
+of a high office the renunciation of that part of life which many people
+say makes life worth living. For the duration of the war, orders tied
+the office holder to his position. Also there is no doubt that he who
+refused to obey an order, especially in the last years of the war,
+risked his own death, and possibly the extinction of his family.
+
+From whatever side we approach the problem of orders in Germany after
+1933, the invocation of the above-mentioned state of duress ought not to
+be denied to a defendant, because that principle of duress which exists
+in the German criminal code, as no doubt it does in the criminal codes
+of all civilized nations, is based on that freedom of the individual
+being which is necessary for the affirmation of any guilt.
+
+If the perpetrator is no longer free to act, because another person
+deprives him of this liberty through direct immediate danger to his
+life, then, on principle, he is not guilty. I do not want at this
+instant to examine whether in the German world of reality of the last
+years such a direct immediate danger for one’s own life always existed;
+but an encroachment upon the freedom of the man receiving orders did
+exist to a smaller or larger extent without any doubt. It seems certain
+to me that Himmler would have interpreted a refusal of Kaltenbrunner to
+take over the direction of the Reich Security Main Office as sabotage
+and would, as a necessary conclusion, have eliminated him.
+
+Hitler, according to the revelations at this Trial, was one of the
+greatest lawbreakers that world history has ever known. Many even admit
+it to be a duty to kill such a monster, so as to guarantee to millions
+of human beings the right of freedom and life. At this Trial the most
+varied points of view with regard to the “Putsch,” especially the
+killing of the tyrant, have been proffered by witnesses and defendants.
+I cannot recognize the duty, but the right is certainly not contestable.
+If the oppression of human freedom occurs by means of a clearly unjust
+order based on misanthropy, the scales in the now ensuing conflict
+between obedience and freedom of conscience will be weighted on the side
+of the latter. Even the so-called oath of allegiance could not justify a
+different point of view because, as everybody feels, the obligation to
+allegiance presupposes duties of both partners, so that he who treads
+under foot the obligation to respect human conscience in the person of
+his subordinates loses at the same moment the right to expect obedience.
+The tortured conscience is freed and breaks the ties which the oath had
+created. Perhaps some people will not agree with my point of view on
+this problem and will point out the necessity of orderliness in the
+community, and the salutary effects of obedience in the very interest of
+this orderly state, or they will point to the wisdom of those in command
+and at the impossibility of understanding and evaluating all such orders
+as well as the person in command does; they will point to patriotism and
+other aspects. And though all that may be correct, there yet remains an
+absolute obligation to resist an order the purport of which, clearly
+recognizable to a subordinate, amounts to the materialization of evil
+and obviously violates the healthy sentiments which aim at humanity and
+peace among people and individuals. The phrase “in a life-and-death
+struggle of a nation there can be no legality” is an untrue thesis not
+thought out to the end, no matter who expresses it. Even immediate
+danger to the life of the person receiving the order could not induce me
+to change my conviction. Dr. Kaltenbrunner would not deny that he who
+stands at the head of an office of great importance to the community is
+obliged to sacrifice his life under the above-mentioned conditions.
+
+Whereas even direct and imminent danger to his own life and that of his
+family cannot excuse him, it does diminish his guilt, and Kaltenbrunner
+only means to point to this moral and legal evaluation of his position.
+Thus he emphasizes a fact, historically proven, which was one of the
+deeper reasons for the collapse of the Reich; for no living man can
+bring to a community liberty, peace, and welfare, who himself bears his
+chains reluctantly and has lost that freedom which is the decisive
+characteristic of all human beings.
+
+I believe Kaltenbrunner would like to be reborn, and I know that he
+would fight for that freedom with his life’s blood. Kaltenbrunner is
+guilty; but he is less guilty than he appears in the eyes of the
+Prosecution. As the last representative of an ominous power of the
+darkest and most anguish-laden period of the Reich’s history he will
+await your judgment, and yet he was a man whom one could not meet
+without a feeling of tragedy.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn now.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Dr. Thoma.
+
+DR. ALFRED THOMA (Counsel for the Defendant Rosenberg): May it please
+the Tribunal, Mr. President, the documentary film which was shown in
+this room and which was to illustrate the “Rise and Fall of National
+Socialism,” begins with a speech delivered by Rosenberg concerning the
+development of the Party up to the assumption of power. He also
+describes the Munich insurrection and says that on the morning of 9
+November 1923 he saw police cars with machine-guns assembling in the
+Ludwigstrasse in Munich and he knew what the march to the Feldherrnhalle
+implied. Nevertheless he marched in the first lines. Today also, my
+client takes the same position in face of the Indictment formulated by
+the prosecutors of the United Nations. He does not want to be pictured
+as though nobody paid any attention to his books, his speeches, and his
+publications. Even today he does not want to appear as a person other
+than what he was once before, a fighter for Germany’s strong position in
+the world, namely, a German Reich in which national freedom should be
+linked to social justice.
+
+Rosenberg is a German, born in the Baltic provinces, who learned to
+speak Russian as a young boy, passed his examination in Moscow after the
+Technical College in Riga moved to Moscow during the first World War,
+took an interest in Russian literature and art, had Russian friends, and
+was puzzled by the fact that the Russian nation, defined by Dostoievsky
+as “the nation with God in its heart,” was overcome by the spirit of
+materialistic Marxism. He considered it inconceivable and unjust that
+the right of self-determination had indeed often been promised but never
+voluntarily granted to many nations of Eastern Europe which had been
+conquered by Czarism even in the nineteenth century.
+
+Rosenberg became convinced that the Bolshevik revolution was not
+directed against certain temporary political phenomena only but against
+the whole national tradition, against the religious faith, against the
+old rural foundations of the Eastern European nations, and generally
+against the idea of personal property. At the end of 1918 he came to
+Germany and saw the danger of a Bolshevistic revolution in Germany too;
+he saw the whole spiritual and material civilization of the Occident
+endangered and believed to have found his lifework in the struggle
+against this danger as a follower of Hitler.
+
+It was a political struggle against fanatical and well-organized
+opponents who had at their disposal international resources and
+international backing and who acted according to the principle: “Strike
+the Fascists wherever you can.” But as little as one can deduce from
+that slogan that the Soviets entertained intentions of military
+aggression against Fascist Italy, just as little can one say that the
+struggle of the National Socialists against Bolshevism meant a
+preparation for a war of aggression against the U.S.S.R.
+
+To the Defendant Rosenberg a military conflict with the Soviet Union,
+especially a war of aggression against the latter, seemed as likely or
+as unlikely as to any German or foreign politician who had read the book
+_Mein Kampf_. It is not correct to maintain that he was initiated in any
+way into plans of aggression against the Soviet Union; on the contrary,
+he publicly advocated proper relations with Moscow (Document
+Rosenberg-7b, Page 147). Rosenberg never spoke in favor of military
+intervention against the Soviet Union. However, he did fear the entry of
+the Red Army into the border states and then into Germany.
+
+When, in August 1939, Rosenberg learned about the conclusion of the
+Non-Aggression Pact between the Reich and the Soviet Union—he was as
+little informed about the preliminary discussions as he was about the
+other foreign political measures taken by the Führer—he might have gone
+to see the Führer and protested against it. He did not do it, and he did
+not object to it with a single word, which the witness Göring confirmed
+as being a statement of Hitler’s.
+
+In the witness box Rosenberg himself described (session of 16 April
+1946) how he was then suddenly called to Hitler, at the beginning of
+April 1941, who told him that he considered a military clash with the
+Soviet Union inevitable. Hitler offered two reasons for it:
+
+(1) The military occupation of Romanian territory, namely, Bessarabia
+and North Bukovina.
+
+(2) The tremendous increase of the Red Army, along the line of
+demarcation and on Soviet Russian territory in general, which had been
+going on for a long time.
+
+These facts were so striking, he said, that he had already issued the
+appropriate military and other orders, and he said that he would appoint
+Rosenberg in some form as a political adviser. As he further stated in
+the witness box, he thus found himself confronted with an accomplished
+fact, and the very attempt to discuss it was cut short by the Führer
+with the remark that the orders had been issued and that hardly anything
+could be changed in this matter. Thereupon Rosenberg called some of his
+closest collaborators together, because he did not know whether the
+military events would take place very soon or later on; and he made, or
+had made, some plans concerning the treatment of political problems. On
+20 April 1941 Rosenberg received from Hitler a preliminary order to
+establish a central office to deal with questions concerning the East
+and to contact the competent highest Reich authorities with respect to
+these matters (Document Number 865-PS, USA-143).
+
+If this statement made by Rosenberg is not in itself sufficient to
+refute the assertion made by the Prosecution, according to which
+Rosenberg is “personally responsible for the planning and execution of
+the war of aggression against Russia” (Brudno, in the session of 9
+January 1946) and was aware of the “aggressive predatory character of
+the imminent war” (Rudenko, in the session of 17 April 1946)—if, above
+all, it is not accepted that Rosenberg was convinced of an imminent
+aggressive war to be waged by the Soviet Union against Germany, then I
+would like to bring up four more points in order to prove the
+correctness of the statements made by the defendant.
+
+(1) Rosenberg was not called to the well-known conference at the Reich
+Chancellery on 5 November 1937 (“Hossbach Document,” Document Number
+386-PS, USA-25), when Hitler disclosed for the first time his intentions
+of waging war. This was at the time when Rosenberg still had political
+influence, or at least seemed to have it. If ever, he should have played
+the part of the intimate political “inspirator” then.
+
+(2) Lammers, as a witness, stated before this Tribunal that Hitler made
+all important decisions quite alone; thus also the decision concerning
+war against Russia.
+
+(3) To my question about Rosenberg’s influence on Hitler’s decisions
+concerning foreign policy, Göring replied before this Tribunal on 16
+March 1946:
+
+ “I think that after the accession to power, the Führer did not
+ consult the Party Office of Foreign Affairs a single time about
+ questions concerning foreign policy and that it was created only
+ as a center for dealing with certain questions concerning
+ foreign policy which came up within the Party. As far as I know,
+ Rosenberg was certainly not consulted about political decisions
+ after the accession to power.”
+
+This was also confirmed by the witness Von Neurath on 26 June 1946 in
+this courtroom.
+
+(4) Finally, I would further like to refer to the “brief report
+concerning the activity of the Office of Foreign Affairs of the NSDAP”
+(Document Number 003-PS, USA-603). Brief mention is made in it of the
+“Near East” in such a harmless manner that no word need be said about
+it. In the confidential reports 004-PS and 007-PS nothing is said either
+about any preparations against the Soviet Union.
+
+Administration in the East.
+
+It would be an easy, too superficial, and therefore, unjust procedure if
+one were to say that firstly the Eastern Territories were occupied in a
+war of aggression, and therefore anything the German administration did
+there was criminal; and secondly, that as Reich Minister for the
+Occupied Eastern Territories, Rosenberg was the responsible minister,
+and therefore he must be punished for all crimes which have occurred
+there, at least for what happened within the scope of the jurisdiction
+and authority of the administrative bodies. I will have to demonstrate
+that this conception is not correct for legal and factual reasons.
+
+Rosenberg was the organizer and the highest authority of the
+administration in the East. On 17 July 1941 he was appointed Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories. Acting on instructions,
+he had performed preparatory work before that time on questions
+concerning Eastern Europe by contacting the Reich agencies concerned
+(Document Number 1039-PS; US-146). He planned and set up his office for
+dealing centrally with questions concerning Eastern Europe (Document
+Number 1024-PS; US-278). He had provisional instructions for the Reich
+Commissioners drawn up (Document Number 1030-PS; US-144); he delivered
+the programmatical speech of 20 June 1941 (Document Number 1068-PS;
+US-143); above all, he took part in the Führer conference of 16 July
+1941 (Document Number L-221; US-317).
+
+In the presence of Rosenberg, Lammers, Keitel, and Bormann, Hitler said
+at that time that the real aims of the war against Russia should not be
+made known to the whole world, that those present should understand
+clearly that “we will never withdraw from the new Eastern Territories;
+whatever opposition appears will be exterminated; never again must a
+military power develop west of the Urals; nobody but a German shall ever
+bear a weapon.” Hitler proclaimed the subjection and the exploitation of
+the Eastern Territories, and in making these statements he placed
+himself in opposition to what Rosenberg had told him before—without
+being contradicted by Hitler—concerning his own plans for the East.
+
+Thus Hitler probably had a program of enslavement and exploitation.
+Nothing is so natural, and nothing easier than to say: Even before
+Rosenberg took over his ministry he knew Hitler’s aims for the East;
+namely, to rule it, to administer it, to exploit it. Therefore he is not
+only an accomplice in a crime of conspiracy against peace; he is also
+jointly responsible for the Crimes against Humanity perpetrated in the
+Eastern Territories, since Rosenberg held the complete power, the
+highest authority in the East.
+
+I shall deal later, _de jure_ and _de facto_, with the question of
+Rosenberg’s automatic responsibility in his capacity as supreme chief of
+the Eastern Territories. First I would like to consider the question of
+his individual responsibility. One might deduce it from two reasons:
+
+First, because he allegedly participated in the preparation of the war
+of aggression against the Soviet Union; I have already stated that this
+assertion is not correct; Rosenberg has neither ideologically nor
+actually participated in the preparations of the war of aggression.
+
+Secondly, because he supported Hitler’s plan of conquest by making
+plans, delivering speeches, and organizing the administration. When a
+minister or general, following the instructions of the head of the
+State, elaborates plans or takes preparatory measures of an
+organizational nature, for later eventualities, this activity cannot be
+considered as criminal even when the interests of other countries are
+affected thereby and even when the plans, preparations, and measures are
+intended for war. Only when the minister or general in question directs
+his activity toward things which have to be considered as criminal
+according to sound common sense and an international sense of decency
+and justice can he be held individually responsible. Rosenberg has
+consistently proved by word and deed that the traditional conceptions of
+right are his conceptions also and that he desired to enforce them. But
+his position was particularly difficult since his supreme chief finally
+exceeded all limits in his ideas, aims, and intentions and since other
+strong forces like Bormann, Himmler, and Gauleiter Erich Koch were also
+involved, who frustrated and sabotaged Rosenberg’s good and fair
+intentions.
+
+Thus we witness the strange spectacle of a minister in office who partly
+cannot understand or approve, partly is totally unaware of the
+intentions of the head of the State; and on the other hand that of the
+head of a state who appoints a minister to take office, who is certainly
+an old and loyal political fellow combatant, but with whom he has no
+longer any spiritual contact whatsoever. It would be wrong to judge such
+a situation simply according to democratic conceptions of the
+responsibility of a minister. Rosenberg could not simply resign, yet he
+felt inwardly the duty of fighting for the point of view which appeared
+to him right and decent.
+
+In his speech of 20 June 1941 Rosenberg said that it was the duty of the
+Germans to consider that Germany should not have to fight every 25 years
+for her existence in the East. He by no means, however, desired the
+extermination of the Slavs, but the advancement of all the nations of
+Eastern Europe and the advancement, not the annihilation, of their
+national independence. He demanded (Document Number 1058-PS; Exhibit
+USA-147) “friendly sentiments” toward the Ukrainians, a guarantee of
+“national and cultural existence” for the Caucasians; he emphasized
+that, even with a war on, we were “not enemies of the Russian people,
+whose great achievements we fully recognize.” He advocated “the right of
+self-determination of people”—one of the first points of the whole
+Soviet revolution. This was his idea, tenaciously defended till the end.
+The speech in question also contains the passage which the Prosecution
+holds against him in particular, that the feeding of the German people
+during these years will be placed at the top of German demands in the
+East and that the southern territories and the North Caucasus would have
+to make up the balance in feeding the German people. Then, Rosenberg
+continues literally:
+
+ “We do not see at all why we should be compelled to feed the
+ Russian people also from these regions of surplus. We know that
+ this is a bitter necessity which lies beyond any sentiment.
+ Without a doubt extensive evacuation will be necessary, and
+ there are very hard years ahead for the Russians. To what extent
+ industries are to be kept up there is a question reserved for
+ future decision.”
+
+This passage comes quite suddenly and all by itself in the long speech.
+One feels distinctly that it has been squeezed in; it is not Rosenberg’s
+voice; Rosenberg does not proclaim here a program of his own but only
+states facts which lie beyond his will. In the directives of the eastern
+ministry (Document Number 1056-PS) the feeding of the population, as
+well as supplying it with medical necessities, is described as being
+especially urgent.
+
+On the contrary, the true Rosenberg emerges in the conference of 16 July
+1941 when, regarding Hitler’s plans, he called attention to the
+University of Kiev and to the independence and cultural advancement of
+the Ukraine and when he took a stand against the intended full power of
+the Police and above all against the appointment of Gauleiter Erich Koch
+in the Ukraine (Document Number L-221).
+
+One will contend: What is the use of opposition and protests, what is
+the use of secret reservations and of feigned agreement with Hitler’s
+intentions—Rosenberg did co-operate all the same. Therefore he is
+responsible too. Later on I will outline in detail how and to what
+extent Rosenberg took part in the policy in the East, what things he did
+not do and how he opposed them, what he planned and desired himself in
+order to defend himself against the grave charge of being responsible
+for the alleged exploitation and enslavement of the East. Here I would
+only like to point out the following: It was in no way a hopeless task
+to begin by accepting even Hitler’s most passionate statements without
+contradiction in the hope and with the intention of nevertheless
+attaining a different result later on. In opposition to Hitler’s
+statement: “No other than a German may ever bear weapons in the East,”
+it was not long, for example, before, on Rosenberg’s recommendation,
+legions of volunteers were formed from the peoples of the East; and in
+opposition to Hitler’s wish, an edict of tolerance was issued at the end
+of 1941 for the churches of the East (Document Number 1517-PS).
+
+If, at first, Rosenberg could achieve nothing for the autonomy of the
+eastern nations, he still adhered to his plans for the future in this
+respect too. First he took care of the urgent agrarian question. An
+agrarian program was drawn up, which it was possible to present to the
+Führer on 15 February 1942, and which was authorized by him in unchanged
+form. It was not an instrument of exploitation, but an act of liberal
+formation of the agrarian constitution in the midst of the most terrible
+of wars. Right in the middle of the war the eastern countries not only
+received a new agrarian constitution but also agricultural machinery.
+The witness Professor Dencker, in his affidavit, has borne witness to
+the following deliveries to the occupied Soviet territories, including
+the former border states:
+
+ Tractors, 40-50 HP about 7,000
+ Threshing machines about 5,000
+ Agricultural implements about 200,000
+ Gas generators for German
+ and Russian tractors about 24,000
+ Harvesters about 35,000
+ Total Cost: about 180,000,000 marks.
+
+I do not think one can say that these deliveries were made with a view
+to exploitation. So in this, too, Rosenberg accomplished a piece of
+constructive work that was really a blessing. In the following I will
+first treat the question of Rosenberg’s automatic responsibility as
+minister for the Eastern Territories; that is, the question of his
+criminal liability on the grounds of his official position.
+
+On 17 July 1941, Rosenberg was appointed Reich Minister for the Occupied
+Eastern Territories. Two Reich Commissariats were set up as supreme
+territorial authorities: “Ostland” (Esthonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and
+White Ruthenia) under Reich Commissioner Lohse, and “Ukraine” under
+Reich Commissioner Koch. The Reich Commissariats were divided into
+general districts and regions. Right from the beginning the eastern
+ministry was not conceived as an administrative authority built on a
+large scale but as a central office, a supreme authority which was to
+confine itself to over-all instructions and fundamental directives and
+in addition was to insure the supply of material and personnel. The
+actual governing was the duty of the Reich Commissioner; he was the
+sovereign in his territory.
+
+Moreover, it is of special importance that Rosenberg, as minister for
+the East, was not at the head of the whole eastern administration, but
+that several supreme authorities existed at the same time. Göring, as
+Delegate for the Four Year Plan, was responsible for the control of the
+economy in all occupied territories and in this respect had authority
+over the minister for the East, for Rosenberg could only issue economic
+decrees with Göring’s agreement. The Chief of the German Police,
+Himmler, was solely and exclusively competent for police security in the
+Occupied Eastern Territories; there was no police division at all in the
+ministry for the East, nor in the Reich Commissariats. Rosenberg’s
+competence was furthermore undermined by Himmler as Reich Commissioner
+for the Preservation of German Nationality and by Speer, on behalf of
+whom a Führer decree detached all technical matters from the eastern
+administration. It was further weakened by Goebbels who claimed for
+himself the control of propaganda in the Occupied Eastern Territories as
+well. Later on I shall come to the important question of labor
+mobilization, which was put under the authority of Sauckel.
+Nevertheless, Rosenberg was the minister responsible for the Occupied
+Eastern Territories. In view of this, the following must be emphasized:
+
+In this Trial Rosenberg is not made responsible from the political
+standpoint, since the High Tribunal is no parliament; neither is he made
+responsible from the point of view of constitutional law, for the High
+Tribunal is not a supreme court of judicature. The liability of the
+defendant with respect to civil law is not in question either, but only
+his criminal liability, his responsibility for his own alleged crimes
+and for the crimes of others. I do not need to outline in more detail
+the fact that in order to establish criminal liability and to condemn
+it, it must be proved that the defendant illegally committed acts
+punishable by law and that he may only be punished for failure to act,
+that is, for an omission, if he had the legal duty to act and if it was
+due to his inactivity that the crime occurred, always assuming that the
+actual possibility existed of his preventing the crime.
+
+The fact seems to me of decisive importance that Rosenberg although
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, was not a supreme ruler.
+Supreme rulers were the Reich Commissioners of the gigantic territories
+“Ostland” and “Ukraine.” The lines along which these territories were to
+be constitutionally remodeled were not yet visible, but one thing was
+certain: The Reich Commissioner was the highest authority. For instance,
+it was he who, on the most important measures—like shooting of
+inhabitants of a region for acts of sabotage—had the right to make the
+ultimate decision. I should like to insert that in practice in these
+cases the Police had exclusive competence. The Reich, that is, other
+authorities, had the right to fundamental legislation and over-all
+supervision. By a slight change in the well-known remark of Benjamin
+Constant, the French professor of constitutional law, “_Le roi règne,
+mais il ne gouverne pas_,” one may define in the following way
+Rosenberg’s position as Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories:
+“_Le ministre gouverne, mais il ne règne pas._” As in certain dominions
+of the British Empire, there existed a sovereignty of the Reich
+Commissioner with a central over-all supervision by the minister for the
+East. Today nobody would think of summoning the competent British
+minister before a tribunal because a governor in India had allowed a
+native village to be bombed and burned down.
+
+And so I come to my conclusion that in Rosenberg’s case there exists no
+automatic criminal responsibility for the nonprevention of crimes in the
+East, if only because, although he had authority of supervision, he was
+not sovereign; the two Reich Commissioners had the supreme authority.
+
+The question must furthermore be asked and briefly examined whether the
+defendant is individually guilty of the criminal exploitation and
+enslavement of the nations of the East and perhaps of further crimes.
+What was his attitude, what were the general lines and general trends of
+his policy, what did he do positively, and what did he prevent or at
+least try to prevent?
+
+In the Baltic countries, national administrations or directorates were
+installed under German supervision. The German administration was
+compelled by the Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories to
+show great understanding for all desires which could be fulfilled and
+strive for good relations with the Baltic countries; the Baltic
+countries had a free legal, educational, and cultural system and were
+only limited with respect to questions concerning politics, economy, and
+the police. After the war of 1914-18 agrarian reform in the Baltic
+states was carried out almost exclusively at the expense of the
+700-year-old German holdings. Nevertheless Rosenberg, as minister for
+the East, made a law returning to private ownership the farms which had
+been made collective by the Soviet Union since 1940 and, by this
+restitution of soil which had originally been taken away from German
+proprietors, showed the greatest possible good will of the German Reich.
+This, as well as the already-mentioned agrarian program, has been
+expressly confirmed by the witness Riecke.
+
+In the General District of White Ruthenia independent administration was
+initiated under Reich Commissioner Kube. The White Ruthenia Central
+Committee was founded, as well as a White Ruthenian relief system and a
+White Ruthenian youth organization. When a White Ruthenian youth
+delegation returned from a visit to Germany, Kube said that he would
+continue to act as a father to White Ruthenian youth; the following
+night he was murdered, yet this policy was not changed.
+
+I should like to observe here in passing that the actual Russian
+territories between Narva and Leningrad and around Smolensk remained all
+the time under military administration; likewise the districts around
+Kharkov and the Crimea.
+
+As far as the Ukraine is concerned, Rosenberg intended to give it
+extensive central self-administrative sovereignty, as soon as possible,
+similar to the directorates in the Baltic states and combined with a
+pronounced advancement of the cultural and educational needs of the
+people. After Rosenberg had originally considered himself entitled to
+assume that Hitler agreed with this idea, another conception later came
+to prevail, namely, that all forces should be directed toward the war
+economy. Rosenberg managed to achieve and carry through one thing only:
+The new agrarian program of 15 February 1942, which provided for a
+transition from the collective economy of the Soviet Union to private
+enterprise and then to ownership by the farmers. On 23 June 1943 the
+property decree was issued as a complement to this. At first it was not
+possible to carry this out because of Reich Commissioner Koch’s
+opposition, and then military events brought everything to an end. A
+further fundamental decree was based on a general adjustment of the
+school system, which Rosenberg had ordered to be worked out because the
+Reich Commissioner of the Ukraine declined to do it himself. Rosenberg
+provided for elementary schools and higher technical schools; the Reich
+Commissioner protested against this. On account of the conflict, which
+became more and more acute, between Rosenberg and Reich Commissioner
+Koch, Hitler in June 1943 issued the following written instruction: The
+Reich Commissioner had no right to make any obstructions, but the Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories should confine himself to
+essential questions, and when issuing any orders should make it possible
+for the Reich Commissioner of the Ukraine to express his opinion
+beforehand, which practically meant Koch’s co-operation beside
+Rosenberg.
+
+During his examination of 8 April 1946 the witness Lammers described
+Rosenberg’s peculiar constitutional position as Reich Minister for the
+Occupied Eastern Territories and his political position, which became
+constantly weaker. I would like to emphasize the following striking and
+especially important declarations made by the witness: The authority of
+the Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories was detracted
+from by the Armed Forces, by Göring as the Delegate for the Four Year
+Plan, by Himmler as Chief of the German Police, by Himmler as Reich
+Commissioner for the Preservation of Germandom (resettlement measures),
+by Sauckel as Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor, by
+Speer in the field of armaments and engineering, and finally, through
+differences of opinion, by Propaganda Minister Goebbels.
+
+Furthermore, Rosenberg was limited by the fact that two Reich
+Commissioners, Lohse and Koch, were appointed for the Occupied Eastern
+Territories. The Higher SS and Police Leader was “personally and
+directly” subordinated to the Reich Commissioner; but, as Lammers has
+declared, in technical respects he could not take any orders from
+Rosenberg or from the Reich Commissioner but only from Himmler.
+
+Lammers said furthermore: Rosenberg always wished to pursue a moderate
+policy in the East; he was without any doubt against a policy of
+extermination and against a policy of deportation, which were widely
+advocated in other quarters. He made efforts to rebuild agriculture
+through the agrarian program, to put the educational system, church
+affairs, the universities and schools in order. Rosenberg had great
+difficulty in asserting himself, for especially the Reich Commissioner
+for the Ukraine simply did not follow Rosenberg’s orders. Rosenberg
+favored instituting a certain degree of independence in the eastern
+nations; he particularly had at heart the cultural interests of the
+latter. The differences of opinion between Koch and Rosenberg, says
+Lammers, could have filled volumes of files. Hitler called Rosenberg and
+Koch to him and decided that they should meet each month in order to
+consult each other.
+
+The witness Lammers said, quite rightly, that of Rosenberg as the
+superior minister it was asking too much to have to come to an agreement
+in each case with his subordinate, the Reich Commissioner. Subsequently
+it was shown that in spite of the meetings they came to no agreement,
+and finally it was Herr Koch who was right in the eyes of the Führer. As
+Lammers says it was about the end of 1943 that Rosenberg was received
+for the last time by the Führer, and even before that time he had always
+had great difficulties in reaching the Führer. There had been no more
+Reich Cabinet sessions since 1937.
+
+Hitler’s ideas tended more and more in the direction of Bormann-Himmler.
+The East became the ground for experiments.
+
+To this group—as it is quite clear today, for the first time—it seemed
+hopeless to look for understanding on the part of Rosenberg as to the
+development of the Reich as they wished it. Rosenberg had no idea of the
+extent of the fight waged against him. His quarrel with Reich
+Commissioner Koch, the exponent of Himmler and Bormann, is proof of this
+ignorance; but it is also complete proof of Rosenberg’s integrity.
+
+On 14 December 1942 Rosenberg issued a set of instructions to the Reich
+Commissioner of the Ukraine (Document Number 19-PS); his other
+instructions have unfortunately not been found. In this, Rosenberg
+requested the administrative chiefs to preserve decent attitudes and
+views; he demanded justice and human understanding for the population,
+which had always seen in Germany the supporter of legal order (Document
+Number 194-PS); the war had brought terrible hardships, but every
+offense should be fairly examined and judged, and should not be punished
+to excess. It is also inadmissible that German authorities meet the
+population with expressions of contempt. One can only show one is the
+master through correct manner and actions, not by ostentatious behavior;
+our own attitude must bring others to respect the Germans; those
+administrative chiefs who have shown themselves unworthy of their tasks,
+who have misused the authority they were given, and who by their
+obnoxious behavior have shown themselves to be unworthy of our uniform,
+must be treated accordingly and summoned before a court or removed to
+Germany.
+
+The echo which such decrees called forth in Koch is shown in his
+memorandum of 16 March 1943 (Document Number 192-PS). Koch writes that
+“it is a strange thought that not only must a correct attitude be
+displayed toward the Ukrainians, but that we must even be amiable to
+them and always ready to help.” Furthermore Rosenberg demanded esteem
+for the highly-developed consciousness of the Ukrainian people and,
+according to Rosenberg, a high degree of cultural self-administration
+was desirable for the Ukraine; nations as big as the Ukraine could not
+be kept in permanent dependence, and the eastern campaign was a
+political campaign and not an economic raid. Here Koch, addressing
+Rosenberg, refers in a cynical manner to the climax reached in the
+relations of his organization with Ukrainian emigration. There are other
+decrees of Rosenberg’s which are criticized by Koch. One of these is the
+decree of 18 June 1942 concerning the acquisition by Rosenberg of
+Ukrainian schoolbooks for a total of 2.3 million Reichsmark to be
+charged to the budget of the Reich Commissariat without his previously
+even getting in touch with Koch. One million primers, one million
+spelling charts, 200,000 schoolbooks, 300,000 language books, and
+200,000 arithmetic books were to be provided at a time when there was
+hardly even the most necessary paper for German school children.
+
+Koch goes on to say:
+
+ “It is not necessary to point out repeatedly in the decrees
+ issued by your ministry and in telephone communications that no
+ coercion may be used in recruiting laborers and that the eastern
+ ministry even demands to be informed of every instance in which
+ compulsion has been used.”
+
+In a subsequent decree Koch says he is blamed for having caused the
+closing of vocational schools; and he also says that Rosenberg ordered
+the General Commissioners to adopt a different school policy, thereby
+overstepping his authority as Reich Commissioner. Koch then concludes
+with a veiled threat that to him, as a veteran Gauleiter, the way to the
+Führer could not be barred. So much challenging criticism of Rosenberg,
+so much unintentional praise, and so much proof of the absolute decency
+of his behavior and the far-sighted and statesmanlike direction of his
+office as chief of the eastern administration!
+
+One last document in the fight of Rosenberg against Koch is the report
+regarding Reich Commissioner Koch and the timber region of Zuman of 2
+April 1943 (Document Number 032-PS), regarding which Rosenberg gave
+exhaustive information as a witness. In this very matter Rosenberg
+displayed his conscientiousness particularly clearly.
+
+And now we have again to unroll another scene before our eyes, because
+the Prosecution attached specific importance to it: In July 1942,
+Bormann wrote a letter to Rosenberg; Rosenberg replied, and a third
+party, Dr. Markull, an associate of Rosenberg in his ministry, wrote a
+commentary regarding it. According to Dr. Markull’s representation the
+contents of Bormann’s letter, the original of which is not extant, was
+the following: the Slavs should work for us; if of no use to us, they
+ought to die; health provisions were superfluous; the fertility of the
+Slavs was undesirable, their education dangerous; it would do if they
+could count up to one hundred. Every educated person is a potential
+enemy. We could leave them their religion as an outlet. As sustenance
+they should receive only the barest necessities; we are the masters and
+we come first.
+
+To that letter by the closest collaborator of Hitler there could be only
+one reply by Rosenberg: feigned consent and feigned compliance. In the
+inner circle of the eastern ministry there arose considerable
+apprehensions regarding this significant change in the attitude of its
+chief, apprehensions which were expressed in Dr. Markull’s memorandum of
+5 September 1942. Rosenberg as a witness has stated that there cannot
+exist any doubt, when that document is read impartially, that he agreed
+only for the sake of pacifying Hitler and Bormann. Rosenberg wanted to
+insure himself against an attack from the Führer’s headquarters, which
+he anticipated with certainty because he allegedly did more for the
+eastern population than for the German people, because he required more
+physicians than there were available for sick Germans, _et cetera_.
+
+The Markull memorandum is the truest possible bona fide reflection of
+Rosenberg’s personality and influence, since it shows the anxious
+subordinate trying to conjure up the spirit of his minister as he had
+come to know and to love him in his work, and to dispel an alien phantom
+who seemed to have taken his place. It is stated there that such a train
+of thought conformed with the policy of Reich Commissioner Koch, but not
+with the decrees of the Reich Minister and the conception of at least 80
+percent of the District Commissioners and specialists who were counting
+on their minister and who considered that the eastern population should
+be treated decently and with understanding, for it evinced a
+surprisingly high capacity for culture, its efficiency in work was good,
+and we were about to waste a precious stock of gratitude, love, and
+confidence. The controversy between the minister and the Reich
+Commissioner was well known among the high authorities of the Reich, and
+it was no secret that the ministry was unable to carry out its policies
+in opposition to the Reich Commissioners, who considered the eastern
+ministry as entirely superfluous; the writings of Bormann would disavow
+the entire policy of the eastern minister up to now, and one was given
+the impression that Koch had been backed by Hitler in his opposition to
+the minister. Since its foundation the ministry had had to register an
+ever-increasing loss of power. The Higher SS and Police Leaders refused
+to render to the General Commissioners the normal honors such as
+reports, et cetera. One jurisdiction of the eastern minister after
+another was being taken away by other highest Reich offices; in the
+offices in Berlin it was openly said that the remodeling of the ministry
+into a mere operations staff was to be expected. On the other hand, the
+Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories, due to the
+personality of its leader, enjoyed the exceptional esteem of the public.
+
+Dr. Markull implores the minister to stand by his original ideas, saying
+that the unfortunate master complex should be as much avoided as the
+opinion that the intelligentsia were alien to the masses. The influence
+of spiritual forces should be taken into consideration. Germany should
+prove a “righteous judge,” acknowledging the national and cultural
+rights of nations. Such had been the ideas of the minister before, and
+such they should remain.
+
+Rosenberg’s attitude did not in fact change, since at that very time he
+was working on the great School Program (Schulverordnung). Later on he
+effected the reopening primarily of the medical faculties in colleges.
+And then came the conflict with the Führer in May 1943.
+
+On 12 October 1944 Rosenberg tendered his resignation through Lammers to
+the Führer (Document Number Ro-14), because German eastern policy in
+general and the political psychological treatment of eastern nations in
+particular, were still contrary to the point of view which he had had
+from the very beginning, namely, his plan of autonomy for the eastern
+nations and the cultural development of their capacities as part of an
+all-European conception of a family of nations on the continent. He now
+inwardly broke down at seeing a great statesmanlike program destroyed.
+All he could do in regard to the policy of enslavement and looting which
+was going on in his country was merely to accept memoranda from his
+colleagues in the ministry, or at best indulge in a futile paper war
+with people like Koch. He had not been strong enough against the plans
+which benighted forces wanted to carry out in the East; and he was
+powerless against their influence, being in addition totally unaware at
+that time of all the police and military orders which were presented
+here to the Tribunal.
+
+When Rosenberg once reminded Hitler of the creation of a university in
+Kiev, Hitler apparently agreed; after Rosenberg had left and he was
+alone with Göring, Hitler said, “This fellow has too many worries. We
+have more important matters on our minds than universities in Kiev.” No
+episode can illustrate better than all the documents the one theme:
+Rosenberg and the reality in the East, and the other theme: Rosenberg as
+the alleged inspirer of Hitler.
+
+As Rosenberg did not receive any reply to his request for resignation,
+he tried many times to talk to Hitler personally. It was all in vain.
+
+On 11 December 1945 Mr. Dodd said:
+
+ “The system of hatred, barbarism, and denial of personal rights
+ which the conspirators had elevated to the national philosophy
+ of Germany followed the National Socialist masters when they
+ overran Europe. Foreign workers became the slaves of the master
+ race, being deported and enslaved in millions.”
+
+And on 8 February 1946 General Rudenko said:
+
+ “In the long line of ruthless crimes committed by the
+ German-Fascist troops of occupation, the forcible deportation of
+ peaceful citizens into slavery and bondage in Germany takes a
+ particularly important place.”
+
+He said that Göring, Keitel, Rosenberg, and Sauckel were particularly
+responsible for the inhuman and barbaric instructions, directives and
+orders of the Hitler Government, whose purpose was the carrying out of
+the deportation of Soviet people into German slavery.
+
+I have already spoken of the formal and individual responsibility of
+Rosenberg as Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories. I have
+already explained, too, that in the field of labor employment it was not
+Rosenberg but Sauckel who, as Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation
+of Labor, was the highest authority and the responsible person, by
+virtue of the Führer’s decree of 21 March 1942 (Document Number 580-PS).
+Thus Sauckel in this field was Rosenberg’s superior.
+
+He wrote to Rosenberg on 3 October 1942 (Document Number 017-PS):
+
+ “The Führer has drawn up new and most urgent armament programs
+ which require the speediest employment of two million additional
+ foreign workers. For the execution of his decree of 21 March
+ 1942 the Führer has given me more authority for my further
+ tasks, particularly empowering me to use my own judgment in
+ taking all measures in the Reich and in the Occupied Eastern
+ Territories in order to insure the organized employment of labor
+ for the German armament industry under all circumstances.”
+
+In his Program for the Allocation of Labor of 24 April 1942 (Document
+Number 016-PS), he emphasized that the state and local labor offices are
+in charge of all technical and administrative matters in connection with
+labor employment which come under the exclusive competence and
+responsibility of the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of
+Labor. The defense of Sauckel is not my task. But may I point out that
+he also did not take over his great and difficult task with a feeling of
+hatred and intentions of enslavement. In his Program for the Allocation
+of Labor just mentioned he says, for instance:
+
+ “Everything has to be avoided which, beyond the shortages and
+ hardships caused by war conditions, would aggravate and even
+ cause unnecessary suffering to foreign male and female workers
+ during their stay in Germany. It stands to reason that we should
+ make their presence and their work in Germany, without any loss
+ for ourselves, as bearable as possible.”
+
+On that point Sauckel and Rosenberg shared the same opinion.
+
+Neither is it my task to state and to prove that many hundreds of
+thousands of foreign workers found good conditions in Germany, that in
+fact numberless persons were better off here than in their fatherland. I
+am only concerned with the bad conditions which have been charged to the
+Defendant Rosenberg.
+
+I come now to the “Central Agency for Nationals of the Eastern
+Territories.”
+
+Gentlemen of the Tribunal, several days ago I read the affidavit of Dr.
+Albert Beil. Essentially it contains an authoritative statement of
+whatever can be said about that subject. Therefore, I should like to
+omit this subject, “Central Agency for Nationals of the Eastern
+Territories,” and ask the Tribunal to consider it as having been
+presented.
+
+[sm type begins]2. Central Office for Nationals of the Eastern
+Territories.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]As the war became more and more intensified in regard to
+totality and brutality, the German workers, and the Germans altogether,
+did anything but live in a grand style; they too, as far as they had not
+been drafted for the Army, were assigned to labor duties, had to do
+heavy work for long hours, were separated from their families, had
+frequently to be content with second-rate billets—especially because of
+the increasing number of houses damaged by air attacks—and they, too,
+were severely punished for refusal to work or defaulting.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The fact that the foreign workers were likewise victims
+of this totality and brutality of the war and, admittedly, in some
+respects even more so, does not incriminate Rosenberg either legally or
+morally. He established, within his ministry, the Central Office for
+Nationals of the Eastern Territories, which had neither police tasks nor
+any other competencies of an administrative nature but was concerned
+solely with the welfare of nationals of the Eastern Territories and
+which employed trustees taken from among the eastern nations. In the
+report of 30 September 1942 (Document Number 084-PS, US-199) this office
+points out several inadequacies: That the accommodation, treatment,
+food, and pay of the Eastern Workers called forth strong criticism;
+that, though actually the situation was much better now (deadline 1
+October 1942), the conditions for Eastern Workers were on the whole
+still far from being satisfactory. Rosenberg is therefore asked to
+discuss the matter with Hitler in order to have Hitler himself take
+energetic measures; Himmler was to be made to rescind his general
+regulations concerning the treatment of Eastern Workers; the Party
+Chancellery and the Party to be reminded of their historical
+responsibility for the millions of former Soviet citizens now guided by
+Germany and instructed to co-operate in all matters concerning Eastern
+Workers in the Reich with the Reich Minister; finally it was suggested
+to extend the scope of the Central Office for Nationals of the Eastern
+Territories as quickly as possible, so as to enable it efficiently to
+look after the interests of the aliens from the occupied territories
+living in the Reich, being, so to speak, the projected arm of the East
+ministry and the representative of these people. In this sense, namely,
+in the sense of social care and humane welfare, the eastern ministry was
+active for the Eastern Workers.[sm type ends]
+
+To refute the charge that Rosenberg was active as protagonist of the
+system of hatred and barbarism, of denying human rights, and of
+enslavement, I must add the following. Rosenberg received further
+unfavorable reports, one being the report of 7 October 1942 about the
+bad treatment of Ukrainian skilled workers (Document Number 054-PS,
+US-198). Abuses in recruiting and during transportation were pointed
+out; the workers were frequently dragged out of their beds at night and
+locked up in cellars until the time of their departure; threats and
+blows by the rural militia were a matter of course; food brought from
+home was often taken by the militia; during transportation to Germany
+neglect and transgressions on the part of the escorting units occurred,
+_et cetera_.
+
+Rosenberg had no authority whatsoever to intervene in those matters, yet
+he tried to do so in a letter of 21 December 1942 to Sauckel; Rosenberg
+first emphasized his fundamental accord with Sauckel; but after a few
+tactical and polite _clichés_, he complained seriously and urgently
+about the methods used in the employment of labor. I quote:
+
+ “I must emphatically request, in view of my responsibility for
+ the Occupied Eastern Territories, that in supplying the required
+ quotas methods should be avoided which might one day cause me or
+ my associates to be charged with connivance and with being
+ responsible for the consequences.”
+
+Rosenberg further states that he empowered the Reich Commissioner for
+the Ukraine to make use, so far as required, of his sovereign rights and
+to give attention to the elimination of recruiting methods which were
+running counter to the interests of warfare and war economy in the
+occupied territories. He, Rosenberg, and the Reich Commissioners could
+not help being surprised that in numerous instances measures, which
+should have been previously agreed upon with the civilian authorities,
+were first learned of through the police or other offices. Without
+co-ordination of their mutual wishes Rosenberg was unfortunately unable
+to accept the joint responsibility for consequences resulting from these
+reported conditions. In conclusion Rosenberg expressed the wish to put
+an early end to such conditions for the sake of their common interest.
+
+Rosenberg also tried personal consultations with Sauckel and got Sauckel
+to promise that he would do everything to bring about a fair solution of
+all these questions (conference of 14 April 1942). It was beyond
+Rosenberg’s power and authority to do more. His secret opponent,
+supported by higher authorities, was Reich Commissioner Koch, who was
+indeed one of the chief culprits responsible for the cruel methods of
+recruiting and employment of Eastern Workers, and whose influence
+Rosenberg was unable to counteract.
+
+When the prosecutor (Brudno, on 9 January 1946) charges the defendant
+with protesting against these methods not for humanitarian reasons but
+out of political expediency, I can only say that in my opinion one
+cannot, without some sound reasons, simply maintain that the Defendant
+Rosenberg is devoid of any human qualities.
+
+As an example of the defendant’s particular bestiality, the so-called
+“Hay Action” has been repeatedly pointed out by the Prosecution
+(Document Number 031-PS). It concerned the intention of Army Group
+Center to evacuate 40,000 to 50,000 juveniles from the area of
+operations, as they represented a considerable burden to the area of
+operations and were besides, for the most part, without any parental
+supervision. Villages for children were to be established behind the
+front lines under native supervision; one of these villages had already
+proven its value. It was hoped that through the Organization Todt, being
+a particularly appropriate organization due to its technical and other
+possibilities, the juveniles might, in the main, be placed at the
+disposal of German handicraft as apprentices, in order to employ them as
+skilled workers after 2 years’ training. At first Rosenberg, as Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, was against this because
+he feared that the action might be considered as a deportation of
+children, while on the other hand, the juveniles did not represent a
+considerable increase of military strength. The chief of the political
+operations staff approached Rosenberg again, stating that Army Group
+Center attached particular importance to the fact that the children
+should enter the Reich, not by authority of the Plenipotentiary General
+for the Allocation of Labor, but through the agency of the Reich
+Minister for the East, as it was felt that only then could they be
+assured of correct treatment. The Army Group wanted the action to be
+carried out under the most correct conditions and asked for special
+regulations to be issued with regard to mail facilities between them and
+their parents, _et cetera_. In the event of a possible reoccupation of
+the territory the eastern ministry could then let the children go back.
+Together with their parents they would certainly form a positive
+political element during the subsequent reconstruction of the territory.
+
+Finally, as reason for the second request addressed to the minister, it
+was stated in addition that the children, to be sure, would not
+essentially contribute to strengthening the military power of the enemy
+but that the important factor in this case was the long-range weakening
+of his biological strength; not only the Reichsführer SS but also the
+Führer had expressed themselves to this effect. Rosenberg finally gave
+his consent to this action.
+
+With regard to this it may be said: This concerned a field which was not
+at all within the jurisdiction of Rosenberg’s administration; he did not
+want to destroy a foreign element, even if biological weakening was
+given him as a reason—a reason which he himself did not recognize.
+Instead he wanted to have the children educated and trained and bring
+them and their parents back to their homes later on. That is virtually
+contrary to the crime with which the defendant is charged. Later on, in
+the late summer of 1944, Rosenberg visited the Junkers plant in Dessau
+where approximately 4,700 young White Ruthenian craftsmen were employed
+and also visited a White Ruthenian children’s camp. The clothing of the
+workmen was irreproachable; they were industrious, enjoyed the best
+treatment, and got along very well with the German workers. As Rosenberg
+was able to see for himself, the young people were taught languages and
+mathematics by Russian teachers. The children were cared for in their
+forest camp by White Ruthenian mothers and women teachers. The figure of
+40,000 moreover, was never attained, in fact, barely half of it.
+
+The attempt of the Prosecution in this instance to appeal especially to
+considerations of humanity in order to discredit the defendant cannot be
+successful in my estimation. For this very example compels me to point
+out the following in particular: We were in the midst of a war which was
+being conducted with terrible intensity on both sides. Is not war in
+itself “monstrous bestiality”? The “weakening of the biological strength
+of nations” is truly a fitting expression for the goal and purpose of
+the whole war, for that is what the thoughts and efforts of both
+belligerent parties are aimed at. It would surely be unthinkable that
+one should forget this in judging the actions of the defendants and that
+one should wish to hold the defendants responsible not only for
+unleashing the war, but in addition, for the fact that war in its very
+essence constitutes a great crime on the part of mankind, both against
+itself and against the laws of life.
+
+The Prosecution contends that Rosenberg is guilty also insofar as it was
+he who issued the inhuman and barbaric decrees which aimed at carrying
+out the deportation of Soviet people into German slavery. This causes me
+to discuss the question as to whether the compulsory labor decree of 19
+December 1941 and Rosenberg’s other decrees concerning compulsory labor
+for the inhabitants of the Eastern Territories, were contrary to
+international law.
+
+The Eastern Territories administered by Rosenberg were militarily
+occupied during the war. Through this occupatio bellica Germany realized
+complete domination and had the same sovereignty as over her own
+territory. While according to previous conceptions of international law
+the occupying power could act arbitrarily without consideration of
+rights and laws, the recent evolution of international law eliminated
+the principle of force and brought victory to the principles of humanity
+and culture. Therefore the formerly unlimited might of the occupying
+power was altered to limited rights. The Hague Rules of Land Warfare
+stipulated in particular the legal obligations of the occupying power.
+
+On the other hand, it is not true to say that the Rules of Land Warfare
+specify only certain privileges for the occupying power. They merely set
+a limit to the basically unlimited right of the occupying power to
+exercise all powers deriving from territorial sovereignty over an
+occupied territory.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Would that be a convenient time to break off?
+
+ [_The Tribunal adjourned until 10 July 1946 at 1000 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED
+ AND SEVENTY-FIFTH DAY
+ Wednesday, 10 July 1946
+
+
+ _Morning Session_
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will sit in closed session this afternoon
+and will not sit in open session after 1 o’clock.
+
+DR. THOMA: Mr. President, may it please the Tribunal, with regard to the
+question of the justification of the decree concerning the compulsory
+labor service of the inhabitants of the Eastern Territories, I should
+like to continue on Page 33.
+
+Thus the following principle recognized by international law is
+indicated:
+
+Measures undertaken by an occupying power in occupied territory are
+legal as long as they are not in opposition to a proven stipulation of
+the international rules of warfare. The occupying power is therefore
+assumed to be entitled to the full exercise of all powers derived from
+territorial sovereignty over an occupied territory. According to the
+uniform opinion of experts on international law the occupying power acts
+by virtue of an original law of its own, guaranteed and defined as to
+content solely by international law, in the interest of its own conduct
+of the war as well as for the protection of the civil population in the
+occupied territory. I quote Heyland from _Handbuch des Völkerrechts_.
+
+ “The inhabitants of the occupied territory no longer have a duty
+ of allegiance to the enemy sovereign but only to the occupying
+ power; the will of the occupying power rules and decides in the
+ occupied territory; the occupying power is the executor of its
+ own will; its own interests alone are decisive for the exercise
+ of its sovereign rights and, therefore, it is at liberty to act
+ against the interest of the enemy state.”
+
+In view of Article 52 of the Hague Rules of Land Warfare the right to
+conscript labor in the occupied territory is acknowledged. It is
+stipulated here that labor services may be demanded from the inhabitants
+of the occupied territory; the demand must be limited to the
+requirements of the occupation forces; it must be in proportion to the
+resources of the country and must be of such a nature as not to compel
+the population to participate in military operations against their own
+country. In these stipulations I cannot discern any prohibition of labor
+conscription in occupied territories; on the contrary, I consider that
+an approval of compulsory labor service can be clearly deduced from
+them. The employment of such labor in war industry is undoubtedly in
+accordance with the requirements of the occupation forces and, in my
+estimation, it is equally beyond doubt that this constitutes no
+commitment to military operations. The Rules of Land Warfare contain no
+stipulations as to whether labor service may be demanded only in the
+home country or whether the conscript may be transported into the native
+land of the occupying power for the purpose of rendering labor services
+there. Thus, the general principle holds good that the occupying power
+is assumed to be entitled to exercise to the utmost extent all powers
+deriving from territorial sovereignty.
+
+If one takes the correct view that the international rules of warfare
+should tend to humanize war by limiting the rights of the belligerents
+and that the trend in this direction should be continued, one must
+consider on the other hand that the stern reality of war tends toward
+the opposite direction.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, the Tribunal would like to know whether it is
+your contention that the Hague Rules authorize the deportation of men,
+women, or children to another country for the purpose of labor service.
+
+DR. THOMA: Mr. President, I propose to speak about the interpretation of
+the Hague Rules of Land Warfare and I am dealing here with the question
+as to whether it is permissible to transport inhabitants of the country
+in order to meet the requirements of the occupying forces. I have stated
+my position here that laborers can also be transported into the country
+of the occupying power. About children, of course, I have said nothing.
+I did not say anything about Jews either. I only spoke about persons
+able to work, who were required to work in accordance with the
+necessities of the occupying power, and I said it was admissible for
+them to be transported into the home country of the occupying power. I
+leave this problem to the discernment of the Tribunal.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal would like to have any authorities in
+international law which you have to cite for that proposition.
+
+DR. THOMA: Mr. President, I shall mention some more quotations, more
+detailed scientific quotations concerning this problem. I have already
+quoted in that regard. I have repeatedly quoted Heyland’s _Handbuch des
+Völkerrechts_, published by Stier-Somlo, and I shall give more
+quotations.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Will you tell me what language that book is in?
+
+DR. THOMA: In German, Mr. President; it is the _Handbuch des
+Völkerrechts_, published by Stier-Somlo, 1923.
+
+Present-day warfare is no longer what it was in 1907. War has developed
+into total war, a life-and-death struggle of annihilation, in which the
+very last physical and moral forces of the nation are mobilized, and the
+loss of which, as is shown by the example of Germany, means
+unconditional surrender and the total destruction of her existence as a
+State.
+
+Can one maintain, in view of this fact, that Germany, in this struggle
+of life and death, should not have been granted the basic right of
+self-preservation recognized by international law?
+
+I refer to Strupp, _Handbuch des Völkerrechts_, published by
+Stier-Somlo, Stuttgart 1920, Part III, “Violations of International
+Law,” Page 128 _et sequentes_.
+
+There is no doubt that the very existence of the State was at stake;
+that is, it was an emergency which justified the compulsory employment
+of labor, even if it had not been permissible according to international
+law. It is inherent in that great anomaly called war that, as soon as
+the state of war has been proclaimed, international law is in a large
+measure set aside in the interest of the objective of the war, the
+overpowering of the enemy.
+
+I quote Strupp, as above, Page 172.
+
+ “The development of civilization has seen a progressive
+ moderation of the conception according to which everything is
+ permissible in war until the enemy is destroyed; nevertheless
+ the rules of warfare constitute even today a compromise between
+ the demands of unrestrained military necessity and progressive
+ humanitarian and civilized views.
+
+ “One thing, at any rate, is certain, namely, that the existence
+ of a genuine emergency may be pleaded, even under the
+ stipulations of the Hague Rules of Land Warfare. During the
+ negotiations preceding the formulation of Article 46 of the
+ Hague Rules, the following was stated literally and without
+ opposition in the plenary session of the Conference:
+
+ “‘The restrictions might affect the liberty of action of the
+ belligerents in certain extreme emergencies,’ indicating that
+ for extreme contingencies, therefore, a state of emergency may
+ be pleaded. It is recognized international law that even an
+ aggressor must not be denied the right of pleading a state of
+ emergency in case his existence is directly threatened.”
+
+In connection with the chapter concerning the eastern administration, I
+should like, without pointing out specifically all that the defendant
+has said during his testimony concerning accusations of the Soviet
+Prosecution, in particular the reports of the state commissions and the
+Molotov reports (Documents USSR-39, 41, 51, 89, and record of 16 April
+1946), to express a hope that the factual corrections made by the
+defendant will be duly evaluated by the Tribunal.
+
+Now I come to a new subject: Contrary to the assumption of the
+Prosecution, Rosenberg was in no instance the instigator of a
+persecution of Jews, any more than he was one of the leaders and
+originators of the policy adopted by the Party and the Reich, as the
+Prosecution claims (Walsh, on 13 December 1945, Volume III, Page 539).
+Rosenberg was certainly a convinced anti-Semite and expressed his
+conviction and the reasons for it both verbally and in writing. However,
+in his case anti-Semitism was not the most outstanding of his
+activities. In his book _Blood and Honor_, speeches and essays between
+1919 and 1933, out of 64 speeches, for example, only one had a title
+referring to Jewry. The same applies to the other two volumes of his
+speeches. He felt his spiritual ancestors to be the mystic Meister
+Ekkehart, Goethe, Lagarde, and Houston Stewart Chamberlain;
+anti-Semitism was for him a negative element, and his chief and most
+positive efforts were directed toward the proclamation of a new German
+intellectual attitude, and a new German culture. Because he found this
+endangered after 1918, he became an opponent of Jewry. Even such
+different personalities as Von Papen, Von Neurath, and Raeder now
+confess to their belief that the penetration of the Jewish element into
+the whole of public life was so great that a change had to be brought
+about. It strikes me as very important, however, that the nature of
+Rosenberg’s anti-Semitism was intellectual above all. For example, at
+the Party Rally of 1933 he explicitly mentioned a “chivalrous solution”
+of the Jewish question. We never heard Rosenberg use expressions like
+“We must annihilate the Jews wherever we find them; we shall take
+measures that will insure success. We must abandon all feelings of
+sympathy.” The Prosecution itself quotes the following as an expression
+of the program Rosenberg set up for himself (Volume III, Page 529):
+
+ “After the Jews have been ousted as a matter of course from all
+ official positions, the Jewish question will find a decisive
+ solution through the setting up of ghettos.”
+
+GENERAL R. A. RUDENKO (Chief Prosecutor for the U.S.S.R.): Mr.
+President, rather reluctantly I interrupt counsel for the defense, and I
+do not like to take the time of the Tribunal, but what I just heard is
+going beyond any permissible limits. When the defendants sitting in the
+dock tried to express their Fascist views, this was deemed inappropriate
+and cut short by the Tribunal.
+
+I think that it is absolutely inadmissible that defense counsel should
+use this place to promote antihuman propaganda; I cannot understand the
+contention of the lawyer who alleges the existence of a noble, spiritual
+anti-Semitism which Rosenberg advocates and that Rosenberg’s belief in
+gathering all Jews in ghettos was chivalrous. Please note that the
+lawyer is not quoting any Nazi leader but expresses his own opinion, and
+I protest against the use of the International Military Tribunal for the
+spreading of Fascist propaganda. I ask the Tribunal to consider this
+objection of mine and to take appropriate action.
+
+DR. THOMA: May it please the Tribunal—may I make an answer to that?
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, we don’t think it is necessary to trouble you.
+The Tribunal thinks—there may be, of course, differences of opinion as
+to the use of words in the course of your argument, but they see no
+reason for stopping you in the argument that you are presenting to the
+Tribunal.
+
+DR. THOMA: Thank you, My Lord.
+
+May it please the Tribunal, after what General Rudenko has said, I
+should like to make one statement. In my speech I have tried to argue
+upon the statements of the Prosecution and nothing else. I would like to
+say something else. The words “chivalrous solution of the Jewish
+question” were not my expression; I just quoted that as a statement made
+by Rosenberg a long time before he came into this Court. The Prosecution
+quotes the following as Rosenberg’s statement of a program: “The Jewish
+question...” and so on; I have already read that.
+
+It was not a mere question of chance that Rosenberg did not take part
+in, the boycotting of Jews in 1933, that he was not called upon to work
+out the laws against the Jews in 1933, 1934, 1935, and so on
+(expatriation, prohibition of marriages, withdrawal of the right to
+vote, expulsion from all important positions and offices). Above all, he
+never took part in the action of 1938 against the Jews, nor in the
+destruction of synagogues, nor in anti-Semitic demonstrations. Neither
+was he the instigator in the background who sent out, or ordered, lesser
+people to commit certain actions. To be sure, Rosenberg was a true
+follower of Hitler, who took up Hitler’s slogans and passed them on. For
+example, the motto, “The Jewish question will be solved only when the
+last Jew has left Germany and the European continent,” and once the
+slogan of “Extermination of Jewry.”
+
+Exaggerated expressions were always part of the National Socialist
+weapons of propaganda. A Hitler speech was hardly imaginable without
+insults to his internal or external political opponents, or without
+threats of extermination. Every one of Hitler’s speeches was echoed a
+million times by Goebbels down to the last speaker of the Party in a
+small country inn. The same sentences and words which Hitler had used
+were repeated, and not only in all the political speeches, but in the
+German press as well, in all the editorials and essays, until, weeks or
+months later, a new speech was given which brought about a new echo of a
+similar kind.
+
+Rosenberg was no exception. He repeated, as everyone did, all of
+Hitler’s slogans, including that of the “solution of the Jewish
+question,” and once also that of the “extermination of Jewry.”
+Apparently, like Hitler’s other supporters, he gave as much or as little
+thought to the fact that in reality none of those phrases were clear but
+that they had a sinister double meaning and, while they might have meant
+real expulsion, they might also have implied the physical annihilation
+and murder of the Jews.
+
+May I remind the Tribunal at this point that Rosenberg, during his
+testimony, made a reference to a speech of the British Prime Minister in
+the House of Commons in September 1943, in which speech it was stated
+that Prussian militarism and National Socialism had to be exterminated
+root and branch. No German interpreted that literally, and I believe no
+one interpreted it to mean that German soldiers and the National
+Socialism had to be exterminated physically.
+
+Aside from the knowledge and will of the German people, and aside from
+the knowledge and will of the majority of the leadership of the
+Party—that is to say, known only to Bormann, Himmler, and
+Eichmann—there was hatched and carried out, from 1941 onward, a mass
+crime which surpassed all human concepts of reason and morality. The
+“Jewish question” was developed even further and brought to a so-called
+“final solution.”
+
+The Tribunal will have to decide the question whether Rosenberg, the
+specially characteristic exponent of the Party, the Reich Minister for
+the Occupied Eastern Territories, is also responsible for the murder of
+the Jews, and particularly for the murder of Jews in the East; that is,
+is he a murderer of Jews? Or must it be recognized and admitted that,
+although he stands but a hair’s breadth from the abyss, it was, after
+all, external circumstances which led up to it all, and that these
+circumstances were outside his sphere of responsibility and guilt?
+
+I believe I can say that Rosenberg never aimed, either openly or in
+secret, at the physical extermination of the Jews. His reserve and
+moderation were certainly no mere tactics. The slipping of anti-Semitism
+into crime took place without his knowledge or will. The fact in itself
+that he preached anti-Semitism justifies his punishment as the murderer
+of Jews as little as one could hold Rousseau and Mirabeau responsible
+for the subsequent horrors of the French Revolution.
+
+Furthermore, no matter how much the first impression might lead to it,
+criminal guilt on his part cannot be deduced from his position as Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories. As already stated, the
+“responsible minister” cannot simply be held responsible for criminal
+acts committed in his sphere or his territory. Criminal responsibility,
+according to the German Penal Code, Paragraph 357, exists only if an
+official knowingly assents to the criminal actions of his subordinates,
+and if—the commentaries furnish this supplement—the superior is in a
+position to prevent the action.
+
+I should like to take up the question of his responsibility on the
+grounds of the documents submitted for this purpose.
+
+(1) The action taken against the Jews at Sluzk (Document Number
+1104-PS).
+
+On 27 October 1941, a horrible slaughter of Jews took place in Sluzk,
+committed by the four companies of a police battalion, because the
+commander received an order from his superior to clear the city of all
+Jews without exception. The district commissioner immediately made
+vigorous protests, demanded that the action be stopped at once, and gun
+in hand kept the police officers in check as far as he was able. He
+reported to the General Commissioner of White Ruthenia, Kube, at Minsk,
+and the latter suggested to the Reich Commissioner Ostland, Lohse, that
+the officers implicated be punished for this “unheard-of bestiality.” He
+in turn reported to the Reich Minister for the East, with the request
+that immediate measures be taken at higher levels. The Reich Minister
+for the Occupied Eastern Territories sent the entire report to Heydrich,
+the Chief of the Security Police and of the SD, requesting further
+action. Due to an ingenious system according to which the Police were
+not responsible to the competent administrative chief and were not even
+obliged to report, Rosenberg could not take any further steps either in
+this or in similar cases. He was not head of the Police, and could only
+hope that the transmission of the report to Heydrich would be sufficient
+to stop what he considered to be regional excesses of the Police.
+
+It can be seen from the indignation of all the administrative offices
+over the reported incidents that none of them knew that it was no
+question of excesses, but of an action ordered by Heydrich and Himmler.
+Even though Rosenberg violently disliked Heydrich and Himmler, not even
+he could suspect anything of this kind.
+
+(2) Also from October 1941 dates Document 3663-PS in which the Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, for whom Dr. Leibbrandt
+signed, calls for a report by the Reich Commissioner Ostland, because a
+complaint has been made by the Reich Security Main Office that the Reich
+Commissioner Ostland had prohibited executions of Jews in Libau. To this
+the addressee replied:
+
+ “I prohibited the execution of Jews in Libau because there was
+ no justification for the way in which it was carried out.”
+
+This is followed by a request for further instructions. Regarding this
+document—which is signed by the departmental chief Leibbrandt, and
+which in no way points to any knowledge on the part of the Defendant
+Rosenberg—I wish to make the following provisional brief statement:
+
+It is not conceived as a reproach by the Reich Minister for the East
+because the executions of Jews were discontinued, but it simply
+represents the transmittal of a complaint by the Reich Security Main
+Office, adding a request to report. It is to be presumed that the reason
+for the complaint was that the Reich Commissioner Ostland encroached on
+the competency of the Reich Security Main Office and the demand for a
+report was presumably issued in that sense. In a letter of 18 December
+1941, the Reich Minister, in a letter also signed “By order: Bräutigam,”
+asked the Reich Commissioner Ostland to settle directly any questions
+which might arise with the Higher SS and Police Leader.
+
+To identify the letter “R” as Rosenberg’s initial, because the
+Prosecution obviously was more than doubtful about Rosenberg’s knowledge
+of matters, turned out to be equally unfortunate. This “R” is not
+Rosenberg’s.
+
+(3) Document Number 3428-PS concerns a letter of the General
+Commissioner for White Ruthenia to the Reich Commissioner for the East.
+It is a shocking document about the mass extermination of Jews in White
+Ruthenia; however, there is nothing of interest in it for the case
+against Rosenberg, because those horrible events could be attributed to
+him only if he knew of them, and in neglect of his duty failed to
+intervene. There is no actual proof to found a supposition of such
+knowledge. The claim that these documents were found in Rosenberg’s
+possession cannot be in accordance with the actual facts, for they show
+the Reich Commissioner in Riga as the addressee.
+
+(4) In the “Memorandum for the Führer of 18 December 1941” (Document
+Number 001-PS) the defendant suggested the following, which I must quote
+literally:
+
+ “The assaults against members of the German Armed Forces have
+ not stopped, but have gone on. It seems to be an obvious plan to
+ disturb German-French co-operation, to force Germany to take
+ measures of retaliation, thereby bringing about a new defensive
+ attitude on the part of the French against Germany. My
+ suggestion to the Führer is that instead of killing 100
+ Frenchmen, he should have 100 or more Jewish bankers, lawyers,
+ _et cetera_, shot.”
+
+It is not my task here to discuss how far it is admissible to shoot
+hostages, but one thing is certain, that Rosenberg was convinced such a
+measure was admissible. In that case, however, his suggestion must be
+considered in that light, and can by no means be judged as an
+independent incitement to murder. Besides, the suggestion had no
+results. In his reply of 31 December 1941, Lammers, acting on behalf of
+the Führer, merely referred to the suggestion of utilizing the furniture
+and fittings from Jewish houses, and not to the shooting of hostages.
+Therefore, Rosenberg made no more reference to it.
+
+At this point I should like to interpolate the following: The French
+prosecutor charged Rosenberg, when the latter was in the witness box,
+with the fact that this was murder. Gentlemen of the Tribunal, it was
+not murder, because no execution took place. But neither was it
+incitement to murder. One can only incite someone who still has to be
+persuaded. However, if the man who commits the act is already prepared
+for anything, is an _omni modo facturus_, then he can be incited no
+more, and there only remains the offense of a suggestion of a criminal
+act, which, according to German law, must be judged as an offense to
+receive only slight punishment, because it has had no consequence.
+
+Just at this point I should like to recall that Rosenberg testified as a
+witness that on one occasion a court sentenced a district commissioner
+in the East to death for having extorted valuables from a Jewish family,
+and that that sentence was carried out. Please do not consider it an
+improper argument of the defense when I say: Does that not prove that
+Rosenberg abhorred criminal acts against the Jews?
+
+(5) Document Number Rosenberg-135, Exhibit Number USSR-289, refers to
+the report of the General Commissioner of White Ruthenia in Minsk, dated
+1 June 1943, on the subject of what happened in the prison of Minsk as
+regards gold fillings. This was addressed to the Reich Commissioner
+Ostland, who forwarded the report on 18 June 1943 with the utmost
+indignation. At his hearing before the Tribunal on 16 April 1946 the
+defendant already made a statement on this point. I should like to
+repeat this briefly now: The defendant had returned on 22 June 1943 from
+an official visit to the Ukraine and found a pile of notices about
+conferences, a number of letters, and above all the Führer decree from
+the middle of June 1943, in which Rosenberg was instructed to limit
+himself to the fundamentals of lawmaking and not to bother about
+details. Herr Rosenberg did not read the letter concerned, but he has to
+surmise—he cannot remember this—that the letter was explained to him
+by his office, and presumably in the course of the reading he was
+informed of many documents and learned that there was again serious
+trouble between the Police and the civilian administration, and it is
+probable that Rosenberg said: Turn that over for investigation to
+Gauleiter Meyer or to the liaison officer. Otherwise the terrible
+details would certainly have remained in Rosenberg’s memory.
+
+Nobody doubts for a moment that the horrible crimes shown in these
+documents and all the other frightful things not covered in the
+documents, but which actually happened, call for atonement. Nobody
+doubts that not only the lesser henchmen acting on higher orders shall
+be punished, but also above all those who issued the orders, and those
+responsible for the crimes. Rosenberg did not issue an order to murder
+Jews; that much is clear. Is he, in spite of this, responsible for the
+frightful murders?
+
+There is no trace of the defendant’s handwriting on any of the murder
+documents. Nor has it been determined in any case that he knew anything
+about what went on. Can we condemn Rosenberg on the basis of his
+presumed and probable knowledge? Rosenberg has by no means the intention
+of playing a false and cowardly game of hide-and-seek behind his
+advisers and officials. But let us remember how cunningly the so-called
+executions of the Jews were kept secret, not only from the public, but
+even from Hitler’s closest collaborators.
+
+Is it not possible, and even credible, that they were playing a game of
+hide-and-seek even with Rosenberg? The thoughts and intentions of none
+of the other NSDAP leaders were revealed so openly and clearly to all
+the world as particularly those of the author Rosenberg. Of none other
+could one be so sure that he would turn with indignation from inhuman
+and criminal acts.
+
+But let us go one step further and assume that Rosenberg had full
+knowledge of this greatest crime. It is not proved, but one could
+imagine it and surmise it. Is he then responsible, too? Peculiar, even
+subtle, as we well know, was the departmental authority, and the
+responsibility which went with it, in the eastern countries. The entire
+police system had been taken from Rosenberg’s sphere of influence, at
+the highest level of which was Himmler, and under him Heydrich. Of their
+orders and measures Rosenberg naturally had no knowledge and no idea.
+
+The lower echelons of police leaders and police agencies were in effect
+subordinate and responsible to their police superiors and no one else.
+It was quite immaterial whether or not Rosenberg knew anything of the
+measures taken by the Police; he could change them as little as any
+other of his fellow citizens in the Third Reich. One might say: Yes, he
+could have remonstrated with Himmler or Hitler; he could have resigned.
+Of course, he could have done so. The decisive point, however, is not
+whether he could have done it; the question is whether he would have
+achieved anything by doing so—that is to say, whether he could have
+prevented the execution; for only in such a case could his
+responsibility be affirmed on the basis of his failure to act, and only
+in such a case could one speak of causality without which criminal
+responsibility is unthinkable.
+
+One might further claim, still under the assumption of Rosenberg’s
+knowledge of matters, that Rosenberg could at least have taken steps
+against the Reich commissioners, who were obviously involved in these
+matters. We know that the administrative organization and the dividing
+up of final authority in the East were vague, to say the least. The
+Reich commissioners were sovereign masters in their own territory, who
+had the final decision in the shooting of hostages and in other
+retaliatory measures of far-reaching consequence. And what was the
+actual extent of their authority? In case the Reich Commissioner was
+dissatisfied with Rosenberg—and mostly he was dissatisfied—he went to
+Hitler. Does anyone really believe that if Rosenberg disagreed with Koch
+as regards the execution of Jews, he would have been upheld by Hitler if
+he had approached him? Here again, there is a lack of that causality
+which is indispensable for a legal condemnation.
+
+I come now to the Einsatzstab Rosenberg, the Operational Staff
+Rosenberg.
+
+No less than three prosecutors have taken the stand in this Trial
+against Rosenberg, and have accused him of wholesale stealing of objects
+of art and science in the East and West (Storey, 18 December 1945;
+Gerthoffer, 6 February 1946; Smirnov, 15 February 1946). First I must
+take exception to some obvious exaggerations and injustices, that is,
+the assertion that the activities of the special staff in the West
+extended to public and private property without distinction (Volume VII,
+Page 55), and that the objects of art Germany appropriated amount to
+more than the combined treasures of the Metropolitan Museum in New York,
+of the British Museum in London, of the Louvre in Paris, and of the
+Tretjakov Gallery. Further, I must declare the statement incorrect that
+the “looting program” of Rosenberg was intended to rob the occupied
+countries of their entire centuries-old possessions of art and science.
+Finally, the Prosecution contrasts Rosenberg’s actions to the looting of
+art treasures in former wars. It says that while egotism, conceit,
+taste, and personal inclination used to be the underlying motives of
+such looting, the National Socialists primarily had the criminal
+intention of storing up reserves of valuables (Volume VII, Page 65). I
+think it unnecessary to refer to the looting of art treasures in former
+times as far back as Napoleon, because the concepts of international law
+and regulations have changed in the meantime, but I should like to
+mention two things:
+
+First, how many of the most famous objects of art in the most famous
+galleries of the world got there through the channels of war and how
+many got there in a peaceful way?
+
+Second, I am prepared to accept the fact that the Prosecution denies
+Rosenberg’s delight in art, or joy in the possession of art treasures as
+a possible motive for his actions, because Rosenberg was no robber, no
+plunderer, of art. He had no intention of appropriating the objects of
+art for himself or for someone else.
+
+What were the actual facts? Rosenberg’s operational staff was active in
+the East and in the West. It had two tasks: First, to search libraries,
+archives, _et cetera_, for material suitable for the proposed
+“university” of the Party, to confiscate this material and take it away
+for the purpose of research, and secondly, to seize objects of cultural
+value which were in the possession of or which belonged to Jews, or
+which had no owner or were of a doubtful origin. The Prosecution says:
+“The true and only motive, the true and only purpose of this ‘seizure’
+was robbery and looting; there could be no question of intentions of
+mere ‘safeguarding.’”
+
+On 20 August 1941 Rosenberg wrote to the Reich Commissioner Ostland that
+he wished distinctly to prohibit the transfer of any kind of art
+treasure from any place whatsoever without the approval of the Reich
+Commissioner (Document Number 1015(c)-PS). On 30 September 1942 the
+Commander-in-Chief of the Army issued an order (Document Number
+1015(n)-PS) in agreement with Rosenberg to the following effect:
+
+ “Apart from exceptional cases when it is urgent to safeguard
+ endangered objects of cultural value, it is desired that for the
+ time being such objects be left where they are.”
+
+Later on, it says:
+
+ “The troops and all military commands within the operational
+ area are now as before directed to spare valuable cultural
+ monuments as far as possible and to prevent their destruction or
+ damage.”
+
+In the report of the Special Staff for Creative Arts (report on work
+carried out between October 1940 and 1944, Document Number 1015(b)-PS)
+it is stated that in the Occupied Eastern Territories the activities of
+the Special Staff for Creative Arts were restricted to the scientific
+and photographic registration of official collections, and that the
+safeguarding and protection of these was carried out in co-operation
+with the military and civilian agencies. It says further that in the
+course of vacating the territories, several hundred valuable icons and
+paintings, _et cetera_, were saved and, with the co-operation of the
+individual army groups, were brought to a place of safekeeping in the
+Reich. Finally, on 12 June 1942 Rosenberg sent out the following decree
+in a circular letter to the highest Reich authorities, which reads:
+
+ “In the Occupied Eastern Territories a number of offices and
+ individuals are engaged in the safeguarding of objects of
+ cultural value. They work from various approaches to the subject
+ and independently of each other. It is absolutely essential for
+ the administration of these territories that a survey be made of
+ the existing objects of cultural value. Furthermore it must be
+ endeavored, as a general rule, to leave them where they are for
+ the time being. To this end I have set up a central office for
+ the registration and safeguarding of objects of cultural value
+ in the East as a special division within my ministry.”
+
+Thus Rosenberg, as can be proved, proceeded from the point of view that
+objects of cultural value had to remain in the country and only through
+the retreat of the German troops were a few hundred valuable icons and
+paintings brought into Germany.
+
+In time of war, objects of cultural value, both mobile and immobile, are
+as exposed to the danger of destruction as are any other objects of
+value. Rosenberg stopped all unnecessary destruction, theft, and
+removal; he centralized the safeguarding of objects of cultural value
+and had all necessary actions taken through his operational staff in the
+East and the West (for example, see Abel’s report on the library at
+Minsk, Document Number 076-PS). It is quite in accordance with the
+conception of international law (I quote Scholz, _Privateigentum im
+besetzten und unbesetzten Feindesland_, Berlin 1919, Page 36) that care
+should be taken on the part of the occupying powers not only to protect,
+but to safeguard and salvage protected objects of art as far as the war
+situation permits. It is even considered a cultural duty for the
+occupying power to remove particularly valuable objects of art from the
+combat zone and place them in safety as far as possible. Under certain
+circumstances the concept of international law may render it the
+cultural duty of the occupying power to bring into his own country for
+reasons of salvage objects of special scientific and artistic value.
+This is not an inadmissible “seizure” (Article 56, Paragraph 2, Rules of
+Land Warfare), because this term could only apply to acts which are
+anti-cultural, not to acts which are procultural. (See Scholz, as above,
+Page 37).
+
+Finally, I want to refer to Document Number 1109-PS, a report according
+to which scientific institutes that had been saved were ready to be
+taken back to the Ukraine immediately after the hoped-for re-entry of
+the troops. I consider it completely impossible to read anything about
+looting into this clear text.
+
+Certainly, in the East great quantities of cultural objects of
+considerable value were destroyed by direct military actions, or by
+wanton destruction, or looting. It would be a fundamental
+misconstruction of the true facts of the case, and a great injustice, if
+these losses should be charged to the account of the Einsatzstab and its
+chief, for his efforts went exactly in the opposite direction.
+
+In the West (I refer to the testimony of the witness Robert Scholz of 19
+June 1946, Document Number Rosenberg-41), the case was different but, in
+my opinion, here also the defendant cannot be charged with looting and
+robbing objects of art. When in the summer of 1940 the inhabitants of
+Paris, with the exception of the Jews, had once more returned, somebody
+conceived the idea of searching the now ownerless apartments, houses,
+and palaces for books and libraries and of taking to Germany whatever of
+this scientific material was of interest. From various branches of the
+Armed Forces came the report that especially in Jewish-owned palaces
+there were collections of objects of art which one could not guarantee
+to remain intact in case of a long occupation. Thereupon, Rosenberg made
+the proposal that his Einsatzstab be allowed to direct its attention to
+objects of art and to take them into its custody, which was then ordered
+by Hitler. What did the Einsatzstab do with these objects of art? It set
+up an accurate card index containing the names of the particular owner
+of each picture, photographed the art objects, scientifically appraised
+them, repaired them expertly insofar as was necessary, packed them
+carefully and shipped them to the Bavarian castles of Neuschwanstein and
+Chiemsee. Because of the danger of air raids, they were then stored in
+an old Austrian mine. Rosenberg attached great importance to keeping
+separate the objects cared for by the Einsatzstab, and not to have them
+mixed with the large-scale purchases which Hitler made for the proposed
+gallery in Linz.
+
+Was that looting, robbery, theft? Looting is the indiscriminate and
+wanton carrying-off of objects in situations involving general distress
+and danger. Robbery is carrying off by force. Theft is carrying off
+without force. In all cases intent must exist to appropriate the object
+illegally for oneself or somebody else. What intent did Rosenberg have?
+He never denied that he and his co-workers had hopes of the pictures
+remaining in Germany. Perhaps as compensation or as a security for the
+peace negotiations, but in any case his intent was only directed at
+confiscating and safeguarding the objects and it has been proved that
+the question of what should be done with the confiscated items was left
+open until the end and that no decision was made on it. It is absolutely
+certain that Rosenberg did not have the intention of appropriating the
+things for himself or anybody else. If Rosenberg had been a plunderer of
+objects of art, he certainly would not have had exact notations made
+concerning dates and place of confiscation and names of the owners. As a
+precaution, however, I should also like to point out that because of the
+flight of their owners the objects were virtually ownerless, and that
+the question of the lack of a possessor and of the legality of their
+acquisition by Rosenberg cannot be judged by normal circumstances, but
+must be judged according to the extraordinary circumstances of the war.
+If the Prosecution claims that public and private objects of art were
+stolen at random, I should like to reply to the statement that only
+Jewish possessions, and indeed the specified ownerless objects were
+confiscated. Above all it is not true that state-owned property was also
+touched. Finally he did not act on his own responsibility but in
+carrying out a governmental order, and I want to ask that the fact be
+not overlooked that Rosenberg acted without any egotistical motive. Not
+a single picture passed into his private possession; he did not gain a
+single Reichsmark from this transaction involving millions, and after
+all, all the artistic and cultural property has been found again. I
+would like to thank the French Prosecution for having acknowledged this
+fact here publicly.
+
+Göring supported the work of the Einsatzstab and, as he admits,
+“diverted” some objects for his own use, with the Führer’s approval.
+This disturbed Rosenberg because the Einsatzstab was in his name, and he
+declared that as a matter of principle he did not want to give anything
+even to the museums, that his task was purely one of registration and
+safeguarding. The Führer should have the final decision on these works
+of art. Rosenberg could not undertake anything against Göring, but he
+ordered his deputy Robert Scholz at least to make an accurate inventory
+of what was given to Göring, and to have the latter sign a receipt,
+which he did. Thus, most certainly it cannot be proved that Rosenberg
+had the intention of illegally appropriating the objects of art for
+himself or for somebody else. Furthermore, Robert Scholz confirmed that
+Rosenberg also forbade all his assistants to acquire any objects of art
+or culture even by virtue of an official appraisal (Document Number
+Rosenberg-41).
+
+The Prosecution says that with the Rosenberg Einsatzstab a gang of
+vandals broke into the European House of Art in order to plunder in a
+barbarous way. If one contemplates the tremendous work of drawing up an
+inventory, of cataloging, of restoration, and of scientific appraisal,
+and if one finally bears in mind that all these treasures were most
+carefully stored away, and certainly came through the war better than
+would have been the case if the German authorities had not taken care of
+them, then I believe that, objectively speaking, one can use any term
+but that of “vandalism.”
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I think this would be a good time to break off.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. THOMA: Rosenberg is also especially charged with looting furniture.
+He allegedly ransacked the contents of 79,000 Jewish-owned homes, among
+them 38,000 in Paris, and took the loot to Germany. Unquestionably,
+these measures were taken for the benefit of air-raid victims; in the
+cities which had been destroyed by air warfare new homes were set up for
+the homeless. It was in line with National Socialist mentality and it
+must certainly be morally condemned that the confiscation was limited to
+Jewish property. The essential question, however, is whether the
+confiscation was at all legal. In all my statements I have avoided
+trying to excuse a weak legal position with a state of military
+emergency, and I do not wish to do it at this point either, for, as an
+expert on international law states, “The state of emergency is the lever
+by means of which the entire body of martial law can be torn from its
+hinges.” In this case, does not the justification of national and
+military necessity exist, did not air warfare bring intense and general
+distress to Germany?
+
+One might object that such distress could have been ended by
+unconditional surrender. In my opinion, however, the above-mentioned
+justification cannot be denied to the defendant by this reference to
+unconditional surrender, entailing the Reich’s abandonment of its own
+existence, its independence, and its own vital interests. The
+appropriation of enemy private property took place in application of a
+right of requisitioning, which was extended beyond the legal terms of
+martial law and justified by the state of emergency. I venture to assert
+that his procedure of confiscating furniture, in view of the devastating
+effects of air warfare against Germany, was not contradictory to “the
+customs among civilized peoples,” “the laws of humanity,” and “the
+demands of the public conscience” (Marten’s clause in the preamble to
+the agreement concerning the Laws and Customs of Land Warfare; see
+Scholz, in the afore-mentioned book, Page 173).
+
+May it please the High Tribunal, I shall now pass on to the Norway
+operation. The Prosecution characterizes Rosenberg and Raeder as the
+most energetic conspirators in the Norway operation, and later in the
+same matter calls Rosenberg a “dealer in high treason.” The opinion of
+the Prosecution and also the assumption of the present Norwegian
+Government (Norwegian Report of 13 October 1945, Document Number TC-56)
+are obviously to the effect that the Party’s Foreign Political Office,
+of which Rosenberg was the head, and Quisling had plotted the war
+against Norway in mutual conspiracy. I believe that of all the charges
+against Rosenberg hitherto dealt with, none has less foundation than
+this one. On the basis of the few documents which have been submitted to
+the Court, in my opinion the case could doubtlessly be cleared up in
+favor of the defendant.
+
+There existed a Foreign Political Office of the Party, which had the
+task of informing foreign visitors about the National Socialist
+movement, of referring any suggestions to the official offices, and
+otherwise of functioning as a central office of the Party for questions
+of foreign policy. The special interest, and I may say the special
+sympathy, of the leading men of the Party and the State was directed
+toward the Scandinavian countries. It was specifically in this direction
+that the Foreign Political Office placed the main emphasis on the field
+of cultural policy. The already existing “Nordic Society” was expanded,
+the birthdays of great Scandinavian scientists and artists were observed
+in Germany, a great Nordic music festival was held, and so forth. The
+relations took on a really political note only with the appearance of
+Quisling, whom Rosenberg had seen for the first time in 1933 and who
+then, in 1939, 6 years later, looked up Rosenberg again after the
+convention of the Nordic Society in Lübeck; the former spoke of the
+danger of European entanglements and expressed the fear that Norway was
+in danger of being drawn into them. He then feared above all a
+partitioning of his country in such a manner that the Soviet Union would
+occupy the northern and England the southern part of Norway.
+
+Quisling again came to see Rosenberg in Berlin in December 1939. The
+latter arranged for a conference with the Führer. Hitler declared that
+he would by far prefer to have Norway remain completely neutral and that
+he did not intend to extend the theater of war and involve more nations
+in the conflict, but he would know how to defend himself against a
+further isolation of Germany and further threats against her. In order
+to counteract the increasing activity of enemy propaganda, Quisling was
+promised financial support of his movement, which was based on the
+pan-Germanic idea. The military treatment of the questions now taken up
+was assigned to a special military staff; Rosenberg was to deal with the
+political aspect, and he appointed his assistant Scheidt to maintain
+liaison. Hagelin, a Norwegian confidential agent of Quisling’s, in
+January 1940 gave Rosenberg some more disturbing reports on the feared
+violation of neutrality by the Norwegian Government, and Rosenberg
+passed them on to Hitler. After the _Altmark_ incident, Hagelin, who
+moved in Norwegian Government circles, intensified his warnings to the
+effect that the Allies had already begun to examine the Norwegian
+seaports for disembarkation and transportation possibilities; in any
+case, the Norwegian Government would be satisfied with protests on
+paper, and Quisling was indicating that any delay in undertaking a
+counteraction would mean an exceptional risk. Rosenberg again handed the
+reports immediately to Hitler. If he had not done so that would have
+been downright treason to his country. The German counterblow followed
+on 9 April 1940, and Rosenberg learned about it from the radio and the
+newspapers like any ordinary citizen. After his above-mentioned report,
+which he made in the line of duty, Rosenberg, did not participate in
+either diplomatic or military preparations.
+
+Should there still be any doubt that in the Norwegian case Rosenberg was
+only an agent who forwarded information to Hitler, and not an
+instigator, conspirator, or traitor, I should like to refer to two
+documents. First, to Document Number C-65, Rosenberg’s file note
+concerning Quisling’s visit. Obviously, it is the information on
+Quisling which Hitler had requested from Rosenberg. If Rosenberg had
+been on closer terms with Quisling, he certainly would have been only
+too glad to inform Hitler about it. Rosenberg had only heard of a
+fantastic and impracticable plan of Quisling’s for a _coup d’état_
+(occupation of important central offices in Oslo by sudden action,
+supported by specially selected Norwegians who had been trained in
+Germany, afterward having the German fleet called in by a newly formed
+Norwegian Government). However, an earlier report of Quisling appeared
+less fantastic to Rosenberg; according to this—names being
+given—officers of the Western Powers traveled through Norway as
+consular officials, ascertained the depth of the water in ports of
+disembarkation, and made inquiries into the cross-sections and
+clearances of railway tunnels. This was the true and only reason for
+everything Rosenberg did in the Norwegian matter.
+
+The second document is the report concerning “The Political Preparation
+of the Norway Operation” (Document Number 004-PS, Exhibit Number
+GB-140), a report from Rosenberg to Hess of 17 June 1940. In this
+interdepartmental report there is also nothing which deviates from
+Rosenberg’s own trustworthy statement and which would allow him to
+appear as an instigator of war and of high treason. Rosenberg was not
+called into any political or military discussion concerning Norway.
+Thus, what criminal act did Rosenberg commit? Was it criminal that he
+tried “to gain influence in Norway” (Document Number TC-56), or that
+with his knowledge the Foreign Office gave subsidies to Quisling?
+Finally, I should also like to point out that later on, after the
+operation had succeeded, Rosenberg was in no way entrusted with an
+office or function with regard to Norway; that even the appointment of a
+Reich Commissioner for Norway was carried out without consulting him.
+
+I shall not deal with the case of Minister Goga, which I have set forth
+in detail, but I ask the High Tribunal to consider it as having been
+dealt with. Now I turn to the topic: Persecution of the Church.
+
+The Prosecution maintains that Rosenberg, together with Bormann, issued
+the orders for religious persecutions and induced others to participate
+in these persecutions. However, not a single order of that kind is
+known. There were presented only letters by Bormann, partly to
+Rosenberg, partly to others, from which no charges against Rosenberg can
+be drawn. On the contrary Rosenberg was repeatedly reproached, as on one
+occasion when in the presence of Hitler he praised a book by Reich
+Bishop Müller (Document Number 100-PS); another time when Rosenberg gave
+Reich Bishop Müller instructions to work out directives for thoughts
+regarding religious instruction in schools (Document Number 098-PS);
+once again when Rosenberg sponsored a strictly Christian work by General
+Von Rabenau.
+
+As a witness Rosenberg himself declared (Volume XI, Page 461) that he
+had opposed propaganda advocating withdrawal from the Church and had
+never called for state and police measures against his opponents in the
+fields of theology and research, and particularly that he had never used
+the Police for suppressing those who were opponents of his book _The
+Myth of the 20th Century_. In December 1941, as Reich Minister for the
+Occupied Eastern Territories, he issued an edict for Church toleration
+(Documents Number 1517-PS and 294-PS). Rosenberg had nothing to do with
+arrests, the deportation of priests, and persecution of the Church. He
+had no part either in the negotiations with the Vatican over the
+Concordat or in the assignment of the Protestant Reich Bishop; neither
+did he take any part in measures which were hostile to the Church, and
+which were later carried out by the Police. He never participated in any
+other administrative or legislative anticlerical measures.
+
+In my opinion it is quite impossible, for lack of documentary evidence,
+to construe from what Rosenberg thought and said about religious and
+philosophical matters—which I will quote presently—that he conspired
+toward a political suppression of religion by force. The only document
+(Number 130-PS) pointing in this direction was withdrawn by the American
+Prosecution itself before I was obliged to draw attention to its being a
+pamphlet directed against Rosenberg.
+
+His book _The Myth of the 20th Century_, which is allegedly written for
+the reshaping of the denominations in the direction of a Germanic
+Christianity, is moreover chiefly addressed to those who had already
+broken with the Church. “No consciously responsible German,” says
+Rosenberg at one place in it, “should suggest withdrawal from the
+Churches to those who are still believing members thereof” (Document
+Number Rosenberg-7, Document Book 1, Page 122), and once again: “Science
+would never have the power to dethrone true religion” (see as above,
+Page 125). His writings are not addressed to the faithful churchgoers of
+today in order to hinder them in the course of their chosen spiritual
+life, but to those who have already discarded their religious faith
+(Document Number Rosenberg-7, Document Book 1, Page 125). In his
+speeches he upheld the view that the Party is not entitled to establish
+norms in metaphysical matters which contest immortality, et cetera.
+After he had been assigned to supervise ideological education, he said
+explicitly in his Berlin speech of 22 February 1934: “No National
+Socialist is allowed to engage in religious discussions while wearing
+the uniform of his Movement,” and he declared at the same time that “all
+well-disposed persons should strive for the pacification of the entire
+political and spiritual life in Germany” (Document Number
+Rosenberg-7(a), Document Book 1, Page 130). That in this respect, too,
+things developed along different lines is not due to the desire or
+influence of Rosenberg.
+
+Moreover, I need make only brief allusion to the fact that it is a
+question of the 1000-year-old problem of relations between the clerical
+and so-called temporal powers. The struggle of emperors, kings, and
+popes in the Middle Ages; the French Revolution with the shooting of
+priests; Bismarck’s clerical controversies; the secular legislation of
+the French Republic under Combes; all those were things, which from the
+standpoint of the Churches ...
+
+Mr. President, may I make a brief statement by way of explanation? I
+wanted to say that I have concluded this topic, that I do not wish to
+concern myself with the problem of Church persecutions any further. I
+have finished with it. I am coming to the topic of ideology and general
+politics.
+
+Ideology and education have been nothing but a means of obtaining power
+and consolidating that power; uniformity of thinking has played an
+important part in the program of the conspiracy; the formation of the
+Armed Forces has only been possible in conjunction with the ideological
+education of the nation and Party—so says the Prosecution (Brudno, on 9
+January 1946). And continuing its attacks against Rosenberg, the
+Prosecution proceeds by saying that Rosenberg’s ideas formed the
+foundation of the National Socialist movement, and that Rosenberg’s
+contribution in formulating and spreading the National Socialist
+ideology gave foundation to the conspiracy by shaping its “philosophical
+technique.”
+
+I think that one will have to take care, in judging Rosenberg’s case,
+not to yield to certain primitive ways of thinking and become a victim
+of them: First of all an exaggeration of the conception of ideology and
+the inexact use of that concept. At best it was a political philosophy
+which was hand in glove with Hitler’s political measures and which
+Hitler himself preached in his book _Mein Kampf_, but it was not an
+ideology in an all-embracing sense. It is true that National Socialism
+endeavored to create a spiritual philosophy and an ideology of its own,
+but it had not reached that stage yet by far. Rosenberg’s book _The Myth
+of the 20th Century_ is an attempt in that direction, being a personal
+confession, without any suggestion of political measures. Therefore, his
+philosophy cannot have formed the ideological basis of National
+Socialism. In addition there is a total lack of proof that a straight
+spiritual line, a clear spiritual causal connection, exists between the
+conceptions of Rosenberg and the alleged and actual crimes.
+
+If one goes to the trouble of looking through the book, _The Myth of the
+20th Century_, one will immediately observe that though there is some
+philosophizing in the National Socialist way, it would be, however, pure
+fiction to affirm that there is any dogmatic formulation of a tangible
+program in this book, or that it is a foundation for the activities of
+the responsible leaders of the Reich in this World War. Another mistake
+of National Socialism was perhaps the boundless unification and
+simplification: people were made uniform; thinking was made uniform;
+only one uniform type of German was left. There was also alleged to be
+only one National Socialist way of thinking, and only National Socialist
+ideology. But in spite of this, as we see today, the leaders were
+frequently of different opinions on essential questions. I will recall
+the question of the policy in the East. Here too, there seems to be
+danger of accepting this way of thinking, of observing everything
+through the spectacles of uniformity, and of saying: One idea, one
+philosophy, one responsibility, one crime, one punishment. Such a
+simplification, apart from its primitive nature, would certainly also
+constitute a great injustice toward the Defendant Rosenberg.
+
+Finally, when one hears how the Prosecution attacks “Germanic
+Christianity,” the “heathen blood myth,” making much of Rosenberg’s
+expression, “the Nordic blood is the mystery which has superseded and
+overpowered the old sacraments,” one feels inclined to close one’s eyes
+for a moment and to picture oneself attending a session of the
+Inquisition in the Middle Ages where they are about to sentence
+Rosenberg to the stake as a heretic. Yet nothing must be farther from
+the Tribunal’s mind than to harbor thoughts of intolerance, since here,
+in spite of all attempts by some of the prosecutors, it is not
+ideologies but crimes which are involved.
+
+In the Defendant Rosenberg’s case it is a question of whether by his
+teachings he was guilty of preparing and promoting crimes. The
+Prosecution has brought forth arguments to this end, but have not proved
+it, while I can prove the opposite merely by pointing to Rosenberg’s
+activities in the East. Had he been the bearer and apostle of a criminal
+idea, he would have had an opportunity, such as no criminal has ever yet
+had in world history, to indulge in criminal activities. I have stated
+explicitly that in his case it was just the opposite. So when the bearer
+and apostle of an idea himself has the greatest of opportunities and yet
+in practice himself behaves morally, then his teachings cannot be
+criminal and immoral either. Above all, he cannot then be punished as a
+criminal on the basis of his teachings. What criminally degenerate
+persons practiced as alleged National Socialism cannot be laid to the
+charge of Rosenberg. Moreover, Rosenberg’s speeches in three volumes,
+which express what he taught in the course of 8 years, bear witness to
+the honorable nature of his endeavors.
+
+Thus, if we relinquish the false conception of uniformity: One party,
+one philosophy, one ideology, one crime—and we will have to, in view of
+the indisputable fact that Rosenberg himself never pursued a policy of
+extermination, destruction, and enslavement in the East—we shall have
+to admit that the facts of the terrible central executive orders and of
+Rosenberg’s philosophy are not identical, and on these grounds alone the
+conclusions of the Prosecution are invalid.
+
+Karl Marx teaches that historical events and political social reality
+are conditioned by the mere casual play of materialistic forces. Whether
+Marx in addition acknowledges the independent influence of man and ideas
+on history is at least doubtful. On the other hand, Rosenberg stresses
+emphatically the influence and the necessity of the highest ideas in the
+history of peoples. But Rosenberg does not overlook the fact that every
+event in history is the result of a totality of acting forces. The will,
+the passions and the intelligence of the people involved work together
+to form a historical process which cannot be calculated in human terms.
+It has already been pointed out that, just as little as Voltaire’s and
+Rousseau’s ideas can be recognized as the causes of the French
+Revolution, and the slogans of “Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity” be
+taken as the cause of the Jacobinic terror, as little as one can say
+that Mirabeau and Sièze had wanted or plotted such a blood bath, so
+little can one ascribe to Rosenberg as his moral or even criminal guilt
+that which National Socialism became during its development through the
+decades. In other words, I believe it is as unjust as it is unhistorical
+to ascribe today, in retrospect, the negative aspects of National
+Socialism, which were connected with the terrible collapse, to a plan
+desired from the outset and emanating from Rosenberg’s ideas.
+
+Therefore, in considering Rosenberg’s work the mistake of a
+standardization which does not correspond to reality is added to the
+further mistake of mechanization; there is neither a mechanical man nor
+mechanical history. And, finally, the construction of the Indictment is
+also an absolutely negative one; it views the defendant from the
+standpoint of political polemics and is impressed by the excitement of
+people in these excited times. I must briefly take exception to this
+distortion of the defendant’s mental traits.
+
+The spiritual state of the period after the first World War and even of
+the preceding period, which gave birth to the defendant’s ideas, are
+known to all of us only too well: The turmoil in the spirit and soul of
+man brought about by the technical age, his hunger and thirst for a new
+spirit and a new soul; liberty was the slogan and a “new beginning” the
+impulse which directed the will of youth. Its longing and enthusiasm
+were aimed at nature. The thoughts and wishes of this generation were
+led into political paths by the contrast between rich and poor, which
+youth considered unjust and sought to bridge through socialism and the
+fellowship of the people. In Germany the development along political
+lines was given further impetus by the national misfortune of 1918-19
+and the Treaty of Versailles, which was likewise felt to be unjust. The
+idea of building German history through the union of nationalism and
+socialism glowed unconsciously in the hearts of millions, as the
+undisputed tremendous success of National Socialism proves. The
+spiritual foundation was the desire for external and internal
+self-assertion and love for one’s fellow countrymen and for the people
+themselves, who had had to suffer so much torment and misery in history.
+
+The desire for self-assertion and love for one’s own people, together
+with the whole system of National Socialist ideas, then developed in an
+inexplicable manner into a furious conflagration. The most primitive
+considerations of common sense were eliminated just as in a delirium; in
+complete delusion everything was risked and everything was lost.
+
+The searching questions which present themselves to Rosenberg time and
+time again are whether he could have done more for what he thought and
+upheld as just and worthy; where he neglected essential things; where he
+fell short of requirements; what negative symptoms, insofar as he had
+knowledge of them, he should have paid more attention to. Can such
+questions, which every person asks when he is crushed by disaster, be
+considered as evidence for his objective guilt? I do not think so. On 17
+January 1946 the French Chief Prosecutor, M. de Menthon, stated the
+following, which I quote (Volume V, Pages 378, 379):
+
+ “We are rather facing systematic criminality which directly and
+ necessarily derives from a monstrous doctrine with the full will
+ of the leaders of Nazi Germany. The crime against peace, which
+ was undertaken, is immediately derived from the National
+ Socialist doctrine.”
+
+To refute this assertion I must briefly present this doctrine. I have
+classified the National Socialist ideology—in accord, I believe, with
+scientific opinions—under the so-called new romanticism. This trend,
+which was grounded in fate and the necessities of history, had gone
+through the whole civilized world since the turn of the century as a
+reaction against rationalism and the technical age. It differs from the
+old romanticism in that it adopts the naturalistic and biological
+consideration of man and history. It is borne up by a confident faith in
+the value and meaning of life and the whole of reality. It does not
+glorify sentiment or intellect, but the innermost motives of man—heart,
+will, and faith. This philosophy receives its National Socialist stamp
+through the emphasis which is placed upon the mysterious importance of
+peoples and races for all human experience and activity. It is in the
+people, in the common possession of blood, history, and culture, that
+the real roots of strength are thought to be found. Only by
+participating in the movements of a people and its strength does the
+individual serve himself and his generation.
+
+Rosenberg’s scientific contribution to the racial ideology consists in
+his description of the rise and fall of great historical figures, who
+sprang from races and peoples and set up definite standards in all
+spheres: language, custom, art, religion, philosophy, and politics.
+According to Rosenberg the efforts of the twentieth century to establish
+a form for itself are a struggle for the independence of the human
+personality. In Rosenberg’s opinion, its essence is the consciousness of
+honor. The myth of national honor is at the same time the myth of blood
+and race, which produce and support honor in its highest form.
+Therefore, the struggle for honor in its highest form is also a
+spiritual struggle with other systems and their maximum values. Thus,
+intuition stands against intuition, will against will.
+
+Rosenberg expresses this thought in the following manner (_The Myth of
+the 20th Century_, Introduction, Pages 1 and 2):
+
+ “History and the task of the future no longer mean a struggle
+ between classes, no longer a struggle between Church dogma and
+ dogma, but the dispute between blood and blood, race and race,
+ people and people. And this means: A struggle between
+ psychologies.”
+
+Consequently, Rosenberg had, in any case, no ideas of genocide as
+Raphael Lemkin expounds in _Axis Rule in Occupied Europe_, Page 81,
+where he ends the above quotation after the words “race and race, people
+and people,” but he believed in a struggle between psychologies, in
+other words, spiritual controversy.
+
+I mention this spiritual trend in order to explain the peculiar fact in
+National Socialism that political considerations born of the intellect
+often gave way before the pathos of will and faith. In Rosenberg’s case
+this danger did not appear so much since in making everything revolve
+around the “soil,” that is, the fatherland, and its history and
+peasantry as the force from which springs the essence of a race, he
+remains in the sphere of life’s realities. Perhaps unaware of it
+himself, he was nevertheless borne upward by this current. The question
+arises as to what effects this ideology had on political life.
+
+It is clear that the emphasis on will and faith gave special weight to
+political demands. After the Treaty of Versailles the political demands
+of Germany were aimed at recovering freedom and equality among the
+peoples as a still fettered great power. This had been the objective of
+German statesmen even before Hitler. The other great powers had certain
+misgivings about recognizing Germany again as such. Rosenberg fought to
+remove these misgivings. His weapon was his pen. The Tribunal has
+allowed me to present in evidence a group of excerpts from Rosenberg’s
+speeches and writings. I submitted it in my Document Book 1, Volume II.
+In view of the quantity of material and of my intention to submit only
+the most important matter, I depend on the Court’s being familiar with
+my document book.
+
+In the first place I wish to call attention to the effect which these
+works had on German youth. I may recall the witness Von Schirach’s
+testimony. I repeat verbally:
+
+ “At conventions of youth leaders, at which he spoke once a year,
+ Rosenberg chiefly chose educational, character-building
+ subjects. I remember, for instance, that he spoke on loneliness
+ and comradeship, personality and honor, and so forth. At these
+ conventions of leaders he did not deliver any speeches against
+ Jews. As far as I remember, he did not touch on the religious
+ problem of youth either, in any case not to the best of my
+ memory. Mostly I heard him talk on such subjects as I have just
+ mentioned before.”
+
+The attitude of youth was actually better than before the taking over of
+power. Idleness, the root of all evil, had ceased and had been replaced
+by work, the fulfillment of duty, the aiming at ideals, patriotism, and
+the will to get ahead. It was a fatality here too, that through Hitler’s
+policy these values were directed in the wrong manner.
+
+The charges by the Prosecution that Rosenberg was the advocate of a
+conspiracy against peace, of racial hatred, of the elimination of human
+rights, of tyranny, of a rule of horror, violence, and illegality, of
+unbridled nationalism and militarism, of a German master race, I could
+already refute by pointing to the excerpts from _The Myth of the 20th
+Century_, which the Prosecution itself has submitted as evidence for the
+truth of its assertions. In reply to this, in order to refute this
+assertion by the Prosecution, I want to point in particular to the
+following facts: To prove Rosenberg’s honest struggle for the peaceful
+existence of nations side by side I wish to refer to his speech in Rome
+in November 1932 before the Royal Academy of Rome (reproduced in _Blood
+and Honor_, Document Book 1, Page 150). In his speech in Rome Rosenberg
+pointed to the fateful significance of the four great powers and
+proclaimed—I quote his words:
+
+ “Therefore he who strives in earnest to create a Europe which
+ shall be an organic unit with a pronounced multiplicity of form
+ and not merely a crude summation, must acknowledge the four
+ great nationalisms as given to us by fate and must, therefore,
+ seek to give fulfillment to the force radiating from their core.
+ The destruction of one of these centers by any power would not
+ result in a ‘Europe,’ but would bring about chaos in which the
+ other centers of culture would also have to perish. In reverse
+ it is only the triumph of the radiations in those directions
+ where the four great forces do not come into conflict with each
+ other which would result in the most dynamic force of creative
+ being and organic peace, not an explosive forced situation such
+ as prevails today, whereby it would guarantee to the small
+ nations more security than appears possible today in the
+ struggle against elementary force.”
+
+To this line of thought Rosenberg, as Chief of the Foreign Political
+Office of the Party, remained true. Unfortunately, he could only work
+for it through his words. No witness could confirm in this courtroom
+that Rosenberg had any influence on actual foreign policy, whether it
+was directed by Neurath, Ribbentrop, Göring, or Hitler himself. Neither
+in the Austrian, nor in the Czech, nor in the Polish, nor in the Russian
+subject matter has his name been mentioned in connection with the charge
+of participation in aggressive wars. Everywhere he was placed before
+accomplished facts. In the war against the Soviet Union he received his
+orders only when the war against Russia had already been established as
+an acute possibility. He did not stir up the Norwegian campaign, but
+passed on personal information in accordance with his duty.
+
+Now, as regards Rosenberg’s speeches and writings on the problems of
+general foreign policy, he advocated the Anschluss of the Austrians, who
+had been forcibly excluded from the Reich, as a demand born of the right
+to self-determination which had been proclaimed by the Allies
+themselves. The revision of Versailles was a postulate of justice
+against a violation of the Treaty of 11 November 1918. To advocate the
+German Armed Forces was, in view of the nondisarmament of the other
+powers, a defense of the solemnly promised equality of rights.
+
+I shall now take up the charge of racial hatred.
+
+Rosenberg’s opinions in regard to the race question were the result of
+racial research of international scientists. Rosenberg repeatedly
+asserts (I refer again to the opinion stated in Document Book 1, Volume
+II) that the purpose of his racial political demands was not contempt of
+race, but respect for it. I quote Page 70:
+
+ “The leading moral idea of an approach to world history based on
+ the laws of heredity belongs to our times and to our generation,
+ being in full accord with the true spirit of the modern eugenics
+ movement with regard to patriotism, that is, the upholding and
+ expansion of the spiritually, morally, intellectually, and
+ physically best hereditary forces for our fatherland: only in
+ this way can we preserve our institutions for all future times.”
+
+These words embody the main theme of his demands, though their
+originator was not Rosenberg, but Henry Fairfield Osborn, Professor at
+Columbia University, who wrote them in discussion of the book by his
+colleague in science, Madison Grant, _The Decline of the Great Race_.
+This research, long before the existence of the Third Reich, led to
+eugenic legislation in other countries, in particular to the American
+Immigration Law of 26 May 1924, which was aimed at a strong reduction of
+immigrants from southern and eastern Europe while favoring those from
+the north and west of Europe.
+
+I do not think I have to say that I am not hereby defending the murders
+of those mentally diseased in Germany as an alleged eugenic measure.
+With this measure, too, Rosenberg did not have the slightest connection.
+
+For Rosenberg it was a question of the spiritual strengthening and
+consolidation of the German nation, indeed of the Aryan race. He would
+like to have his ideology considered in that light, above all _The Myth
+of the 20th Century_. His preaching of the significance of race in
+history did not call—I stress this again—for race contempt, but for
+consideration and respect of race, and demanded the acknowledgment of
+the racial idea only by the German people, not by other nations. He
+considered the Aryan nations as the leading ones in history. And if in
+doing so he underestimated the significance of other races, as for
+instance the Semitic ones, he, in his praise of Aryan races, did not
+think of the German nation alone, but of the European nations in
+general. I refer to his speech in Rome of November 1932.
+
+I am keeping within the framework of historical truth in pointing to the
+fact that anti-Judaism is not an invention of National Socialism. For
+thousands of years the Jewish question has been the minority problem of
+the world. It has an irrational character which can be understood to
+some extent only in connection with the Bible. Rosenberg was a convinced
+anti-Semite, who in writing and speech gave expression to his
+convictions and their foundations. I have already emphasized that even
+such different personalities as Von Papen, Von Neurath, and Raeder are
+still of the opinion that the predominance of the Jewish element in the
+entire public life had reached such proportions that a change had to
+come about in this respect. The concrete result of that predominance,
+the fact that the Jews in Germany when attacked knew how to repay in
+kind, sharpened the anti-Semitic fight before the accession to power.
+
+I wanted to present to the Tribunal a selection of Jewish literary
+attacks on the national feeling at that time, but the Tribunal ruled
+that my application was irrelevant; as these writings were not
+introduced as evidence I cannot speak about them. It is, however, an
+injustice to Rosenberg to assert that blind hatred of the Jewish race
+had goaded him into that controversy. He had before his eyes concrete
+factual evidence of the disintegrating activities of Jews.
+
+It appeared as if the Party program of placing Jews under a generous law
+of aliens would be realized. It is true that Goebbels at that time
+arranged a one-day boycotting of Jewish stores. Rosenberg, however, in
+his speech of 28 June 1933, the anniversary of the Versailles Treaty, in
+the assembly hall of the Reichstag in the Kroll Opera House, declared
+that it was no longer necessary that in the capital of the Reich 74
+percent of all lawyers should be Jews, and that 80 to 90 percent of the
+physicians in Berlin hospitals should be Jewish; about 30 percent of
+Jewish lawyers in Berlin would suffice amply. In his speech at the Party
+Rally in September 1933 Rosenberg stated in addition, and I quote:
+
+ “In the most chivalrous way, the German Government has excluded
+ from the percentage stipulations those Jews who have fought for
+ Germany at the front, or who have lost a son or a father in the
+ war” (Document Book 1, Page 153a).
+
+In his speech at the Kroll Opera House Rosenberg gave the reason for
+this measure, saying that there was no intention thereby to discriminate
+against a whole people, but that it was necessary for our younger German
+generation, who for years had had to starve or beg, now to be able to
+obtain bread and work too. But despite his strong opposition to the Jews
+he did not want the “extermination” of Jewry, but advocated as the
+nearest aim the political expatriation of Jews, that is, through
+classifying them by law as aliens and giving them protection as such. In
+addition, he granted to the Jews a percentage access to nonpolitical
+professions, which still by far exceeded the actual percentage of Jews
+in the German population. Of course, his final aim was the total
+emigration of the Jews from Aryan nations. He had no understanding and
+appreciation of how great a loss to the Aryan nations themselves such an
+emigration would be in cultural, economic, and political respects. But
+one will have to admit that he believed that such an emigration would
+prove useful for the Jews themselves, first, because they would be set
+free from all anti-Semitic attacks, and also, because in their own
+settlement area they might live unhampered and according to their own
+ways.
+
+The dreadful development which the Jewish question took under Hitler,
+which he justified as being a reaction against the policy pursued by
+emigrants, was never more regretted by anyone than by Rosenberg himself,
+who blames himself for not having protested against the attitude of
+Hitler, Himmler, and Goebbels as firmly as he protested against Koch’s
+actions in the Ukraine. Nor does Rosenberg hesitate to admit that his
+suggestion to Hitler to shoot 100 Jews instead of 100 Frenchmen after
+the recurring murders of German soldiers was an injustice born of a
+momentary feeling—despite his belief in its formal
+admissibility—because, from the purely human standpoint, the real basis
+for such a suggestion was lacking, namely, the active participation of
+those Jews.
+
+I have returned to this case again, as in my opinion it is the only
+instance where Rosenberg desired retribution by the death of Jews. On
+the other hand, one must insist with the greatest emphasis that there is
+no proof of Rosenberg’s having been aware of the extermination of five
+million Jews. The Prosecution accuses him of making preparations for an
+anti-Semitic congress as late as 1944, which did not take place only
+because of the course of the war. What point could such a congress have
+had, had Rosenberg known that the majority of the Jews in Europe had
+been exterminated already?
+
+Rosenberg had no faith in democracy, because in Germany it led to a
+splitting up into numerous parties and a constant change of government,
+and finally made the formation of an efficient government impossible.
+Another reason for his not having faith in democracy was that non-German
+democratic powers did not stand by their democratic principles in
+certain cases where they might have been of benefit to Germany, for
+instance in 1919, when Austria was willing to be incorporated in
+Germany, and later on at the plebiscite in Upper Silesia. But Rosenberg
+did not for that reason turn toward tyranny. In connection with
+Paragraph 25 of the Party Program he said in his comments, on Page 46:
+
+ “This central power”—referring in this case to the Führer’s
+ power—“should have as advisers representatives of the people as
+ well as those councils which had evolved in the course of time”
+ (Document Book 3, Page 6).
+
+And in his speech in Marienburg on 30 April 1934 on the state of the
+German Order, he said that the National Socialist State must be “a
+monarchy on a republican foundation.” I quote:
+
+ “From that standpoint the State will not become a deified end in
+ itself, neither will its leader become a Caesar, a God, or a
+ deputy of God” (Document Book 1, Page 131).
+
+In his speech on German law of 18 December 1934, Rosenberg stressed:
+
+“In our eyes the Führer is never a tyrannical commander” (Document Book
+1, Page 135). Only in such terms was a protest against the development
+of tyranny possible.
+
+The development passed over Rosenberg and degenerated. Rosenberg himself
+learned this while acting as Minister for the East. Rosenberg was an
+idealist, but he was not the unscrupulous man who inspired the State and
+the Führer to commit crimes. I believe, therefore, that he should not be
+included in Mr. Justice Jackson’s Indictment (Page 8), where it says
+that Rosenberg belonged to those men in Germany who have been “the very
+symbols of race hatred, of the rule of terror and violence, of arrogance
+and cruel power.”
+
+In looking through Rosenberg’s writings one finds, on the contrary,
+statements and expressions which give a decided impression of tolerance.
+He says, for example, in his Myth, of the national Church which he
+aspired to:
+
+ “The German Church cannot pronounce compulsory dogmas which
+ every one of its followers is compelled to believe at the very
+ risk of losing his everlasting salvation.”
+
+In his speech on ideology and dogma at the University of
+Halle-Wittenberg, he called for tolerance toward all denominations with
+a demand for “inner respect for every genuine denomination.” In his
+speech on German intellectual freedom of 6 July 1935 he also spoke up
+for the freedom of conscience. No document was presented which contained
+a request by Rosenberg for criminal persecution of one of his numerous
+ideological opponents, although he might easily have been prompted to do
+so by their sharp attacks on his opinions.
+
+Further, the Prosecution accused him of promoting militarism. Rosenberg
+was indeed an admirer of the soldier’s profession and a soldierly
+attitude toward life, but he also admired the peasant’s standards as the
+basis of the national character. He advocated the creation of a people’s
+army, both as the outward expression of Germany’s capacity as a
+political ally and for the purpose of training and educating the people
+at home. However, he denies having contemplated world conquest. On this
+point I can refer to his speech on Germany’s Position in the World of 30
+October 1933. There he offered peace to Russia on the occasion of the
+German withdrawal from the League of Nations (Document Book 1, Page
+147). I shall quote this passage, for it also proves that National
+Socialism did not desire to interfere in the affairs of other countries:
+
+ “We are ready at any time to maintain absolutely correct
+ relations with Soviet Russia, because naturally we do not
+ necessarily want to modify an ideology in the field of foreign
+ policy and foreign relations.”
+
+In the same speech he emphasizes that the avowal of an ideology he
+describes as racial science is “not meant to be an expression of racial
+hatred, but an expression of racial respect” (_Blood and Honor_, Page
+377).
+
+Mr. Justice Jackson called Rosenberg’s nationalism a “wild” one.
+Rosenberg was passionate, but he wanted thereby to overcome class
+conflict in the nation, which threatened its existence. For a clearer
+understanding of the facts it may also be said ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, the Tribunal would like you to finish your
+speech before lunch, if you could possibly summarize some parts of it. I
+don’t know whether that is possible.
+
+DR. THOMA: I shall try to do that, Mr. President.
+
+I once more refer to Mr. Jackson’s statement that Rosenberg’s
+nationalism, or militarism, was “wild.” In this connection I should like
+to refer only to the fact that such nationalism was a compensatory
+symptom, which is easily found in a conquered country.
+
+The accusation dealing with anti-Christianity and neopaganism is
+something which I have already mentioned, and I should just like to
+refer to it. I have dealt with the term “master race,” mentioning the
+fact that these words are not found in Rosenberg’s works at all.
+
+Concerning the Party Program, I stated that Rosenberg did not draft it,
+but only supplied a commentary upon it, and that it is not a question of
+what is contained in the Party Program, but rather with what its effect
+was. I referred to the witness Funk, who stated that his first action
+and his first program as Minister of Economics had no reference at all
+to the Party Program, but was simply democratic and liberal.
+
+The Party Program was adhered to neither in a positive nor a negative
+sense. The government was carried on just as in other states, on the
+basis of general necessity.
+
+May it please the Tribunal, I shall turn to the charge that Rosenberg
+was the delegate of the Führer for the supervision of all education and
+spiritual ideology within the NSDAP. During the reading of the affidavit
+by Dr. Eppe I pointed to the fact that Rosenberg, as head of this
+office, had no executive power, and that Rosenberg interpreted the
+duties of his office in such a way that he published magazines on all
+cultural and scientific topics, especially the _NS Monatshefte_, the
+polemic political contents of which, after 1933, were more and more
+superseded by historical, scientific, and cultural subjects. On the
+basis of all the literature at our disposal it is not in accordance with
+the facts that Rosenberg interpreted his position as one from which to
+sow hatred. After 1933 he mainly endeavored to intensify and promote new
+definite talent. I have said in addition that this nonpolitical office
+concentrated its efforts on exercising a regulating and guiding
+influence on all noble and cultural values which manifested themselves.
+
+May it please the Tribunal, I shall now turn to the topic: “Morality as
+a basis of the Indictment.” I should like to ask the High Tribunal, even
+though I do not propose to read this passage, to consider it as having
+been presented by me. I refer to Pages 82a through 82g, and I should
+like to ask the High Tribunal for permission not to read this matter and
+yet to have this matter considered as having been submitted in its
+entirety and read into the record. I shall now sum up ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, all the speech will be taken as being
+presented to the Tribunal. By your summarizing it, you are not excluding
+it from the record of the Tribunal. The Tribunal will take note of it
+all.
+
+DR. THOMA: Thank you, Mr. President.
+
+I shall now sum up in conclusion, and I should like to point out the
+following:
+
+[sm type begins]... that he is to be understood as a phenomenon of
+psychic compensation, as often appears in a conquered people. In
+addition, Germany, situated in the middle of Europe, was always exposed
+to so many political and military dangers that military circles in
+Germany, particularly after the entrance into the Ruhr in 1923, were
+necessarily particularly sensitive on national questions. As a German
+Balt he was brought up in a national way of feeling that led him to
+expect more of self-assertion and mobilization for defense than of the
+disappointments resulting from the international negotiations carried on
+up to that time. He was always ready for an understanding based on equal
+representation (Document Number 003-PS, Exhibit Number USA-603).[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Rosenberg has been further reproached with
+anti-Christianity and neopaganism. It is true that this reproach was not
+brought against his theory, but in connection with the persecution of
+the Christian religion in all its forms which later resulted. Rosenberg
+was an opponent of Christianity in its—as he sees them—present
+historical forms, just as he was of Jewry. In place of Christianity he
+strove for an idealistically, racially, and ethnically, conditioned
+religion, an emotional religion of blood and soil.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]He thereby attacked both Christianity and Jewry
+theoretically, and hoped that the Christian Churches would gradually
+become extinct among the German people; yet it will always have to be
+admitted that Rosenberg staged no violent persecution. He carried on
+this battle with intellectual weapons. Here, too, since he expected
+freedom of conscience for himself, he advocated freedom of conscience
+for others, and pointed out that with his _Myth_ and his new
+religiousness he did not wish to confuse Church believers but to create
+new spiritual ties for those, too, who had ceased to be believers in the
+Church.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The term “master race,” to my knowledge, does not appear
+in Rosenberg’s writings, nor does it fit into Rosenberg’s ideology,
+which proceeds from the race as a general law. Therefore, Rosenberg
+speaks of the Nordic, Mediterranean, Dinaric race, in relation to races
+which are biologically different, not in the sense of an arrogant
+judgment as to value, but in the sense of racial facts, in the sense of
+honoring the entire human race of Europe.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]As far as the Party Program is concerned, despite the
+assertions of the Prosecution, it was not he, Rosenberg, who designed
+it. Like so many other things, the meaning and action of the Party
+Program has also been overestimated and exaggerated. It was one of the
+first deeds of the National Socialist Government to design a
+reconstruction program, of which the Defendant Funk said that almost any
+other liberal or democratic government could accept it also. In place of
+breaking up capital investment, the reinstatement of a sound money and
+credit system was demanded. I could go on quoting a number of examples,
+for instance the program of aliens’ status for Jews, which was not
+carried out. The Party Program was never adhered to subsequently either
+in the positive or the negative sense. Rules were simply enacted as in
+other states, too, based on the necessities of the moment.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The entire ideology of the journalist and author
+Rosenberg becomes intensified and is rendered more menacing to peace,
+according to the Prosecution, by the fact that Rosenberg was nominated
+the deputy of the Führer for the supervision of the entire intellectual
+and ideological education of the NSDAP. How did this assignment come
+about and what were the circumstances concerning it? On the basis of his
+previous experience in the educational work of the Party, its
+organizational leader asked Rosenberg whether he would not undertake a
+common intellectual project. Rosenberg answered in the affirmative, if
+the Führer so desired. Thereupon, on 24 January 1934, the Führer
+appointed him chief of that office. It was a Party office and had
+nothing to do with the schools, as is erroneously assumed. The office
+had no right to issue directives to Reich offices; even any
+correspondence with them had to be sent via the Party Chancellery.
+Neither did it have any right to suppress books, et cetera. Even a right
+to issue directives to the Party was not granted, the more so since the
+branch school directors were also subordinated to the Reich leaders (SA,
+SS, HJ). Therefore, from the very beginning Rosenberg did not consider
+his work as representing the tasks of an intellectual police, but as an
+executive and unifying work, as the central point of the expression and
+realization of the factual and personal power of conviction and
+initiative.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]He had no offices in the various Gaue, not even
+individual representatives; he agreed to the Gau education leader as his
+deputy at the same time, in order to maintain a connection with
+practical education in the country.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The office had many things to review in the course of
+time, yet it remained limited in extent. It became subdivided into
+various spheres of work; teaching and education proper, cultivation of
+literature, the arts, cultural and general problems. About twice a year,
+for the purpose of comparing tuition experiences, Rosenberg called
+together the so-called “Working Community for the Instruction of the
+Entire Movement.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In it were represented the educational deputies of the
+political leadership and its various subdivisions. They reported on
+their work and expressed their suggestions. On the basis of these
+suggestions, Rosenberg frequently lectured in the Gaue on appropriate
+topics, and likewise induced his collaborators to handle such questions
+in all the subdivisions. These are the two educational meetings which
+the Prosecution mentioned by reason of their alleged “broad influence on
+the community schools” as an indication of criminal activity (Volume V,
+Page 48). This generally executive work found expression particularly in
+the periodicals of the offices of Rosenberg’s department; primarily in
+the N. S. _Monatshefte_, which after 1933 acquired a gradually
+increasing polemical political content in the interest of handling
+historical, cultural, and scientific topics. _Die Kunst im Deutschen
+Reich_ achieved special significance by simply offering the most
+beautiful examples in the way of contemporary plastic art, excellently
+presented without discussion. The _Bücher Kunde_ offered a monthly cross
+section of writings and literary contributions. The monthly periodical
+_Musik_ devoted itself above all to serious art, the cultivation of the
+German classics, and without any pettiness toward new creations. The
+journal _Germanisches Erbe_ published contributions on research in early
+history, the _Deutsche Volkskunde_ was devoted to games, folk songs,
+peasant customs. _Deutsche Dramaturgie_ described the ambitions and
+problems of the contemporary theater.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Besides this there were special exhibitions of the
+lifework of great artists in Rosenberg’s exhibition building in Berlin,
+and book exhibitions in various cities.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It is simply not true if the Prosecution declares that
+Rosenberg used his assignment to disseminate hatred. The essence of his
+entire work after 1933 went toward a profounder and large-scale
+promotion of new positive talents.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Political polemics in these seven years had almost
+entirely disappeared. But for the difficulties in the language, one
+would find, in glancing through the journals and speeches, an honest
+great effort, whether Rosenberg spoke to youth or to the technicians,
+teachers, lawyers, workers, professors, women, at meetings of
+historians, or before the Northern Society.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The heads of his offices were instrumental in publishing
+and promoting valuable works of art: Classics of music, history of the
+German ancestry, world political libraries, development of German
+peasantry, and others. In the present impassioned days one is not
+interested to know of this side of somebody’s lifework, and therefore I
+only touch upon it; but I wish to emphasize that it was just that which
+seemed to Rosenberg, since 1933, to constitute the essential part of his
+work, and similarly he intended to devote himself in his old age
+entirely to scientific-cultural research and teaching. I shall permit
+myself a few more words about this later.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Contrary to some opinions which at first appeared
+necessary, although some Individuals may perhaps have looked upon them
+as rather petty, Rosenberg advocated at the universities of Munich and
+Halle the right of examining new problems of our times as well as the
+independence of scientific thinking. He declared that we would have to
+“feel that we were the intellectual brothers of all those who once in
+mediaeval times raised the flag for this free research” (Document Book
+1, Page 134). Against certain attempts to identify certain scientific
+physical theories with the Party, he protested in an official
+declaration which rejected this danger of hairsplitting. “It is not the
+task of the National Socialist movement,” he said in a speech about
+Copernicus and Kant on 19 February 1939, “to make any regulations for
+research other than necessarily connected with our philosophy of life”
+(Document Book 1, Page 173).[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]When a certain trend toward mass statistics, peak
+figures for the number of visitors, et cetera, developed in the
+otherwise desirable progress achieved by the German Labor Front, he made
+a determined stand in favor of emphasis on the personal element. He
+rejected this idea of “mass production” in an address to youth with the
+words: “One cannot receive art and culture like mass-produced,
+ready-made clothes in a department store” (Document Book 1, Page 155).
+Today poisoning of this youth is imputed to him, but on the contrary he
+asked (Document Book 1, Page 161) for comprehension in teaching on the
+part of everybody to whose care young people are entrusted, and he
+decidedly rejected any orders in the intellectual field.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]With regard to any form of collectivism, as has already
+been mentioned, he impressed on youth the importance of comradeship, but
+emphasized the personal element and the right to solitude. When on the
+grounds of certain occurrences many voices criticized the teaching
+class, Rosenberg began to fear lest general discrimination against the
+profession might develop. He took a stand against this danger in two
+speeches: at a great meeting in October 1934 at Leipzig, and later at
+the conference of the N.S. Teacher’s League at Bayreuth (Document Book
+1, Page 162), where he declared that the National Socialist movement
+would step in and see that the teaching class be respected, just as it
+would have done for all other professions.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]By these brief allusions I mean to say that Rosenberg,
+as a regulating and leading intellectual force, advocated high cultural
+values and the rights of personality in a manner rendered convincing by
+his attitude and motives. Throughout the whole Party it was no secret
+that this activity involved profound opposition to the Propaganda
+Minister. Rosenberg from the very beginning considered it a calamity
+that culture and propaganda should be associated in one ministry. For
+him art was a creed, propaganda a form of tactics.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]As things at first could not be changed, Rosenberg
+emphasized his attitude to the outside world by not attending a single
+annual meeting of the Reich Chamber of Culture, in the firm hope that at
+some later day another conception would win through.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Many things Rosenberg said did not fail to have their
+effect and certainly prevented some harmful actions, but more, and
+probably the most important, did not succeed because the legislative and
+executive powers in the State lay in quite different hands, and these
+finally, due to the war and in spite of the will to sacrifice, brought
+about not the development of the National Socialist idea but its
+degeneration. Moreover, this happened to an extent which Rosenberg could
+not foresee.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It was seen that the foundations for the spiritual
+education of the Party were not sufficient, and round about 1935 there
+developed a wish to create a serious place for research and study. This
+desire led to the idea later known as “high school,” which was intended
+to take the form of an academy. Rosenberg considered the creation of
+this academy as a task for his old age. Since it would have taken years
+to provide tuition material and to choose suitable personnel, the Führer
+authorized Rosenberg at the end of January 1940 to carry on the
+preparatory work he had started on official orders. Thus, contrary to
+what the Prosecution asserts, (Volume V, Page 48) the “high school” had
+nothing to do with Rosenberg’s “Einsatzstab,” which was not even planned
+at that time.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Mr. Justice Jackson, in his fundamental speech of 21
+November 1945, expressed the desire, that this Trial should appear to
+posterity as the fulfillment of the human yearning for justice. Mr.
+Jackson furthermore declared that he had brought the Indictment because
+of conduct which according to its plan and intention meant injustice
+from the moral and the legal standpoint. In his report of 7 June 1945
+Mr. Justice Jackson outlined that by this Trial those actions are to be
+punished which since time immemorial have been considered as crimes and
+are designated as such in any civilized legislation. The most difficult
+problem, the greatest task, and the most tremendous responsibility for
+the Tribunal lies concentrated in this single point: What is justice in
+this Trial?[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]We have no code of laws, we have, however astonishing it
+may sound, not even any fixed moral concepts for the relations of
+nations among each other in peace and war. Therefore the Prosecution had
+to be satisfied with the general terms “civilized conception of
+justice,” “traditional conception of legality,” “conception of legality
+built on sound common sense with regard to justice”; they have spoken of
+“human and divine laws” (Volume VII, Page 78); the Hague Land Warfare
+Rules refer in their preamble to the “laws of humanity” and to the
+“demands of the public conscience.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The basis of justice is without any doubt a morality,
+the moral law; thus if we wish to determine what injustice among nations
+is, what is contrary to the idea of justice among nations according to
+international law, then we must broach the question of morality. The
+answer will be: everything is moral which our conscience accepts as
+being moral.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]But what is the original cause of moral discrimination:
+desire and happiness of the individual; or progress, improvement,
+preservation of the life of an individual, of a people, of humanity; or
+virtue; or duty?[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]How can we recognize what is good and what is bad? By
+intuition, or by experience, or by authoritarian and religious
+education? What is good and bad in the actions of a State, what is good
+and bad in the mutual relationship between nations? Does a difference
+exist between national morals and private morals? Can the State commit
+any injustice at all? From Saint Augustine through Machiavelli and
+Nietzsche to Hegel, Tolstoy, and the pacifist thinkers, yearning
+humanity has received the most different answers to this question.[sm
+type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]And furthermore: Have fixed moral laws existed since
+time immemorial or have changes in the ideals of nations brought about
+changes in morals, too? What is the situation with regard to this
+today?[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]I have already said once that, according to my opinion,
+war itself is a brutality and a great crime of humanity against itself
+and the laws of life. An essentially different question is whether this
+conviction has already entered the conscience of humanity. We consider
+ourselves far above the moral level of former nations and ages, and are,
+for example, surprised to find that the highest representatives of Greek
+morality such as Plato and Aristotle consider abandoning of children and
+slavery to be absolutely right, or that in certain parts of East Africa
+even today only robbery and murder give a man the stamp of heroism; on
+the other hand it is absolutely compatible with our present-day idea of
+morality that human beings are killed by hundreds of thousands in war
+and that the products of human welfare and culture are wantonly
+destroyed. Neither in a moral nor in a legal sense is this considered as
+unjust.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]If the Prosecution now charges the defendant with a
+wrong in the moral or legal sense, it is its duty to present the
+prerequisites for a punishment of the defendant, in such a way as to
+convince the Court, for, according to the hitherto existing moral
+concepts of nations, killing in war is not murder within the meaning of
+the penal codes of the individual countries, and the measures of a
+sovereign country in war or in peace have never been interpreted as an
+offense within the meaning of these penal codes or as punishable and
+immoral acts by the legal convictions of civilized humanity.
+Christianity teaches us to return good for evil and to love one’s
+enemies; this has been a world religion for 2,000 years, but many people
+today will laugh outright if one should venture to claim certain
+principles for the relations of nations between each other. In the face
+of the yearning of humanity the Prosecution now desires to aid its
+progress, even if only step by step, in this direction; it seeks to
+achieve the end that “unequivocal rules” shall emerge from this Trial;
+its mistake however, is that it wants to explain “traditional opinions
+of justice” and civil criminal laws as the contents of a public
+conscience which hardly exists any longer, compliance with which cannot
+in any case be demanded retroactively of the defendants.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It is certainly very true that a profound change is
+commencing today in the moral thinking of humanity, a regeneration of
+the moral law of nations, and that this Trial before the High Tribunal
+marks the beginning of this new era. However, it appears to me very
+doubtful whether it is proper to impress a new kind of justice upon the
+conscience of mankind by making an example of the defendants.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It is easy to speak of human and divine laws, or of the
+demands of public conscience, but we become greatly embarrassed for an
+answer to the question: What is the substance and content of private
+morality, when is an act immoral according to private morality? In their
+concern over what is good or evil, some rely on religion, others have
+been taught wisdom by experience and education, still others find an
+explanation in the philosophers.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The State has in recent times taken up the moral
+education of its citizens in increasing measure, not only through
+criminal laws but also through “political education” or whatever other
+name is used for it. Not only did the National Socialist State have a
+great advantage here over the liberal states, but so do all totalitarian
+states of the world: They have hammered moral principles into the minds
+of their citizens, both of a private and public nature. They have
+proclaimed moral ultimate values, such as fidelity, honor, and
+obedience. By this means reflection concerning private and public morals
+is made easier for the individual citizens and they are obliged by force
+to uphold these ultimate values in the prescribed form. The German
+people, who had become tired and resigned as a result of continual
+warlike disputes and religious upheavals, willingly followed National
+Socialism, even when the latter’s ethics were exalted to a faith; it
+took this leap into the unknown, not with the idea of being taught by
+this means to deceive people, to enslave them, to rob them, to kill
+them, to torture them (see Volume VII, Page 78), but because it was in
+search of moral elevation, an authoritative moral leadership in its
+material and spiritual distress, and because nothing else was offered to
+it, especially not by a liberal world conscience which did not know how
+to make the fundamental principle of humanity a reality. The National
+Socialist ethical conceptions were taught to Germans as _summum bonum_,
+as the highest idea, and they believed the idea to be moral and good.
+Then National Socialism came into conflict not only with ideologies, but
+also with the plans of power of other states, because it could not find
+the formula which would include not only perfection and life for
+Germany, but also the interests and justice for all nations of the
+world. To try to construe out of such inadequacy of a national ethical
+idea, however inefficient, a punishable action, a conspiracy, is not
+admissible in my opinion, if only because uniformly acknowledged
+national morality has not yet developed, and unlimited national egotism
+has not yet been dethroned and is still considered the highest moral
+instance of the State.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It might be objected that the Germans should only have
+followed the teachings of their great philosopher Kant in thought and
+action, according to his “categorical imperative”: Act in such a way
+that the maxim of your will could always serve as a principle for
+general legislation! Then they would and should have recognized the
+moral instability of National Socialist teachings. To that I can answer
+with the words of the great English philosopher, John Locke, who says on
+the question of what is good or evil in his _Essay Concerning Human
+Understanding_; Book 2, Chapter XXVIII, Paragraph 6: “God has ordained
+it in such a manner that certain activities produce general happiness,
+preserve society, and even reward the doer. Man has discovered this, and
+has established it as a practical rule. With that rule are connected
+certain rewards and punishments either by God Himself (reward and
+punishment of infinite size and duration in the Beyond) or by mortals
+(legal penalties, social approval or condemnation, loss of honor); good
+and evil which are not the natural effect and results of the actions
+themselves. Then men look to those rules or laws, be they divine or made
+by the State, and the laws of usage or of private opinion, and measure
+their actions by them. They judge the moral value of their actions
+according to whether they conform with the rules or not. Moral good or
+evil therefore amounts only to conforming or not conforming our action
+with a law which by the will and power of the legislator determines for
+us what is good and evil.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Therefore good and evil has been and still is today what
+the authorities want or do not want. Christianity for centuries has been
+preaching not only to Germans but to all nations of the world: “Let
+every man be subject to the authority above him.” And the authorities do
+not move beyond conscience and morality so long as the expansion of
+national egotism is not opposed by clear laws and commandments and
+irrefutable legal convictions.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The highest good, _summum bonum_, in international
+morals of nations has not yet been mandatorily codified. There does not
+exist any authoritative idea for the community of nations. Instead of
+discussions on individual ethics and individual criminality, the
+Prosecution should have submitted its accepted principles and criteria
+as international common law, which was not done.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Therefore, with regard to the standpoint of the
+prosecuting authorities as to the personal responsibility of acting
+statesmen, I feel impelled to look upon this as a totally new philosophy
+and one which is very dangerous in its consequences.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Apart from the misdeeds of the individual, which do not
+satisfy even the minimum of moral conceptions, the ethical conceptions
+of National Socialism and the actions resulting from them, insofar as
+they are an expression of National Socialist ethics, cannot be subjected
+to the judgment of a human forum, since they are an event of world
+history. And the fate and guilt of the Defendant Rosenberg likewise
+cannot be judged conclusively within the framework of this Trial. As to
+the question of deciding the criminal guilt of the defendant, that is
+the hard task of the High Tribunal; but his potential historical guilt
+cannot and will not be judged by the Tribunal. Rosenberg, like all
+persons of historical importance, has acted according to his character
+and spirit, thereby perhaps becoming guilty in the eyes of history. The
+more freedom of action a given personality has in his will, the clearer
+the importance of conditions and the one-sidedness of all human
+activities becomes, and out of an insignificant guilt there grows,
+particularly in historical personalities, an enormous power which
+decides the fate of many, and which remains a gloomy foreboding for
+whoever lets it loose.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Goethe once said: “The doer never has a conscience; no
+one feels his conscience but the observer.” But this maxim can never
+mean that a person must not move and act to the best of his knowledge
+and conscience, and particularly for his country’s sake. And we all know
+that in reality nobody is capable of attaining the good he is striving
+for. Just as his knowledge, so will his actions always be incomplete:
+Any action we accomplish as free beings is an infringement on the
+operating forces of the universe, which we are never able to assess.[sm
+type ends]
+
+Rosenberg was caught up in the destiny of his nation in a period of
+severe foreign political oppression and internal dissension. He
+struggled for cultural purity, social justice, and national dignity, and
+rejected vehemently all elements which did not admit these high values
+or consciously attacked them in an irreverent manner. With respect to
+foreign policy he stood for an agreement between the four central powers
+of the European continent, in full realization of the grave consequences
+of a lost war. He acted in all loyalty and respect toward a personality
+who appeared to give political shape and increasing power to his ideals.
+After the political victory at home, Rosenberg proposed that the
+polemics and other aspects of the period of struggle be subdued. He
+stood for a chivalrous solution of the existing Jewish problem, for
+spiritual and cultural instruction of the Party on a high plane and,
+contrary to the statements of the Prosecution, he opposed any form of
+religious persecution. He can hardly be reproached for emphasizing a
+definite religious-philosophical conviction of his own.
+
+The practical application of many of his views was practiced to an
+increasing degree by authoritative agencies of the Party, although later
+they were disregarded, especially after the outbreak of the war.
+Finally, as has been discovered now, they were often turned into the
+opposite of what Rosenberg fought for.
+
+Until 17 July 1941 Rosenberg was excluded from participation in any
+national legislation. Considered from the point of view of personal
+responsibility, all his speeches and writings up to that time come
+within the scope of unofficial journalistic activity which every
+politician and writer must admittedly be free to engage in—a freedom
+which the Tribunal has fundamentally acknowledged with regard to all
+utterances by the statesmen of other countries during the unofficial
+period of their career. It seems to be all the more significant that
+Rosenberg as a private citizen did not call for war or for the
+commission of any inhuman or violent acts.
+
+As Minister for the East he advocated a generous solution in accordance
+with the understandable national and cultural aspirations of the eastern
+European peoples. He fought for this concept as long as there were any
+prospects for its realization. Ultimately realizing that Hitler refused
+to be persuaded, he requested his dismissal. The fact that Rosenberg
+could not prevent many outrages from happening in the East cannot be
+charged against him in the criminal sense. Neither the Armed Forces nor
+the Police nor the Allocation of Labor were subject to his authority.
+Whenever injustices or excesses came to his knowledge, he did everything
+he could to counteract them.
+
+For almost a whole year, Rosenberg endeavored to keep labor recruiting
+on a voluntary basis. Later, when several age groups were drafted, he
+protested against every abuse by executive agencies and always demanded
+redress. Quite apart from the legitimate requirements of the occupation
+power, his labor legislation for the Eastern Territories was necessary
+for the establishment of order and the repression of arbitrary measures
+as well as of dangerous idleness, increasing sabotage, and the growing
+number of murders. There was a war on and it was a war area, not a
+postarmistice period, much less one following final capitulation.
+
+So far as he was informed of things and commanded any influence,
+Rosenberg fought for his convictions. The fact that adverse powers
+became stronger than he was cannot be brought up as a charge against
+him. One cannot punish offenses, and at the same time punish those who
+revolted against them. In view of the terrible extermination orders
+which have now been disclosed, it is certainly possible to raise the
+point whether Rosenberg could not have exerted much stronger opposition.
+To expect this would, however, suppose an earlier knowledge of things
+which he only learned about after the collapse. Should he be charged
+with any carelessness it must not be forgotten that he felt it to be his
+duty to serve the Reich engaged in the struggle for its existence, and
+that terrible injuries were also inflicted upon the German nation,
+injuries which Rosenberg was equally unable to recognize as war
+necessities.
+
+His official tasks, as for example the duties of the Einsatzstab in the
+West and East, were carried out by Rosenberg without compromising his
+personal integrity. The requisitioning of artistic and cultural objects
+he always carried out provisionally, subject to final decisions by the
+supreme authority and, as far as was at all possible, with proper
+identification of the proprietor. Moreover, in the use of unclaimed
+furniture for the benefit of air-raid victims in Germany, provision was
+made for the subsequent indemnification of the owners based upon a
+precise inventory.
+
+In considering his entire personality we see that Rosenberg followed
+with faith and devotion an ideal of social justice combined with
+national dignity. He fought for it openly and honorably, went to prison,
+and risked his life for it. He did not step in only when National
+Socialism afforded the opportunity to begin a career, but at a time when
+it was dangerous and asked only for sacrifice. In his speeches after
+1933 he took his stand in favor of deeper spiritual formation, a new
+cultural education, personality values, and respect for every form of
+honest work. He accepted the gloomy days of that time as unfortunate but
+inevitable accompanying phenomena of a revolution otherwise acclaimed as
+having passed without bloodshed, without having in fact learned of the
+secret details. He fully believed that good forces and ideas would
+prevail over these other human imperfections. During the war he was at
+the service of the Reich in accordance with his duty.
+
+For 25 years, throughout the revolution and the events of the war, he
+maintained his personal integrity and untainted character. He had to
+witness with deep sorrow that a great idea, in the hands of those
+possessed with the lust for power, was gradually abused, and in 1944, at
+Party meetings, he protested against this abuse of power entrusted to
+its holders. During this Trial he had to his dismay and horror to look
+upon the evidence of the degeneration of his life’s ideal; but he knows
+that his aspirations and the aspirations of many millions of other
+Germans have been honorable and decent. Today he still adheres to his
+honorable, honest, and humanly irreproachable conduct and, full of
+sorrow for the wounds inflicted upon all nations and for the downfall of
+the Reich, he awaits the sentence of a just Tribunal.
+
+ [_The Tribunal adjourned until 11 July 1946 at 1000 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED
+ AND SEVENTY-SIXTH DAY
+ Thursday, 11 July 1946
+
+
+ _Morning Session_
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn this afternoon at four o’clock
+to sit in closed session.
+
+Dr. Seidl, will you present the case of the Defendant Frank?
+
+DR. ALFRED SEIDL (Counsel for Defendant Frank): Mr. President, My Lords.
+The Defendant Dr. Hans Frank is accused in the Indictment of having
+utilized his posts in Party and State, his personal influence, and his
+relation with the Führer, for the purpose of supporting the seizure of
+power by the National Socialists and the consolidation of their control
+over Germany. He is also accused of having approved, led, and taken part
+in the War Crimes mentioned in Count Three of the Indictment, as well as
+in the Crimes against Humanity mentioned in Count Four, particularly in
+the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in the course of
+the administration of occupied territories.
+
+As I have already explained in the case of the Defendant Hess, the
+Indictment fails to adduce any facts in substantiation of these
+accusations. It is similar in the case of the Defendant Frank; here
+again the Indictment contains no statement of factual details to
+substantiate the accusations. Like all the other defendants, the
+Defendant Frank is accused of having taken part in a common plan which
+is alleged to have had as its object the planning and waging of wars of
+aggression and the commission in the course of these wars of crimes
+which infringe upon the laws and customs of war.
+
+The evidence has shown that the Defendant Frank joined the National
+Socialist Party in the year 1928. Both before and after the assumption
+of power by the National Socialists he was concerned almost exclusively
+with legal questions. The Reich Law Department was under his control as
+Reichsleiter of the Party until the year 1942. After Adolf Hitler’s
+appointment as Chancellor, Frank became the Bavarian Minister of
+Justice. In the same year he was appointed Reich commissioner for the
+co-ordination of legal institutions. This task consisted in the main of
+transferring to the Reich Ministry of Justice the functions of the
+administrative legal departments of the component states of the Reich.
+That was completed by the year 1934. When the affairs of the Bavarian
+Ministry of Justice had been transferred to the Reich, the office of the
+Defendant Frank as Bavarian Minister of Justice came to an end. In
+December 1934 he was appointed Reich Minister without Portfolio. In
+addition he became, from 1934 onward, President of the Academy for
+German Law, which he himself had founded, and President of the
+International Chamber of Law. Finally, he was the Leader of the National
+Socialist Lawyers Association.
+
+This list of the various posts held by the Defendant Frank in Party and
+State would alone be sufficient to show that his work was almost
+exclusively concerned with legal matters. His tasks were in the main
+confined to the execution of Point 19 of the Party Program, which
+demanded a German common law. And in actual fact almost all speeches and
+publications by the Defendant Frank, both before and after the
+assumption of power by the National Socialists, dealt with legal
+questions in the widest sense of the term.
+
+In the course of his examination in the witness box, the Defendant Frank
+testified that he had done everything he could to bring Adolf Hitler to
+power and to carry out the ideas and the program of the National
+Socialist Party. But whatever the defendant undertook in this respect
+was done openly.
+
+The aims of the National Socialists before they assumed power can be
+expressed in a few words: Liberation of the German people from the
+shackles of the Versailles Treaty; elimination of the mass unemployment
+which had arisen in consequence of that treaty and the unreasonable
+reparations policy of Germany’s former enemies; counteraction against
+the symptoms of degeneracy—political, economic, social, and
+moral—connected with that unemployment; and finally, the restoration of
+the sovereignty of the Reich in all spheres.
+
+The Prosecution was unable to produce any evidence to show that the
+revision of the Versailles Treaty was, if necessary, to be carried out
+by violent means and by war. The political, military, and economic
+situation in which Germany found herself before the assumption of
+power—a situation in which it could only be a question of eliminating
+the terrible consequences of the economic collapse and of enabling seven
+million unemployed again to play their part in the economic
+process—could not but make any serious thought of a war of aggression
+appear futile.
+
+Moreover, the evidence brought forth nothing to show the existence of
+the common plan as stated in Count One of the Indictment, as far as one
+understands thereby a definite and concrete plan among a narrow uniform
+circle of persons. The evidence, in particular the testimony given by
+the witness Dr. Lammers and the defendant himself in the witness box,
+has shown on the contrary that Frank did not belong to the circle of
+Hitler’s closer collaborators. The Prosecution was unable to present to
+the Tribunal a single document dealing with important political or
+military decisions with which the Defendant Frank was connected. In
+particular, the Defendant Frank was not present at any of the
+conferences with Hitler which the Prosecution considers especially
+important in proving the alleged common plan, the minutes of which
+conferences the Prosecution has submitted as Exhibits, Numbers USA-25 to
+34.
+
+The only statute which is important in this connection is the Law on the
+Reintroduction of General Conscription of 16 March 1935. The facts have
+already been explained, and will be further enlarged upon, which led to
+the promulgation of that law and why it cannot be looked upon as an
+infringement of the Versailles Treaty. The Defendant Frank signed that
+law in his capacity as Reich Minister, as did all the other members of
+the Reich Government. That law, which had as its object the
+restoration—at least in the military sphere—of the sovereignty of the
+German Reich, did no harm to any other nation. Nor did the content of
+that law, or the circumstances which led to its enactment, admit the
+conclusion that it was part of a common plan with the object of
+launching a war of aggression.
+
+The German people had been obliged to realize, during the preceding 17
+years, that the voice of a nation without military power, and in
+particular a nation in Germany’s geographical and military situation,
+cannot make itself heard in the concert of nations if it has not at its
+disposal adequate instruments of power. The Government of the Reich
+faced the consequences of this realization after equality of rights had
+been promised the German people over and over again for 14 years and
+that promise had not been kept, and in particular after it had become
+clear in the years 1933 and 1934 that the Disarmament Conference would
+not be capable of fulfilling its appointed functions. For the rest, I
+refer to the proclamation of the Reich Government to the German people,
+which was issued in connection with the publication of that law.
+
+Further, the work of the Defendant Frank, even after the assumption of
+power and up to the beginning of the war, was confined almost
+exclusively to the execution of tasks connected with the leadership of
+the Academy for German Law and the National Socialist Lawyers
+Association. The objects of the Academy for German Law are apparent from
+the law concerning its establishment of 11 July 1933. It was intended to
+encourage the reform of German legal procedure and, in close and
+constant co-operation with the appropriate legislative authorities, to
+put the National Socialist program into practice in the whole sphere of
+law. The academy was under the supervision of the Reich Minister of
+Justice and the Reich Minister of the Interior. The function of the
+academy was to prepare drafts of statutes; legislation itself was
+exclusively restricted to the Reich ministries for the various
+departments.
+
+One of the tasks of the academy was to exercise the functions of the
+legal committees of the former Reichstag. In actual fact the work of the
+academy was done almost exclusively in its numerous committees, which
+had been established by the defendant. Acceptance into the academy was
+not dependent on membership in the Party. Most of the members of the
+academy were legal scholars and eminent legal practitioners who were not
+Party members. Moreover, it is well known that the Academy for German
+Law kept up close relations with similar establishments abroad and that
+numerous foreign scholars gave lectures in the academy. These facts
+entirely exclude the assumption that the academy could have played any
+important part in the common plan alleged by the Prosecution. The same
+is true of the position of the Defendant Frank as leader of the National
+Socialist Lawyers Association.
+
+Adolf Hitler’s attitude toward the conception of a State founded on law,
+insofar as any doubt could still have been entertained about it, has
+become perfectly clear through the evidence presented at this Trial.
+Hitler was a revolutionary and a man of violence. He looked on law as an
+impeding and disturbing factor in the realization of his plans in the
+realm of power politics. Incidentally, he left no doubt about this
+attitude of his and discussed the subject of the State founded on law in
+a number of speeches. He was always very reserved in his dealings with
+lawyers, and for this reason alone it was impossible from the outset
+that any close association could have developed between him and the
+Defendant Frank. The Defendant Frank considered it his life’s work to
+see the conception of the State founded on law realized in the National
+Socialist Reich and, above all, to safeguard the independence of the
+judiciary.
+
+The Defendant Frank proclaimed these principles as late as 1939, before
+the outbreak of war, in a great speech he made before 25,000 lawyers at
+the final meeting of the Congress of German Law at Leipzig. Among other
+things he declared on that occasion:
+
+ “First, no one should be sentenced who has not had an
+ opportunity of defending himself.
+
+ “Second, no one shall be deprived of his property, provided that
+ he uses it unobjectionably from the point of view of the
+ community, except by judicial sentence. Legal properties in this
+ sense include honor, freedom, life, and earnings.
+
+ “Third, an accused person, no matter under what procedure, must
+ be enabled to procure someone to defend him who is capable of
+ making legal statements on his behalf; and he must have an
+ impartial hearing according to law. If these principles are
+ applied to their full extent, then the Germanic ideal of law
+ will be fulfilled.”
+
+These principles constitute a definite repudiation of all methods
+employed in a police-ruled State and imply, moreover, the definite
+rejection of the system of concentration camps. The Defendant Frank had
+actually spoken against the establishment of concentration camps before
+the date indicated. The evidence has shown that in the year 1933, in his
+capacity as Bavarian Minister of Justice, he was opposed to the
+concentration camp at Dachau, that he urged the application of the
+so-called legality principle, that is, the prosecution of all offenses
+by the State, even in these camps, and that, over and above this, he
+demanded the dissolution of the concentration camp at Dachau. That this
+last point is a fact is shown by the evidence given by the witness Dr.
+Stepp, who was questioned elsewhere.
+
+The Prosecution also appears to see in the sentence, “Right is what
+benefits the people,” an indication of the participation of the
+Defendant Frank in the alleged common plan. Such a conclusion could only
+be drawn in complete misapprehension of the idea which the Defendant
+Frank wished to express by means of this sentence. This was merely a
+challenge to the exaggeratedly individualistic legal idea. In the same
+way as by the phrase, “The common good before one’s own,” the sentence
+quoted is intended to express the demand for a legal system which, to a
+greater extent than in previous years, should take account of common law
+and socialist tendencies. It is in reality nothing more than a different
+way of saying: _Salus publica suprema lex_.
+
+These material differences alone would have been sufficient to make it
+unthinkable that the Defendant Frank could have belonged to the inner
+circle of Hitler’s collaborators. The differences of outlook in regard
+to the functions of law were bound to become more pronounced in the
+course of the war. It could therefore cause no surprise that after the
+death of the former Reich Minister of Justice, Dr. Gürtner, it was not
+the Defendant Frank who was appointed his successor, but the President
+of the Peoples’ Court, Dr. Thierack.
+
+Summing up, it may be said that there is no factual foundation for the
+assumption that the Defendant Frank participated in a common plan, a
+common plan which had as its object the waging of an aggressive war and
+in connection therewith the commission of crimes against the rules of
+war. Before I turn to the points of accusation brought against the
+Defendant Frank within the framework of his career as Governor General,
+I will refer shortly to his responsibility under penal law as a member
+of the organizations accused of criminality.
+
+So far as Frank’s responsibility as member of the Reich Government is
+under investigation, I can here in the main refer to the statements
+which I shall later make in the case of the Defendant Hess. The only
+difference lies in the fact that whereas Hess, too, was only Reich
+Minister without Portfolio, he had—as the Führer’s Deputy under the
+Führer’s decree of 27 July 1934—a considerable influence on the
+preparation of laws. That, however, was not the case with the Defendant
+Frank. Frank had hardly any influence at all on the legislation of the
+Reich. That is why he was cosignatory of so extraordinarily few Reich
+laws. With the exception of the law of 16 March 1935, by which general
+conscription was reintroduced, his name is to be found under none of the
+laws which the Prosecution has presented to the Tribunal as relevant to
+the proof of the criminal nature of the Reich Government as an
+organization.
+
+The Defendant Frank, in his capacity as Reichsleiter and Leader of the
+Reich Law Department, was also a member of the Leadership Corps of the
+National Socialist German Workers’ Party. An investigation of this point
+of accusation seems all the less called for since in this respect no act
+can be attributed to the Defendant Frank which fulfills the requirements
+of any penal law. For the rest, here too I can refer to my statements in
+the case of the Defendant Hess.
+
+In Appendix A to the Indictment it is alleged that the Defendant Frank
+was a general of the SS. The evidence has shown that Frank at no time
+belonged to the SS and that he did not even have the honorary rank of a
+general of the SS. On the other hand, he was an Obergruppenführer in the
+SA. With respect to the application made by the Prosecution to declare
+that organization as criminal, too, the same may be said as in the case
+of the application to declare the Leadership Corps criminal. The Charter
+and the Prosecution here again depart from the principle which hitherto
+has been considered an indispensable component of any modern criminal
+law practice, namely, that no punishment is admissible unless guilt has
+been established in every individual case.
+
+I now pass to the points of accusation in connection with the career of
+the Defendant Frank as Governor General. When the Polish Government had
+left the country after Poland’s military collapse, the German occupying
+forces were faced with the task of building up an administration without
+the help of any parliamentary, representation or any representatives of
+the former Polish State. The difficulties arising out of this situation
+were bound to be all the greater because, in spite of the comparatively
+short time that the war had lasted, the war damage, especially to the
+communications system, was not inconsiderable. Above all, however, the
+establishment of an orderly administration was rendered more difficult
+by the fact that the homogeneous economic area of the former Polish
+State was divided into three parts. Of the 388,000 square kilometers
+which made up the territory of the former Polish State, about 200,000
+were taken over by the Soviet Union and 97,000 formed the Government
+General, while the rest was incorporated in the German Reich. A change
+came on 1 August 1941. On that date Galicia was annexed to the
+Government General as a new district, whereby the territory of the
+Government General was increased to an area of approximately 150,000
+square kilometers with about 18 million inhabitants. This frontier
+delimitation made it all the more difficult for the administration, as
+the agricultural excess production all went to the Soviet Union, while
+on the other, hand important industrial cities such as Lodz, and above
+all the coal fields of Dombrowa, fell to the Reich.
+
+Directly after the military collapse of Poland, a military government
+was set up to cover the four military districts of East Prussia, Posen,
+Lodz, and Kraków, Commander Von Rundstedt being placed at the head of
+that government. The Defendant Frank became Supreme Chief of
+Administration (Oberverwaltungschef). The military government ended on
+26 October 1939 with the coming into force of the decree of the Führer
+and Reich Chancellor concerning the administration of the occupied
+Polish territories under the date of 12 October 1939. Under this decree
+the Defendant Frank was appointed Governor General for the occupied
+Polish territories which were not incorporated in the Reich and which
+shortly afterward became known as the Government General.
+
+As the time at my disposal is short, I will not go into detail on the
+question as to whether the administration of the territories of the
+former Polish State, jointly designated as the Government General,
+should have conformed to the principle of _occupatio bellica_
+(occupation of enemy territory), or whether it should not rather be
+assumed that the principles of debellatio (complete subjection and
+incorporation in a foreign state) were applicable in that case.
+
+I come now to the question of the powers vested in the Defendant Frank
+by virtue of his office of Governor General. According to Article 3 of
+the Führer’s decree of 12 October 1939 the Governor General was directly
+subordinate to the Führer. The same provision placed all branches of the
+administration in the hands of the Governor General. In actual fact,
+however, the Governor General had by no means such wide powers as it
+would seem at first sight. The Führer’s decree itself provided in
+Article 5 that the Ministerial Council for the Defense of the Reich
+could also make laws for the territory of the Government General.
+
+The Delegate for the Four Year Plan had the same power. Article 6
+provided that, moreover, all supreme Reich authorities could issue
+decrees necessary for planning within the German living space and
+economic area and that these would be effective also for the Government
+General.
+
+Apart from this limitation of the authority of the Governor General as
+provided in the Führer decree of 12 October 1939, other powers were
+conferred at a later date which no less impaired the principle of
+uniform administration. That is particularly true of the position of the
+Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor. I refer at this
+point to the appropriate documents presented by the Prosecution and the
+Defense, in particular to the Führer’s decree of 21 March 1942, in which
+it is expressly provided that the powers of the Plenipotentiary General
+for the Allocation of Labor extend to the territory of the Government
+General. The whole armament industry in the Government General was at
+first in the hands of the OKW, but after the establishment of the Reich
+Ministry for Armaments and War Production it came under the jurisdiction
+of the latter.
+
+The evidence has shown that in other directions, too, the principle of
+uniform administration was extensively infringed upon. For this I refer
+to the statements of the witnesses Dr. Lammers and Dr. Bühler and to the
+content of the documents submitted by me, especially Document USA-135.
+This deals with the directives in “special matters concerning
+instructions Number 21 (Case Barbarossa),” in which it is expressly
+provided that the commander-in-chief of the Army shall be entitled “to
+order such measures in the Government General as are necessary for the
+execution of his military duties and for safeguarding the troops” and in
+which the commander-in-chief is empowered to delegate his authority to
+the army groups and armies.
+
+All these infringements of the principle of a uniform administration of
+all special powers, however, pale beside the special position allotted
+to the Reichsführer SS Himmler also in respect of the territory of the
+Government General. The evidence, and particularly the testimony of Dr.
+Bilfinger, Oberregierungsrat in the RSHA, shows that as early as in 1939
+when the defendant was appointed Governor General, a secret decree was
+issued in which it was provided that the Higher SS and Police Leader,
+East was to receive his instructions direct from the Reichsführer SS and
+Chief of the German Police, Himmler. Similarly, it is provided in the
+decree of the Führer and Reich Chancellor for the Preservation of German
+Nationality that the Reichsführer SS shall be directly empowered to
+effect the planning of new German settlement areas by means of
+resettlements. These two decrees conferred on the Reichsführer SS
+Himmler powers which, from the very first day of the existence of the
+Government General, tended to confront its administration with almost
+insurmountable difficulties. It was very soon evident that the general
+administration under the Governor General had at its disposal no
+executive organs, in the true meaning of the term. Since the Higher SS
+and Police Leader, East received his instructions and orders direct from
+Reichsführer SS Himmler and refused to carry out instructions emanating
+from the Governor General, it was very soon seen that in reality there
+were two separate authorities ruling over the Government General. The
+difficulties which thus arose were bound to become all the greater, as
+Higher SS and Police Leader Krüger, who for no less than 4 years was
+Himmler’s direct representative in the Government General, did not even
+inform the administration of the Government General before carrying out
+police measures.
+
+It is a well-known experience in the life of any state that an
+administration lacking executive police organs is in the long run not
+capable of carrying out its appointed functions. This is true even under
+normal conditions, but it must be all the more pronounced in the
+administration of occupied territory. If we remember, moreover, that not
+only did the Reichsführer SS Himmler issue his instructions direct to
+the Higher SS and Police Leader, ignoring the Governor General, but that
+over and above this the Offices III, IV, V, and VI of the RSHA also gave
+direct orders to the Commander of the Security Police and the SD in
+Kraków, we can well assess the difficulties with which the civil
+administration of the Government General had to wrestle day by day.
+
+Under these circumstances the Governor General had no choice but to make
+every attempt to reach some form of co-operation with the Security
+Police, unless he was prepared to relinquish any hope of building up a
+civil administration in the Government General. And in fact the history
+of the administration of the Government General—which lasted for over 5
+years—is for the greater part nothing but a chronicle of uninterrupted
+struggles between the Governor General and the administration on the one
+hand, and the Security Police with the SD as represented by Reichsführer
+SS Himmler and the Higher SS and Police Leader, East, on the other.
+
+The same applies to the activity of Himmler and his organs in the field
+of resettlement. As Reich Commissioner for the Preservation of German
+Nationality, Himmler and his organs carried out resettlement measures
+without even establishing previous contact with the administration of
+the Government General or informing the Governor General.
+
+The numerous protests of the Governor General, addressed to Dr. Lammers,
+the Reich Minister and Chief of the Reich Chancellery, with regard to
+the measures taken by the Reichsführer and the Higher SS and Police
+Leader, East, and the difficulties they put in the way of the
+administration of that territory, have been established by the evidence.
+These protests led in the year 1942 to an attempt at redirecting the
+relationship between the administration and the Police. In retrospect,
+it can be said today as a result of the evidence that even this attempt
+was only utilized by Himmler and the Security Police to undermine
+internally and externally the position of the Governor General and his
+civil administration.
+
+By a decree of the Führer dated 7 May 1942 a State Secretariat for
+Security was established in the Government General, and the Higher SS
+and Police Leader was appointed State Secretary. According to Article II
+of this decree, the State Secretary for Security also became the
+representative of the Reichsführer SS in his capacity as Reich
+Commissioner for the Preservation of German Nationality. The decisive
+provision of this decree is contained in Article IV, in which it is
+stated verbatim:
+
+ “The Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police can issue
+ direct instructions to the State Secretary for Security in
+ matters pertaining to security and the preservation of German
+ nationality.”
+
+Herewith, the contents of the secret decree issued in 1939 on the
+establishment of the Government General—which also provided that the
+Higher SS and Police Leader, East was to receive his instructions direct
+from the Berlin central offices and particularly from the Reichsführer
+SS in person—was expressly, and now publicly, confirmed. It is true
+that Article V of the Führer decree of 7 May 1942 provided that in cases
+of difference of opinion between the Governor General and the
+Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police the Führer’s decision was
+to be obtained through the Reich Minister and Chief of the Chancellery.
+
+The Chief of the Reich Chancellery, Lammers, was interrogated on this
+subject when he appeared as a witness before this Tribunal. He testified
+that insofar as he found it possible at all to gain the Führer’s ear in
+these matters, the latter on principle invariably approved Himmler’s
+view. This is not surprising if we remember Himmler’s position in the
+German governmental system, particularly during the later war years.
+This deprived the Defendant Frank of the last possibility of influencing
+in any way the measures taken by Himmler and the Higher SS and Police
+Leader, East.
+
+In consequence of Article I, Paragraph 3, of the Führer decree of 7 May
+1942 the scope of duties of the State Secretary for Security had to be
+newly defined. Both the Higher SS and Police Leader and, backing him,
+the Reichsführer SS attempted to bring as wide a field as possible under
+their jurisdiction in connection with the new regulation of the
+competence of the State Secretariat; on the other hand, the Governor
+General, in the interest of the maintenance of some sort of order in the
+administration, naturally tried to obtain control of at least certain
+departments of the Regular Police and the Administration Police. There
+is no doubt at all that it was the Police that emerged the victor in
+these struggles.
+
+On 3 June 1942 the Governor General was obliged—in a decree concerning
+the delegation of duties to the State Secretary for Security—to declare
+himself willing to transfer to the State Secretary all the departments
+of the Security Police and the Regular Police. I have submitted this
+decree to the Tribunal (together with its two Appendices A and B) in the
+course of the evidence as Exhibit Number Frank-4. The two appendices
+list all the functions of the Regular and Security Police that have ever
+existed in the German police system. In Appendix A, which covers the
+departments of the Regular Police, there are 26 headings in which not
+only all the departments of the Regular Police are transferred to the
+State Secretary for Security, but over and above that, almost all the
+departmental functions of the so-called Administration Police. I will
+only mention Heading 18 as one example among many. This transfers to the
+Regular Police, and thereby to the Higher SS and Police Leader, all
+matters connected with price control. What is true of the Regular Police
+applies in even greater measure to the departments of the Security
+Police. No change as compared with the earlier situation was brought
+about by placing under the jurisdiction of the Higher SS and Police
+Leader the whole of the Political and Criminal Police, political
+intelligence, Jewish affairs, and similar departments; these
+competencies were already his as leader of the Security Police and the
+SD, and were made entirely independent of the administration of the
+Government General under the secret decree of 1939. Departments were
+also transferred to the State Secretary for Security which had only the
+remotest connection with the tasks of the Security Police, for example,
+matters such as the regulation of holidays and so on.
+
+Of considerable importance are the two last headings in the Appendices A
+and B, in which it is expressly provided that at conferences and
+meetings, particularly with the central Reich authorities, on all
+matters pertaining to the Regular and Security Police, the Government
+General—not the Governor—should be represented by the Higher SS and
+Police Leader. Therewith any competency possessed by the Governor
+General, even in regard to comparatively unimportant branches of the
+Administration Police, was transferred to the organs of Reichsführer SS
+Himmler, and the Government General was thus deprived of even the last
+remnants of an executive of its own.
+
+Only by considering these facts and the development of the conditions
+obtaining between administration and police in the Government General is
+it possible to form an even approximately correct appreciation of the
+events in the Government General, which form part of the subject of the
+Indictment in this Trial.
+
+Your Lordships, the Prosecution seeks to prove its accusations against
+the Defendant Dr. Frank in the main by quotations from the defendant’s
+diary. In this connection I have the following basic observation to
+make.
+
+That diary was not kept personally by the Defendant Frank but was
+compiled by stenographers who were present at Government conferences and
+other discussions of the Governor General. The diary consists of 42
+volumes with no less than 10,000 or 12,000 pages of typescript.
+
+With one exception, the entries do not represent the outcome of
+dictation by the defendant, but take the form of stenographers’
+transcripts. For the greater part—and this is evident from the diary
+itself—the authors of this diary did not record the various speeches
+and remarks word for word, but made a summarized version in their own
+words. The entries in the diary were not checked by the defendant,
+nor—again with one single exception—were they signed by him. The
+attendance lists stapled into several volumes of the diary—they are
+only contained in such volumes as relate to Government
+conferences—cannot be looked upon as a substitute for a confirmatory
+note.
+
+Moreover, the evidence has clearly established that very many entries in
+the diary were not made on the basis of personal observations but came
+about through the fact that the author was told by participants about
+the subjects of Government meetings or other conferences after they had
+taken place, and then expressed it in the diary in his own words.
+Moreover, by an examination of the diary it can easily be ascertained
+that the entries cannot be considered complete.
+
+All these facts bring us to the conclusion that the material evidential
+value of this diary must not be overestimated. The evidential value of
+this diary can in no way be compared with the evidential value of
+entries made personally by the person concerned.
+
+Above all, however, it seems to me essential to point out the following:
+The contents of any document are of material evidential value only
+insofar as the document is appreciated in its entirety. The diary of the
+Defendant Frank with its 10,000 or 12,000 pages is one uniform document.
+It is improper to put in as evidence certain individual entries without
+showing the context in which alone some of them can be understood. But
+it is particularly improper—and this infringes upon the principles of
+any presentation of evidence—to select from some uniform whole, such as
+a long speech, a few sentences and put them in as evidence. In Document
+Book Number 2, I have listed a few examples of this and hereby refer to
+them.
+
+As the Defendant Frank himself rightly pointed out in the witness box,
+the diary is a uniform whole; only in its entirety can it be probative
+and form part of the presentation of evidence. I have read through that
+diary of more than 10,000 pages and can only confirm his opinion. And
+that was why I did not use individual entries in presenting my evidence
+but put in the whole diary.
+
+If I myself, in presenting evidence, have read certain single entries
+from the diary and if in the course of my present address I shall quote
+a few more passages from it, then, just as in the case of the extracts
+put forward by the Prosecution, their evidential value can certainly be
+gauged only within the framework of the whole diary.
+
+The following may also be looked upon as having been established by the
+evidence: As the diaries show, and as is evident in particular from the
+testimony given by the witnesses Bühler, Böpple, and Meidinger, the
+Defendant Frank in his capacity as Governor General often made two or
+three improvised speeches in the course of one day. The extracts from
+the diary presented by the Prosecution consist, for the most part, of
+single sentences from such speeches. If we take into consideration both
+the temperament of the defendant and his habit of expressing himself in
+an incisive manner, then that is another reason which tends to reduce
+the probative value of these extracts from the diary. And we actually do
+find many diary entries which flatly contradict other entries on the
+same subject occurring a little earlier or later.
+
+In connection with the many speeches made by the Defendant Frank, the
+following must not be left out of consideration and may also be looked
+upon as established by the evidence: It was a foregone conclusion that
+the Defendant Frank, as an avowed champion of the idea of a State
+founded on law and of the independence of the judiciary, would come into
+increasingly sharp conflict with the representatives of the police-state
+system; this developed to an even greater degree in the course of the
+war, both within the Reich and in occupied territory. The
+representatives of the police state, however, were Reichsführer SS
+Himmler and, for the area of the Government General, the Higher SS and
+Police Leader, East, above all and in particular SS Obergruppenführer
+and General of Police Krüger. The relation between the Defendant Frank
+on the one hand, and Reichsführer SS Himmler and his representative,
+Obergruppenführer Krüger, on the other, had been extremely bad even at
+the time the Government General was established. They deteriorated still
+more as the divergence of outlook concerning the tasks of the Police
+came ever more openly to the fore; and the Defendant Frank was forced to
+lodge increasingly strong protests with the Chief of the Reich
+Chancellery, Dr. Lammers, and the Führer himself regarding the violent
+measures taken by the Security Police and the SD.
+
+As I have already mentioned, the Governor General, lacking an executive
+of his own, had no choice but to make repeated attempts to co-ordinate
+the work of the general administration with that of the Police, in order
+to be in a position to carry out any administrative work at all.
+Obviously these objectives demanded—at least on the face of things in a
+certain degree—a conciliatory tendency toward the general attitude of
+the Security Police and, above all, of the Higher SS and Police Leader,
+East. Moreover, the evidence has further established that the tension
+existing between the Governor General and the Higher SS and Police
+Leader often reached such a degree that the Defendant Frank could not
+but feel himself menaced and—to quote the words of the witness
+Bühler—was no longer a free agent and master of his own decisions.
+
+The testimony of the witnesses Bach-Zelewsky and Dr. Albrecht leaves no
+doubt on this point. Quite rightly, therefore, the witness Dr. Bühler
+also pointed out that the Defendant Frank expressed himself with
+particular vehemence when the Higher SS and Police Leader or the
+commander of the Security Police and the SD were present at conferences,
+while his utterances were made on quite a different note when he was
+speaking to an audience composed only of members of the administration.
+Even a cursory inspection of the diary will confirm this. All these
+circumstances must be taken into consideration in assessing the
+substantive evidential value of the Defendant Frank’s diary.
+
+It should also be noted that these diaries constituted the only personal
+property that Frank was able to rescue from the castle at Kraków. On his
+arrest he handed over all the diaries to the officers who took him into
+custody. It would have been an easy matter for him to destroy these
+documents.
+
+Your Lordships, I now turn to the individual accusations brought against
+the defendant, and their legal aspects. The Defendant Frank is accused
+of having approved of, and participated in, War Crimes and Crimes
+against Humanity in the administration of occupied territory.
+
+As the law stands, it rests on the principle that only a sovereign
+state, not an individual, can be a subject of international law. To make
+international law binding on an individual, such law itself would have
+to lay down that a certain set of facts constitutes a wrong and that the
+rule thereby established is applicable to an individual creating such a
+set of facts. Only in that way can individuals, who under the law as it
+stands are subject only to the criminal law applying in each state, by
+way of exception be directly bound by international law.
+
+Deviating from this rule, existing international law permits, in
+exceptional cases, a state to punish the national of an enemy state who
+has fallen into its power, if before his capture he has been guilty of
+infringing the rules of war. But even here punishment is excluded if the
+deed was not committed on the person’s own initiative, but can only be
+attributed to his state of allegiance. Moreover, the conception of war
+crimes and their factual characteristics are the subject of great
+controversy both in judicial decisions and in legal literature.
+
+Nor do the Hague Rules on Land Warfare, which form the Appendix to the
+IVth Convention on the Laws and Customs of War on Land and purport to be
+a codification of certain subject matter of the laws of war, list any
+facts which could be interpreted as a basis for the criminal liability
+of individuals. In Article 3 of this convention it is, on the contrary,
+expressly provided that not individuals but the state which infringed
+the rules may, under certain circumstances, be liable to pay an
+indemnity and is also responsible for all acts done by persons belonging
+to its armed forces.
+
+In connection with the Hague Rules for Land Warfare of 1907 the
+following should also be noted: The principles therein enunciated were
+evolved from the experience of wars in the 19th century. Those wars were
+confined in the main to the armed forces directly concerned therein.
+
+Now the first World War already overstepped this framework, and not only
+in respect of the geographical extent of conflict. On the contrary, the
+war became a struggle for extermination of the nations involved, a
+struggle in which each belligerent party utilized the whole of its war
+potential and all its material and imponderable resources. War technique
+having meanwhile been considerably perfected, the second World War was
+bound altogether to destroy the framework set up for the conduct of war
+by the Hague Rules for Land Warfare. That can be seen at a glance—the
+condition of Europe today reveals it. If we remember in addition that in
+Germany alone the greater part of almost every city has been destroyed
+as a result of bombing raids; and not only that, but that considerably
+more than a million civilians thereby lost their lives and that in a
+single major raid on the city of Dresden almost 300,000 people were
+killed, then it will be possible to realize that the Hague Rules for
+Land Warfare, at any rate in respect of many activities coming under the
+rules of war, can no longer be an adequate expression of the laws and
+customs to be observed in waging war. But if any doubt should exist on
+this subject, then that doubt will certainly be removed on contemplation
+of the consequences of the two atom bombs which razed Hiroshima and
+Nagasaki to the ground and killed hundreds of thousands of people.
+
+Taking these circumstances into consideration, it is not possible to
+adduce the provisions of the Hague Rules for Land Warfare, even
+indirectly or by way of analogy, to establish individual criminal
+liability. Seeing that this is the case, it must be looked upon as
+impossible to give a clear and general definition of the factual
+characteristics of so-called war crimes. Referring to the fact that even
+Article 6 of the Charter of the International Military Tribunal only
+purports to furnish a list of examples, it will be realized that the
+question as to whether a certain line of conduct amounts to the
+commission of a war crime or not can only be answered on the merits of
+each particular case, and then only if all the circumstances are taken
+into consideration.
+
+In the course of the presentation of evidence for the personal
+responsibility of the Defendant Frank, the Prosecution submitted as
+Exhibit USA-609 (864-PS) minutes of a conference held by the Führer with
+the Chief of the OKW on the future form of Polish relations to Germany.
+This conference took place on 17 October 1939. It is alleged that these
+minutes alone, by which the administrative goals of the Defendant Frank
+in the Government General are said to be established, reveal a plan or
+conspiracy at variance with the laws of warfare and humanity. This is an
+inadmissible conclusion, at least insofar as the Defendant Frank is
+concerned.
+
+The Prosecution was unable to prove that the Führer entrusted the
+Defendant Frank with a task in conformity with the administrative aims
+demanded in that conference. Moreover, this seems very unlikely, because
+the directives laid down at that conference dealt mainly with measures
+which could not be carried out by the general administration, but only
+by the Security Police, the SD, and the other organs and offices under
+Reichsführer SS Himmler. In this connection special mention should also
+be made of the powers vested in Reichsführer SS Himmler before the date
+of that conference in his capacity of Reich Commissioner for the
+Preservation of German Nationality. Actually, there is at the end of
+Exhibit USA-609 a reference to a commission with which Himmler was
+charged. In consideration of the fact that the Defendant Frank, in the
+course of a short interview with Hitler about the middle of September
+1939, had been told to take over the civil administration of occupied
+Polish territory as Chief of Administration and had not seen Hitler for
+a very long time after that, it can safely be assumed that the
+directives laid down at the conference between Hitler and the Chief of
+the OKW were intended, not for the Defendant Frank, but for Reichsführer
+SS Himmler, who was the only person to have the necessary executive
+organs at his disposal.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. SEIDL: Mr. President, My Lordships, another document to which the
+Prosecution has referred and which is also alleged to show the
+criminality of the administrative aims of the Defendant Frank is Exhibit
+Number USA-297, which is EC-344(16). The content of this document is a
+discussion which the Defendant Frank is said to have had on 3 October
+1939 with a certain Captain Varain. The Defendant Frank testified in the
+witness box that he had never made any such or similar statements to an
+officer. Moreover, a comparison of the dates shows that this
+conversation, even if it should have taken place, can have no connection
+with the subject of the conference between the Führer and the Chief of
+the OKW, the latter not having been held until 17 October 1939, that is,
+at a later date.
+
+Not within the framework of the evidence presented in connection with
+the personal responsibility of the Defendant Frank, but in connection
+with the accusation of so-called Germanization, a document was submitted
+with the Exhibit USA-300, 661-PS. This is a memorandum entitled “Legal
+Aspects of German Policy toward the Poles from the Ethno-Political Point
+of View.” According to a note on the title page, the legal part of this
+was to serve as a model for the Committee of the Academy for German Law
+which dealt with legal nationality questions. This document can have no
+probative value in connection with the personal responsibility of the
+Defendant Frank. He testified in the witness box that he had given no
+instructions for the writing of that memorandum and that he was not
+aware of its contents. Over and above this, it would seem that no
+substantive evidential value can be attached to that document within the
+scope of this whole Trial. Nor is it evident, from the memorandum, who
+wrote it or who gave instructions that it should be written. Its whole
+form and content would seem to show that it is not an official document,
+but rather the work of a private individual. It was stated to have been
+found at the Ministry of Justice in Kassel. But in actual fact there has
+been no Ministry of Justice at Kassel for many decades. All these
+circumstances would seem to indicate that the material probative value
+of this document is, to say the least, extremely small.
+
+But whatever the evidential value of minutes of conferences that took
+place in the year 1939 on the occasion of the establishment of the
+Government General, the following should be pointed out:
+
+In judging the conduct of the Defendant Frank it is not of such
+essential importance to know what Hitler, he himself, or other persons
+said on one occasion or another, but what policy the Defendant Frank
+actually pursued toward the Polish and Ukrainian peoples. And here there
+can be no possible doubt—on the basis both of the general result of the
+evidence and, in particular, of entries in the diary of the defendant
+himself—that he repudiated all tendencies and measures designed to
+effect Germanization. That is shown with great clarity by the extracts
+from the diary which I have submitted to the Tribunal. Thus on 8 March
+1940 he declared at a meeting of department chiefs, that is, to an
+audience of men who as leaders of the various main departments were
+deputed to put his directives into practice:
+
+ “I have been charged by the Führer to look upon the Government
+ General as the home of the Polish people. Accordingly no
+ Germanization of any sort or kind is possible. In your
+ departments you will please see that the two-language principle
+ is strictly observed; you will also point out to district and
+ provincial officers that no violence is to be used in opposing
+ such safeguarding of Polish national existence. We have in a
+ certain sense herewith taken over on trust from the Führer the
+ responsibility for Polish national life.”
+
+This declaration alone makes it apparent that the directives laid down
+in the conference between Hitler and the Chief of the OKW on 17 October
+1939, as contained in Exhibit USA-609, 864-PS, cannot possibly have been
+made the subject of the duties with which the Defendant Frank was
+charged. On the other hand, in view of the entire activities of the
+Higher SS and Police Leader, East from the first day of his appointment,
+it can safely be assumed that it was Reichsführer SS Himmler whom Hitler
+charged with carrying out the directives laid down at his conference
+with the Chief of the OKW.
+
+A diary entry of 19 February 1940 is on the same lines; in this the
+Defendant Frank advocates the formation of a Polish government or
+regency council.
+
+On 25 February 1940, at a service conference of officials of the
+District of Radom, the Defendant Frank gave out, in program form, his
+directives regarding general administration. On this occasion the
+Defendant Frank said among other things:
+
+ “1. The Government General comprises that part of the occupied
+ Polish area which is not a component part of the German Reich
+ ...
+
+ “2. The Führer has decreed that this territory shall be the home
+ of the Polish people. The Führer and Field Marshal Göring have
+ impressed on me over and over again that this territory is not
+ to be subjected to Germanization.
+
+ “3. In accordance with the instructions we have received under
+ the Führer’s decree Polish laws will remain in force here.”
+
+On 7 June 1942 the Defendant Frank stated word for word as follows:
+
+ “It is not as rulers by violence that we come and go in this
+ country. We have no terroristic or oppressive intentions. Welded
+ into the interests of Greater Germany, the living rights of the
+ Poles and Ukrainians in this territory are also safeguarded by
+ us. We have not taken away from the Poles and Ukrainians either
+ their churches, their schools, or their education. We Germans do
+ not wish to denationalize by violent means. We are sufficient
+ unto ourselves, and we know that people must be born into our
+ community and that it is a distinction to belong to it. And that
+ is why we can look the world in the face in this our task.”
+
+These examples could be amplified by many more, which all show clearly
+that the measures taken, at any rate by Frank, were intended to care for
+the Polish nation and that he repudiated any terror policy.
+
+I now come to the so-called “peace-enforcing action.” When the campaign
+against Poland had ended in September 1939 that did not mean that all
+resistance had ceased. Very soon afterward new centers of resistance
+sprang up; and when on 9 April 1940 German troops occupied Denmark and
+Norway and on 10 May 1940 the German western army had begun their
+attack, the leaders of the Polish resistance movement believed that, in
+consideration of the general political and military situation, the time
+for action had come. This resistance movement was all the more dangerous
+because dispersed but not inconsiderable remnants of the former Polish
+Army were active in it. A large number of entries in the diary of the
+Defendant Frank show that the security situation deteriorated from day
+to day during that period. Here for instance is an entry for 16 May
+1940:
+
+ “The general war situation requires that the most serious
+ consideration be given to the internal security situation of the
+ Government General. A large number of signs and actions lead to
+ the conclusion that there exists a widely organized wave of
+ resistance on the part of the Poles in the country and that we
+ are on the threshold of violent happenings on a large scale.
+ Thousands of Poles are already organized in secret circles; they
+ are armed and are being incited in the most seditious manner to
+ commit all kinds of violence.”
+
+In consideration of this menacing general situation, the order was
+given—as the diary shows, by the Führer himself—that in the interest
+of the maintenance of public security all measures were to be taken to
+suppress the imminent revolt. That order was given through Himmler to
+the Higher SS and Police Leader. The administration of the Government
+General at first had nothing to do with it. It intervened, however, in
+order as far as possible to prevent the Security Police and the SD from
+taking violent measures and to make sure that innocent people should
+under no circumstances lose their lives.
+
+The testimony given by the Defendants Frank and Seyss-Inquart in the
+witness box and the evidence given by the witness Dr. Bühler have shown
+that the efforts made by the administration of the Government General
+were so far successful in that all the members of the resistance
+movement rounded up by this special action were brought before a
+drumhead court-martial introduced by a decree issued in 1939; and
+moreover, the decisions of this court were not carried out before being
+submitted to a Board of Pardon which in many cases modified the
+sentence. The chairman of this Board of Pardon, until his appointment as
+Reich Commissioner for the Netherlands, was the Defendant Dr.
+Seyss-Inquart. As his testimony revealed, no less than half the death
+sentences pronounced by the summary court were commuted to imprisonment
+by the Board of Pardon. For the rest, in regard to the so-called
+peace-enforcing action, I refer to the oral testimony and to the
+extracts from the diary of the Defendant Frank which I read into the
+record.
+
+Within the scope of the charges against him personally, the Defendant
+Frank is accused of having supported the resettlement plans of the Reich
+Commissioner for the Preservation of German Nationality (Himmler) and of
+having thereby also committed a war crime. There is no question but that
+resettlement, even when carefully planned and well prepared, means great
+hardship for those who are affected by it; in many cases a resettlement
+means the destruction of a person’s economic existence. Nevertheless, it
+seems doubtful whether resettlement constitutes a War Crime or a Crime
+Against Humanity, for the following reasons:
+
+Germany today is being flooded with millions of people who have been
+driven from their homes and who own no property but what they carry with
+them. The misery thereby caused, which is bound to increase to an
+immeasurable degree in consequence of the devastation wrought by the
+war, is so terrible that the bishops of the Cologne and Paderborn
+ecclesiastical districts were moved on 29 March 1946 to bring this state
+of affairs to the attention of the whole world. Among other things they
+said:
+
+ “Some weeks ago we found occasion to comment on the outrageous
+ happenings in the East of Germany, particularly in Silesia and
+ the Sudetenland, where more than 10 million Germans have been
+ driven from their ancestral homes in brutal fashion, no
+ investigation having been made to ascertain whether or not there
+ was any question of personal guilt. No pen can describe the
+ unspeakable misery there imposed in contravention of all
+ consideration of humanity and justice. All these people are
+ being crammed together in what remains of Germany without means
+ for earning a livelihood there. It cannot be foreseen how these
+ masses of people who have been driven from their homes can
+ become other than peace-disturbing elements.”
+
+My Lords, I am not mentioning this in order to point out the enormous
+dangers connected with such measures, dangers which must arise, if only
+out of the fact that in view of her planned deprivations of territory,
+Germany—with an area reduced by 22 percent as compared with 1919—will
+have to feed a population increased by 18 percent and that in future
+there will be 200 inhabitants to the square kilometer. I am, further,
+not pointing to this state of affairs to show that if the present
+economic policy is continued and the so-called industrial plan is
+maintained, Germany is heading for a catastrophe the consequences of
+which cannot be confined to the German people. The evidential relevance
+of these facts is however shown by the following:
+
+Millions of Germans were driven from their ancestral homes in accordance
+with a resolution taken at Potsdam on 2 August 1945 by President Truman,
+Generalissimo Stalin, and Prime Minister Attlee.
+
+GENERAL RUDENKO: ML President, excuse me for interrupting the
+defendant’s counsel, but it seems to me that his legal considerations
+and the criticism of the decisions taken at Potsdam have no bearing on
+the present case.
+
+DR. SEIDL: Mr. President, may I briefly define my attitude on this?
+
+As far as I am concerned, I do not wish to criticize the decisions of
+the Potsdam Conference. However, I am anxious to find out whether,
+employing the rules of the Charter, a certain conduct which has been
+alleged on the part of the Defendant Frank constitutes evidence for War
+Crimes or Crimes against Humanity. It is only within the framework of
+investigating that question that I find myself forced to go into the
+decisions of the so-called Potsdam Conference and bring them up in my
+argument.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Seidl, the Tribunal considers that your references to
+the Potsdam Declaration are irrelevant, and the objection of General
+Rudenko is therefore sustained. You are directed to go on to some other
+part of your argument.
+
+DR. SEIDL: Mr. President, I presume that the Tribunal have the
+translation of my presentation at hand. I am not quite clear about the
+question as to whether the final conclusion, which appears on Page 38,
+is also affected by the decision of the Tribunal which you have just
+announced.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: It is affected by that, and I think you can pass on to
+Page 40, where you begin to deal with the subject of the Jews. That is
+the second paragraph on Page 40.
+
+DR. SEIDL: Very well, Mr. President.
+
+The Defendant Frank is further accused of having approved and carried
+out a program for the extermination of Jews of Polish nationality,
+thereby infringing upon the laws of war and humanity.
+
+It is true that in a number of speeches given by the Defendant Frank in
+his capacity as Governor General, he revealed his point of view on the
+Jewish question. The extracts from the diary submitted by the
+Prosecution in connection with this matter comprise practically
+everything relevant thereto in the Defendant Frank’s diary of 10,000 or
+12,000 typed pages. Nevertheless it shall not be denied that the
+Defendant Frank made no secret of his anti-Semitic views. He spoke in
+detail on this question when giving his testimony in the witness box.
+
+But the question of the importance to be attached to the diary entries
+submitted by the Prosecution is quite another matter. Almost all of them
+consist of statements made by the Defendant Frank in speeches, but there
+has not even been an attempt by the Prosecution to prove the existence
+of a causal connection between these statements and the measures carried
+out against the Jews by the Security Police.
+
+As a result of the evidence, in particular of the testimony given by the
+witnesses Dr. Bilfinger and Dr. Bühler, it can be looked upon as
+certain—in connection with the secret decree concerning the
+jurisdiction of the Security Police and the SD, of the year 1939, and
+the decree concerning the transfer of certain tasks to the State
+Secretary for Security—that all the measures concerning Jews in the
+Government General were carried out exclusively by Reichsführer SS
+Himmler and his organs. That is true for both the initiation and the
+organization of ghettos and the so-called final solution of the Jewish
+question.
+
+In regard to the latter it may be said here, on the basis of the
+testimony given by the witnesses Wisliceny and Hoess and of the
+documents presented by the Prosecution, that these measures were
+undertaken on Hitler’s express orders and that only a small circle of
+persons was concerned in their execution. This small circle was confined
+in the main to a few SS leaders of Department IVA, 4b of the RSHA and
+the personnel of the concentration camps that had been selected for the
+purpose.
+
+The administration of the Government General had nothing to do with
+these measures. The above facts also show that the anti-Semitic
+statements by the Defendant Frank as submitted by the Prosecution have
+no causal connection with the so-called final solution of the Jewish
+question. Since a causal link must be established before the question of
+illegality and guilt can even be considered, it does not seem necessary
+to dwell further on the matter—all the less because the factual
+elements of any punishable offenses can only be said to exist if at
+least an attempt has been made, that is, if the commission of the
+offense has at least been begun. Under the principles derived from the
+criminal law of all civilized nations, the statements contained in the
+diary of the Defendant Frank do not even constitute preparatory acts. In
+consideration of the tense and sometimes extremely frangible
+relationship between the Government General, on the one hand, and the
+Reichsführer SS Himmler and the Higher SS and Police Leader Krüger, on
+the other, it would also seem to be impossible to look upon the
+statements of the Defendant Frank as acts of incitement or complicity.
+The evidence has shown on the contrary that all the efforts of the
+Defendant Frank to investigate successfully the rumors about the
+elimination of the Jews, at least within his own administrative
+district, failed completely. Only to complete the picture need it be
+mentioned that the Concentration Camp of Auschwitz was not in the
+Government General, but in that part of Poland which was annexed to
+Upper Silesia. For the rest it cannot be clearly seen whether the
+erection and administration of concentration camps is in itself to be
+looked upon as fulfilling the requirements of a war crime or a crime
+against humanity, or whether the Prosecution considers the establishment
+of such camps solely as part of the so-called common plan. Setting aside
+the crimes committed in the concentration camps and considering the
+nature of concentration camps to be that in which people are confined
+for reasons of state and police security on account of their political
+opinions and without an opportunity of defending themselves in an
+ordinary court of law, it appears at least doubtful whether an occupying
+power should not have the right to take such necessary steps as this in
+order to maintain public order and security. Apart from the fact that it
+was not National Socialists and not Germans at all who first established
+such camps, the following must be mentioned:
+
+In the American Occupation Zone alone there were, according to a
+statement ...
+
+DR. ROBERT M. KEMPNER (Assistant Trial Counsel for the United States):
+Mr. President, we raise an objection. This matter is completely
+irrelevant.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Seidl, do you wish to say anything in answer to the
+objection?
+
+DR. SEIDL: Mr. President, I beg you to overrule the objection by the
+Prosecution, and I should like to say the following: I am not interested
+in criticizing an occupying power; I am only concerned with the question
+of whether certain conduct of which the Defendant Frank has been accused
+by the Prosecution constitutes the evidence of a criminal act.
+
+I base my case on the assumption that what is proper for one occupying
+power must, under similar circumstances, be allowed for another
+occupying power, especially when it is a question of accusations made
+against the defendant concerning actions carried out during the war,
+while, the state of war with Germany having ceased on 8 May 1945 at the
+very latest, these urgent reasons now perhaps no longer exist to that
+extent.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal sustains the objection. There is no evidence
+of the statements which you have made. And in any event, the Tribunal
+considers them entirely irrelevant.
+
+DR. SEIDL: I assume, Mr. President, that in that case I may continue
+with the last paragraph on Page 44.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I think so, yes, the last paragraph.
+
+DR. SEIDL: It is not necessary to go into this matter in more detail
+here, because the evidence has shown that it was the Defendant Frank who
+from the first day of the National Socialists’ assumption of power
+fought against the police-state system and, above all, decried the
+concentration camps as an institution which could in no way be made to
+harmonize with the idea of a state founded on law. In this connection I
+refer to the testimony given by the witness Dr. Stepp, to the
+defendant’s own statement, and above all to the extracts from the
+defendant’s diary which I put in evidence. The evidence has further
+shown that the establishment and administration of the concentration
+camps lay within the sphere of Reichsführer SS Himmler’s organization.
+The camps, both in Reich territories and in all areas occupied by German
+troops, were exclusively under the command of the SS-WVHA or the
+Inspector General of the Concentration Camps. Neither the Governor
+General nor the general administration of the Government General had
+anything to do with these camps.
+
+A further point of accusation against Frank is the charge that he
+supported violence and economic pressure as a means of recruiting
+workers for deportation to Germany. It is true that during the recent
+war many Poles came to work in Germany. But in this connection the
+following should be noted:
+
+Even before the first World War, hundreds of thousands of Poles came to
+Germany as vagrant workers. This stream of vagrant workers continued to
+flow also during the period between the first and the second World Wars.
+In consequence of the unfortunate demarcation line, the Government
+General became an area that was distinctly overpopulated. The
+agricultural excess production areas had fallen to the Soviet Union,
+whereas important industrial areas were incorporated into the Reich.
+Under these circumstances, and because there were no riches to be found
+in the soil, the only valuable means of production lay in the working
+capacity of the population. And this—at any rate for the first few
+years—could not be utilized to a sufficient extent, because the other
+production factors were lacking. In order to avoid unemployment, and
+above all in the interest of maintaining public order and security, the
+administration of the Government General was bound, if only for reasons
+of State policy, to try to transfer as many workers as possible to
+Germany.
+
+There can indeed be no doubt that during the first years of the
+administration most of the Polish workers went to the Reich voluntarily.
+When later, in consequence of the continuous bombing raids, not only
+Germany’s cities but also her factories crumbled to ruins and a not
+inconsiderable part of Germany’s capacity for the production of war
+materials had to be removed to the Government General for reasons of
+security, the aim of the Defendant Frank necessarily was to put a stop
+to any further transfer of labor. Over and above this, however, the
+Defendant Frank had from the very beginning opposed all violent measures
+in recruiting labor and solely for security reasons and in order not to
+create new centers of unrest had insisted that no compulsory measures
+were to be used and only propagandistic methods employed. That is
+established by the testimony of the witnesses Dr. Bühler and Dr. Böpple,
+and also by a large number of entries in the diary. In my presentation
+of evidence I have already referred to several of them. Thus, for
+example, the Defendant Frank said, among other things, on 4 March 1940:
+
+ “... I refuse to issue the decree demanded by Berlin
+ establishing compulsory measures and threatening punishment.
+ Measures that, viewed from the outside world, create a sensation
+ must be avoided under all circumstances. There is everything to
+ be said against the removal of people by violence.”
+
+On 14 January 1944 he made a similar statement to the Commander of the
+Security Police. I quote:
+
+ “The Governor General is strongly opposed to the suggestion that
+ police forces should be used in recruiting labor.”
+
+These quotations could be amplified by many more.
+
+I refer further to the evidence presented by me in respect to the
+treatment of Polish workers in Germany. The Defendant Frank continuously
+and repeatedly pleaded for better treatment of the Polish workers in the
+Reich.
+
+For the rest, the legal position in the matter of recruiting foreign
+labor does not appear to be quite clear. I do not intend to go further
+into the legal questions pertaining to this matter. The defense counsel
+for the Defendant Sauckel will go into this matter fully and I just wish
+to say the following:
+
+In the literature of international law it is undisputed that the
+conception of vital stress (Notstand) as recognized in criminal law
+would, in international law, too, preclude illegality in the case of a
+given violation of law. If the vital interests of a State are
+endangered, that State may, these interests being preponderant,
+safeguard them if necessary by injuring the justified interests of a
+third party. Even those writers who deny the application of the “vital
+stress” theory to international law—they are in the minority—grant the
+threatened State the “right to self-preservation” and therewith the
+right to enforce “necessities of state” even at the cost of the just
+interests of other States. It is a recognized principle of international
+law that a State need not wait until the direct threat of extinction is
+at its very threshold. There can be no doubt that after the entry into
+the war of the United States, with which for all practical purposes the
+productive capacity and the military might of almost the whole world
+were gathered together to overthrow Germany, the German Reich was faced
+with a situation which not only threatened the State as such with
+extinction but over and above that placed the bare existence of the
+people in jeopardy. Under these circumstances the right of the State
+leadership to make use of labor forces, even those in occupied
+territory, in this defensive struggle had to be acknowledged.
+
+In addition, the following should not be passed over: The Prosecution
+alleges that many, if not most of the foreign workers were brought to
+Germany by force and that they were then obliged to do heavy labor under
+degrading conditions. However one may look upon the evidence on this
+question, the fact cannot be ignored that there are hundreds of
+thousands of foreign workers still living in Germany who were allegedly
+deported thither by force. They refuse to return to their homes,
+although no one now attempts to hinder them. Under these circumstances
+it must be assumed that the force cannot have been as great, nor the
+treatment in Germany as bad, as is alleged by, the Prosecution.
+
+Another allegation refers to the closing of the schools. It may be left
+out of account whether international law recognizes any criminal
+classification which would make the closing of schools appear as a war
+crime or a crime against humanity. In time of war this would seem to be
+all the more unlikely as it is well known that schooling in wartime was
+considerably reduced, not only in Germany, but also in many other
+belligerent countries. There is all the less reason to investigate this
+question more thoroughly, as the evidence has shown that the schools
+were for the most part already closed when the defendant assumed office
+as Governor General. During his whole period of office he left no means
+untried to reactivate, not only the elementary and vocational, but also
+the higher forms of school. In this connection I will only mention the
+university courses which he initiated.
+
+The Soviet Prosecution has presented as Exhibit Number USSR-335 a decree
+issued by the defendant to combat attacks against German reconstruction
+work in the Government General, dated 2 October 1943. There is no
+question but that this decree setting up a drumhead court-martial is not
+in conformity with what must be demanded of court procedure under normal
+circumstances. However, this decree can only be judged correctly if the
+circumstances which led to its promulgation are taken into
+consideration.
+
+In general it should first be said that the reconstruction work of the
+administration of the Government General had to be carried on in a
+difficult territory and under circumstances which must be among the most
+difficult that have ever fallen to the lot of any administration. After
+the collapse of the Polish State, the German administration found, so to
+speak, a vacuum in which to organize and administer. In all spheres of
+administration they had to start completely afresh. If, in spite of the
+difficulties, they succeeded fairly quickly in repairing the war damage,
+particularly in the communications system, then that is incontestably to
+their credit.
+
+The year 1940 was, however, to prove the only one in which the work of
+restoration in the area of the Government General could be carried out
+under fairly normal conditions. As the year 1941 began, the Germans
+proceeded to concentrate their troops for action against the Soviet
+Union and therewith initiated a period of immense strain for the
+administration of the Government General. The Government General became
+the greatest repair workshop and the greatest military transit territory
+that history has ever known. This carried in its train an increasing
+deterioration of the security situation. The resistance movement began
+to reorganize on an intensified scale. But the menace inherent in the
+security situation developed to a still more alarming degree when the
+German armies were forced to arrest their progress in Russia and
+when—after the catastrophe of Stalingrad—their march forward was
+transformed into a general retreat. In the course of the year 1943, the
+activities of the resistance movement and in particular of the numerous
+guerrilla bands, in which thousands of lawless elements were grouped,
+reached extremes that represented a danger to any kind of orderly
+administration. The administration of the Government General was forced
+again and again to deal with this matter. Thus on 31 May 1943 a service
+meeting of the authorities of the Government General was held to deal
+with the security situation. At that meeting the President of the Chief
+Department Internal Administration felt obliged to state among other
+things—I quote from the diary:
+
+ “... In their activities the guerrilla bands have revealed an
+ increasingly well-developed system. They have now gone over to
+ the systematic destruction of institutions belonging to the
+ German administration; they steal money, procure typewriters and
+ duplicating machines, destroy quota lists and lists of workers
+ in the communal offices, and take away or burn criminal records
+ and taxation lists. Moreover, raids on important production
+ centers in the country have multiplied, for instance, on
+ sawmills, dairies, and distilleries, as also on bridges, railway
+ installations, and post offices. The organization of the
+ guerrillas has become strongly military in character.”
+
+In the course of the summer and autumn of the year 1943, the increasing
+activities of the partisans and the improvement in their military
+organization and equipment so endangered security in the Government
+General that it might perhaps under the circumstances have been better
+to turn over its entire administration to the appropriate army
+commanders and to proclaim a state of emergency. It is indeed not
+possible to describe conditions then existing in the Government General
+as anything else but a state of war. It was the period when at any
+moment the possibility had to be taken into account that a general
+revolt would break out over the whole country.
+
+All this notwithstanding, the Defendant Frank even then made every
+effort under all circumstances to thwart any violent measures by the
+Security Police and the SD. It was in order to exercise at least a
+modifying influence on the Security Police and the SD and to have at
+least some guarantee against excesses that the Defendant Frank agreed to
+the order dated 9 October 1943 setting up a drumhead court-martial.
+
+It is quite obvious from the content of this decree that its main
+purpose was to serve as a general preventive. It was meant as a
+deterrent to the guerrillas, and there can be no question but that in
+this it was temporarily successful. For the rest, the evidence has shown
+that even while this drumhead court-martial order was in operation, the
+Boards of Pardon continued to act and that many sentences passed by the
+drumhead court-martial were reversed by the boards.
+
+In the course of the present Trial repeated mention has been made of the
+report by SS Brigadeführer Stroop concerning the destruction of the
+Warsaw Ghetto in the year 1943; Exhibit USA-275 (1061-PS). Both that
+report and a number of other documents reveal that all the measures in
+connection with the Warsaw Ghetto were undertaken exclusively on the
+direct instructions of Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police
+Himmler. I refer in this connection to the affidavit of SS Brigadeführer
+Stroop of 24 February 1946, submitted by the Prosecution as Exhibit
+Number USA-804 (3841-PS) and to the affidavit of the same date given by
+the former adjutant of the SS and Police Leader of Warsaw, Karl Kaleske.
+That is Exhibit Number USA-803 (3840-PS). These documents show quite
+clearly that those measures, like all others within the competence of
+the Security Police and undertaken on direct orders from either
+Reichsführer SS Himmler, the Higher SS and Police Leader, East, or on
+instructions from the RSHA, were carried out exclusively by the Security
+Police and the SD and that the administration of the Government General
+had nothing to do with them.
+
+The Soviet Prosecution has also put in evidence as Exhibit USSR-93,
+under Article 21 of the Charter, the Report of the Polish Government.
+That report makes no distinction between the areas which were
+incorporated in the Reich and the territories of the former Polish State
+which were grouped together in the Government General. But particularly
+in view of the fact that the report makes no substantial statements as
+to the personal responsibility of the Defendant Frank, it does not seem
+necessary to delve further into this voluminous document. Like the
+Indictment itself, the report constitutes an accusation of a general
+nature; it does not deal in detail with the results of investigations
+and with evidence which might justify the conclusions drawn in the
+report. The objections to be raised to the report must appear all the
+more valid, since, to take only one example, in Appendix (1) of the
+report directives for cultural policy are appended which obviously
+purport to represent instructions given by the Governor General or his
+administration. Actually, however, nothing of the kind is to be found
+either in the _Official Gazette_ of the Government General or in any
+other documents. The witness Dr. Bühler stated during his interrogation
+that the administration of the Government General had never issued such
+or similar directives. In consideration of this alone, it would seem at
+most admissible to attach substantive probative value to this Exhibit
+USSR-93 only insofar as the statements therein made are confirmed by
+genuine documents and other unobjectionable evidence.
+
+According to the Indictment, and in particular according to the
+statements in the trial brief presented by the Prosecution, the
+Defendant Frank is also alleged to be responsible for the
+undernourishment of the Polish population. Actually, however, the
+Prosecution is unable to produce any evidence to show that in the area
+governed by the Defendant Frank either famine occurred or epidemics
+broke out. The evidence has revealed on the contrary that the efforts of
+the Defendant Frank in the years 1939 and 1940 were successful in
+inducing the Reich to deliver no less than 600,000 tons Of grain. That
+made it possible to overcome the food difficulties caused by the war.
+
+It is true that in the following years the Government General
+contributed in no small degree to the war effort by itself delivering
+grain. But it must not be overlooked that these deliveries were made
+possible by an extraordinary increase in agricultural production in the
+Government General. And this was in its turn made possible by a
+farseeing economic policy, especially by the distribution of
+agricultural machinery, seed corn, and so on. Nor should it be forgotten
+that the deliveries of grain by the Government General from the year
+1941 onward also served to feed the Polish workers placed in Reich
+territory and that in general these grain deliveries were utilized to
+maintain the internal balance between the European economic systems. In
+principle, however, the following should be said concerning this
+question:
+
+In a number of points of accusation the Prosecution has leveled
+reproaches against the administrative activities of the Defendant Frank
+in his capacity as Governor General without making an attempt to give an
+even approximately adequate description of the general work of the
+defendant and without pointing out its inherent difficulties. There can
+be no question but that such an attitude transgresses the fundamental
+rules of any criminal procedure. It is a recognized principle derived
+from the criminal law principles of all civilized states that a uniform
+natural process must be judged in its entirety and that its evaluation
+must take into account all the circumstances of the case that are in any
+way fit for consideration by the court when passing judgment. This would
+seem to be all the more necessary in the present case, as the Defendant
+Frank is accused of having pursued a long-term policy of oppression,
+exploitation, and Germanization.
+
+My Lords, if the Defendant Frank had in truth had any such intentions,
+then he could certainly have attained his goal in far simpler fashion.
+It would not have been necessary to issue hundreds of decrees every
+year, decrees which for example for the year 1940 reached the
+proportions of this volume that I hold here in my hand. The Defendant
+Frank, from his first day of office, set himself to integrate the entire
+economic policy in a manner which one can only term constructive.
+Certainly he did this partly in order to strengthen the production
+capacity of the German nation engaged in a struggle of life and death.
+But at the same time there can be no doubt that the success of these
+measures also benefited the Polish and Ukrainian peoples. I do not
+intend to go into this matter in detail. I will only ask the Tribunal in
+this connection to take notice of the report given by the Chief of
+Government on the occasion of the fourth anniversary of the existence of
+the Government General on 26 October 1943. I have included this report
+in the document books I put in evidence. It is in Volume IV, Page 42.
+The report gives a concise summary of the measures taken and the
+successes achieved by the administrative acts of the defendant during
+these 4 years in all fields of industrial economy, in agriculture,
+commerce, and transport, in the finance and credit system, in the sphere
+of public health, and so on. Only in consideration of all these facts is
+it possible to form an approximately correct estimate of the whole
+position. For the sake of completeness I will add that the defendant by
+his administration succeeded in reducing the danger of epidemics—in
+particular typhus and typhoid—to a degree which had been found
+impossible in this area in the preceding decades.
+
+If much of what had been achieved by the Defendant Frank in the
+Government General was destroyed in the subsequent fighting, that can
+certainly furnish no grounds for reproach against the general
+administration, which had nothing to do with military measures.
+
+My Lords, I am certainly not going to deny that in the course of the
+recent war terrible crimes were committed in the territory known as the
+Government General. Concentration camps had been established in which
+mass destruction of human beings was carried out. Hostages were shot.
+Expropriations took place; and so on. The Defendant Frank would be the
+last to deny this; he himself waged a 5 year struggle against all
+violent measures. The Prosecution has put in evidence, as Exhibit Number
+USA-610 (437-PS), a memorandum which Frank addressed to the Führer on 19
+June 1943. In this memorandum, on Page 11, he listed nine points in
+which he sharply condemned all the evils which had arisen in consequence
+of the violence practiced by the Security Police and the SD and of the
+excesses committed by various Reich authorities, against which all his
+efforts had proved unavailing.
+
+These nine points are in the main identical with the points of
+accusation against Frank. The content of the memorandum of 19 June 1943,
+however, shows very plainly that the defendant denies responsibility for
+these abuses. It reveals, on the contrary, quite clearly that neither
+the defendant nor the general administration of the Government General
+can be held responsible for the said evils but that the whole
+responsibility must be borne by the institutions mentioned above, in
+particular the Security Police and the SD, or the Higher SS and Police
+Leader, East. If the Defendant Frank had had the instruments of power
+wherewith to abolish the evils he condemned, it would not have been
+necessary for him to address that memorandum to Hitler at all. He would
+then himself have been able to take all necessary steps. In addition to
+this the evidence has shown that that memorandum of 19 June 1943 was not
+the only one addressed to the Führer on the matter. It is clear from the
+testimony of the witnesses Dr. Lammers and Dr. Bühler and the
+defendant’s own statements in the witness box that from the year 1940
+onward he sent protests and memoranda at regular intervals of a few
+months both to Hitler personally and to the Chief of the Reich
+Chancellery. These written protests were invariably on the subject of
+the violent measures taken and the excesses committed by the Higher SS
+and Police Leader and the Security Police, including the SD. But none of
+the protests met with success.
+
+As can also be said on the basis of the evidence, the Defendant Frank
+continually made suggestions to Hitler on the subject of improving
+relations between the administration of the Government General and the
+population. The memorandum of 19 June 1943 is also cast in the form of a
+comprehensive political program. It includes, moreover, all the
+essential points of protest contained in a memorandum presented in
+February 1943 to the Governor General, at his own desire, by the leader
+of the Ukrainian Chief Committee. This latter memorandum was put in
+evidence by the Prosecution as Exhibit Number USA-178 (1526-PS). Such
+suggestions were also consistently rejected by Hitler.
+
+Under these circumstances it is pertinent to ask what else the Defendant
+Frank could have done. Certainly he should have resigned. But that too
+he did. He offered his resignation no less than 14 times, the first time
+as early as 1939. His resignation was rejected by Hitler as often as it
+was tendered. But the Defendant Frank did more. He approached Field
+Marshal Keitel with the request that he be allowed to rejoin the Armed
+Forces as a lieutenant. That was in the year 1942. Hitler refused his
+consent to that too. These facts allow of only one conclusion, namely,
+that Hitler saw in the Defendant Frank a man behind whose back he (with
+the help of Himmler and the organs of the Security Police and the SD)
+could carry out the measures he considered requisite for attaining the
+aims of his power policy.
+
+My Lords, when it became more and more obvious that Hitler and
+Reichsführer SS Himmler were about to abolish the last remnants of a
+State founded on law; when it became increasingly apparent that the
+power of the Police knew no bounds and that a police state of the purest
+water was in process of development, the Defendant Frank came forward
+and addressed four great speeches to the German public with a last
+appeal on behalf of the idea of a State founded on law. He did that when
+Hitler stood at the summit of his power. He addressed this appeal to the
+German public at a time when the German forces were marching on
+Stalingrad and into the Caucasus, when the German Panzer Armies in
+Africa stood at El Alamein, barely 100 kilometers from Alexandria. In
+the course of the evidence I read some extracts from these great
+speeches which the Defendant Frank made in Berlin, Heidelberg, Vienna,
+and Munich. Those speeches contained a clear repudiation of every form
+of police state and championed the idea of the State founded on law, of
+the independence of the judiciary, and of law as such. These speeches
+found a tremendous echo among lawyers, but unfortunately not in wider
+circles. Nor in particular were they echoed by the men who alone would
+have possessed the power to ward off the threatening catastrophe.
+
+The consequences of this attempt to avert the extinction of the idea of
+the State founded on law by a last great effort are well known. The
+Defendant Frank was deprived of all his Party offices: he was dismissed
+from his post as President of the Academy for German Law. The leadership
+of the National Socialist Lawyers Association was conferred on the Reich
+Minister of Justice, Thierack. Frank himself was forbidden by Hitler to
+speak in public. Although the Defendant Frank again on this occasion
+sent in his resignation as Governor General, Hitler refused to accept
+it, as he had always done before. The reason for this, as given in a
+letter from the Reich Minister and Chief of the Reich Chancellery to the
+Defendant Frank, was that considerations of foreign policy had caused
+the Führer again to refuse this latest request of Frank to be allowed to
+resign. According to everything that has emerged from the evidence in
+this Trial it may be looked upon as certain that it was not only, and
+probably not even mainly, for such reasons that Hitler refused to accept
+Frank’s resignation.
+
+The decisive factor was obviously the consideration that it was better
+policy not to let the Security Police and Reichsführer SS Himmler’s
+other organs fulfill their appointed task openly, but rather to let them
+continue their work under cover while maintaining a general civil
+administration under the Governor General.
+
+Naturally this open breach between the Defendant Frank, on the one hand,
+and Hitler and the State Police system represented by Reichsführer SS
+Himmler and the Higher SS and Police Leader, East, on the other, could
+not fail to have repercussions on the position of the defendant in his
+capacity as Governor General. Still more than before the various Reich
+authorities now began to interfere in the administration of the
+Government General. Above all, however, it was quite clear from the
+summer of 1942 onward that the Higher SS and Police Leader, East,
+together with the organs of the Security Police and SD subordinated to
+him, took no more notice at all of any instructions issued by the
+Governor General and the general administration.
+
+Both in the Government General and in the Reich itself legal
+institutions receded more and more into the background. The State was
+transformed into an unadulterated police state, and developments took
+the inevitable course which the Defendant Frank had foreseen and
+feared—the course which on 19 November 1941 he had outlined at a
+congress of the principal section chiefs and Reich group leaders of the
+National Socialist Lawyers Association in the following words:
+
+ “Law cannot be degraded to a position where it becomes an object
+ of bargaining. Law cannot be sold. It is either there or it is
+ not there. Law cannot be marketed on the stock exchange. If the
+ law finds no support, then the State too loses its moral stay
+ and sinks into the depths of night and horror.”
+
+THE PRESIDENT: We will begin again at 10 minutes past 2.
+
+ [_The Tribunal recessed until 1410 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ _Afternoon Session_
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Pannenbecker.
+
+DR. OTTO PANNENBECKER (Counsel for Defendant Frick): Mr. President,
+Gentlemen of the Tribunal:
+
+The American Prosecution, through Dr. Kempner, has charged Defendant
+Frick with criminal actions according to Article 6, Items a, b, and c of
+the Charter. I should like first to examine the question as to whether
+Article 6 of the Charter, with its list of criminal acts, is to be
+considered as the authoritative expression of material penal law which
+would lay down, in a manner irrevocably binding on, and not subject to
+revision by the Tribunal, what actions are to be regarded as punishable;
+or whether Article 6 of the Charter concerns a rule of procedure
+defining the competence of this Tribunal for specific subject matters.
+
+THE PRESIDENT [_Interposing_]: Perhaps it will be for the convenience of
+the interpreters if I say that we might, as it is now nearly half past
+2, sit without a break until 4 o’clock, when we rise.
+
+DR. PANNENBECKER: The latter interpretation was implied in the
+Prosecution’s presentation of the case by Sir Hartley Shawcross’ remark
+that although Article 6 of the Charter fills a gap in international
+penal procedure, the material penal law to be applied to the defendants
+has already been previously standardized by positive laws. Part II of
+the Charter, beginning with Article 6, is accordingly entitled:
+“Jurisdiction and General Principles,” and it may be inferred therefrom
+that Article 6 is intended to establish a ruling as to the competence of
+this Tribunal as to procedure in specific groups of crimes.
+
+Sir Hartley Shawcross’ statements were directed against the objection
+that it is inadmissible and in contradiction with a basic legal
+principle to punish someone for an act which had not yet been forbidden
+at the time it was committed; an objection which has as a basis the
+conception that the Charter has created new material penal law with
+retroactive effect. It should be examined whether the prohibition of
+retroaction of penal laws is a legal principle of such importance that
+it should not be infringed. I need not state to this Court the reasons
+why this legal principle found general recognition in all civilized
+countries as a prerequisite and basic precept of justice.
+
+In contrast to this, the Prosecution has in its speech charged the
+defendants with the fact that they themselves had continuously
+disregarded law and justice, and inferred from this that the defendants
+in this Trial could not appeal to such a legal principle. I do not
+believe, however, that such an argument can be decisive in this Trial.
+The Prosecution has replied in the negative to the further question of
+whether it would not have been right to pay back in the same coin and
+not allow the defendants of this Trial any possibility at all to defend
+themselves in a proper legal procedure. Such a course of simply
+exercising the power of the victor over the defendants has purposely not
+been assumed by the signatory powers for reasons presented in detail by
+the Prosecution. On the contrary, Sir Hartley Shawcross has appealed to
+the Tribunal to apply in this procedure—I quote—“the undisputed
+principles of international custom.”
+
+If, however, it is intended to proceed in such a manner, then an
+examination must take place in keeping with the same principles of law,
+to determine the question whether the deeds with which the defendants
+are charged can be regarded as criminal acts for which punishment is
+possible according to the recognized principles of international custom.
+It is not, according to these principles, an argument if the use of a
+legal principle as fundamental as the prohibition of retroaction in
+penal law is in actual application to be made dependent on whether or
+not the defendants concerned themselves with law and justice. The
+decision of the signatory powers to subject, on the basis of
+considerations which have been seriously weighed, the conduct of the
+defendants to a proper trial recognizing all legal principles of
+international custom, therefore signifies not only the observance of
+legal procedure with all assurances of fair trial, but such a decision
+by the signatory powers also signifies adherence to the fundamental
+principles of a material guarantee of justice, of which the prohibition
+of retroactive penal laws is one.
+
+In this connection I should like to point out that the decreeing of the
+retroactive validity of penal laws, when so ordered by the National
+Socialist Government for certain individual cases, to which Dr. Stahmer
+has already referred, shocked the entire civilized world. At that time,
+the violation of such a principle of law was generally condemned as a
+deplorable retrogression in civilization. I also ask the Tribunal to
+recall that one of the first measures taken by the occupation powers for
+deliverance from the National Socialist abuse of the law was to declare
+void any laws which had a retroactive effect on the material penal
+legislation.
+
+In view of this situation there exist valid reasons, I believe, why
+Article 6 of the Charter should, in accordance with its heading, be
+regarded as a ruling on the jurisdiction of this Tribunal, all the more
+so as the signatory powers have already and with so much emphasis
+insisted on a renewed strict and uniform observance of the prohibition
+against retroactive penal laws.
+
+On the basis of such an interpretation, whereby Article 6 establishes
+the jurisdiction of this Tribunal, it would be for the Tribunal by its
+own examination not only to determine whether the charges on which the
+Indictment is based are proved, but also to rule on the legal question
+as to whether, for the facts established in each case by the
+Prosecution, there exists a criminal law which makes punishment
+possible. To revert in this way to provisions of material criminal law
+in existence at the time the act was committed does not mean that it
+would be impossible for this Tribunal to call the accused to account for
+offenses which are punishable under all circumstances. There are,
+however, a number of restrictions resulting from this which in the
+opinion of the Defense it would be better to accept rather than violate
+a principle so essential to just procedure as is the prohibition of
+retroaction in criminal laws. I am therefore of the opinion that it is
+entirely possible, and not incompatible with the necessity for just
+expiation for war crimes, to interpret Article 6 in accordance with its
+heading as a ruling on the jurisdiction of this Court, but not as new
+material criminal law.[1] The next remarks concern themselves with the
+conspiracy, a matter which has been dealt with by Dr. Stahmer to such an
+extent that I can omit these pages. I continue now on Page 7 with the
+summary.
+
+The Charter does not impose the interpretation that a defendant is
+responsible also for such acts of commission as exceed the measure of
+his participation in the common plan. The wording of the Charter, “in
+the execution of a common plan,” does not contradict the interpretation
+that the Charter establishes liability for acts of commission which
+remained within the scope of the said plan. To that extent the
+assumption of liability for the actions of others complies with a demand
+of justice, but beyond that it would violate essential legal principles.
+The Defense therefore advocates the concept that, as far as the actions
+of others are concerned, for which a defendant is to be made liable,
+proof must be required that these actions, in the manner of their
+execution, corresponded to the intention of the defendant. To give an
+example:
+
+The participation of a defendant in rearmament against the regulations
+of the Versailles Treaty does not in itself justify the assumption that
+that defendant also desired a war of aggression which was later on
+planned by others in the further plan of restoring military power to the
+German people.
+
+I should now like to turn to the various categories of crimes of which
+the Defendant Frick is accused, taking first of all the assertion of the
+Prosecution that the defendant participated in the planning and
+preparation of wars of aggression. With regard to the problem as to
+whether a war of aggression is a criminal offense according to the
+concepts of law for the period in question, I refer, in order to avoid
+repetition, to the statements of Professor Jahrreiss, with which, in
+behalf of the Defendant Frick, I fully concur.
+
+By virtue of these convincing statements, there exists only one
+possibility of punishing co-operation in a war of aggression as a
+criminal offense capable of being perpetrated by individual persons,
+namely, when, contrary to the statement of Sir Hartley Shawcross, the
+Charter is applied as a standard of material penal law which has for the
+first time defined, with retroactive effect, a war of aggression as a
+criminal offense by individual persons. From the point of view of the
+other interpretation, which regards Article 6 of the Charter as a
+procedure regulating the jurisdiction of this Court, the Defense holds
+that the deduction is cogent that the Court is indeed declared competent
+to judge offenses against peace, but that the criminal guilt of the
+individual defendants is not proved therewith because one condition for
+this is lacking, namely, the possibility of establishing that the
+defendants have offended against a principle of generally valid
+international custom or a principle of national law which defined the
+war of aggression at the time it took place and declared it punishable
+as a crime of which a single individual could be guilty.
+
+As it happens, the statesmen, during the period between the two World
+Wars, have neglected to establish adequate measures of general validity,
+by which it would have been made clear that anyone who, after the first
+wholesale slaughter of peoples, organized a second World War, would go
+about with a rope around his neck. The statements of the Prosecution,
+that such rules of international law are necessary, appear to be
+absolutely convincing, but the fact cannot be overlooked that such rules
+were nevertheless not created by the statesmen of that period at the
+right time. A missing rule of law, fashioned to fit a special case,
+cannot be replaced subsequently by an order of procedure or by the
+sentence of a Court whose task is to apply the general law, but not to
+create it for a single special case.
+
+I shall now turn to the actual statements of the Prosecution concerning
+the participation of the Defendant Frick in the planning and preparation
+of wars of aggression.
+
+The Prosecution sees such activity already in Frick’s earliest
+co-operation with the Party, which he continued until the year 1933, in
+order to bring Hitler to power. The Prosecution appraises in a similar
+way the subsequent activity of Frick after the taking over of the
+Government by Hitler, when he helped to consolidate the power of the
+Party and its leaders through measures of domestic policy, especially by
+his participation in the legal measures by which armed forces were
+created, and finally by his collaboration in measures by which direct
+preparations were made in case of war.
+
+Proceeding from the interpretation that only deliberate participation by
+the defendant in the preparation of a war of aggression is of penal
+significance, I shall not take up the question as to whether the
+Prosecution has proved that Frick was aware that his collaboration in
+the advancement of the Party and its aims constituted a preparation for
+war, and intended it as such, and therefore helped to bring the war
+about.
+
+In this connection the Prosecution has made the assertion that Hitler
+and his Party from the very beginning openly pursued the aim of bringing
+about a change in Germany’s situation in foreign politics by means of
+war. On the basis of this statement the Prosecution has declared that no
+special proof is necessary that in working for Hitler and his Party each
+of the defendants also knowingly collaborated in the preparation of a
+war of aggression.
+
+As proof of the fact that Hitler and his Party had from the beginning
+planned a war of aggression, the Prosecution refers to the Party
+Program, which names as one of its aims the abolition of the Treaty of
+Versailles. No word is said, however, in the Party Program that this aim
+should be achieved by force of arms. In the Party Program, as the
+testimony of the Defendant Von Neurath has also shown, among other
+things, there is nothing to prove an intention existing from the very
+beginning to wage a war of aggression. Nor is anything different found
+in the other official publications of the Party from the time previous
+to Hitler’s assumption of the Government. Because as the Party did not,
+on the basis of its official publications, reveal any intention of
+bringing about the revision of the Versailles Treaty by force of arms,
+it was even before 1933 authorized outside the territory of the Reich,
+as for example in 1930 in Danzig, when it received the sanction of the
+then High Commissioner of the League of Nations and of the Polish
+Resident General.
+
+From the time of his assumption of power on 30 January 1933 Hitler, as
+responsible head of the Government, adopted a quite unequivocal attitude
+with regard to the ways and aims of his foreign policy, both in official
+speeches and discourses as well as in private conversations.
+Unchangingly, and upon every occasion that presented itself after his
+assumption of power, he stressed his absolute desire for peace and his
+abhorrence of war, and he always defended this attitude with convincing
+reasons. He repeated again and again that he intended to obtain certain
+revisions of the Versailles Treaty by peaceful means only. I need not
+repeat the quotations to that effect from Hitler’s speeches, which were
+read by the Prosecution to prove how Hitler deceived the world, and the
+people he ruled, by his peace talks. And the world, including the German
+people, took these speeches which he, as responsible head of the
+Government, made again and again, quite seriously. In the face of that,
+warning voices which at an early stage were convinced that Hitler wanted
+war, remained a hopeless minority throughout the world.
+
+The Prosecution has repeatedly alluded to this world belief which took
+Hitler’s assertions of peaceful intentions seriously, and the best proof
+of this delusion about peace even among the foreign statesmen, who also
+knew the Party Program, would certainly appear to lie in the fact that
+these statesmen neglected to so vast an extent to arm against Hitler’s
+war of aggression, in which nobody in Germany and in the world believed
+seriously except those who were directly initiated into Hitler’s most
+secret plans. From the Party Program and from isolated wild speeches
+made before 1933 during the period of parliamentary opposition, it is
+not possible to prove a continuous preparation for a war of aggression
+since the twenties, which is alleged to have been discernible to anybody
+who took a glance at the Party Program.
+
+The Prosecution contends further that even if the warlike intentions
+were not discernible in a general way at first, the intention of Hitler
+to prepare a war of aggression must have been clearly visible to the
+Defendant Frick on account of the duties which he had to fulfill after
+30 January 1933 in his capacity as Reich Minister of the Interior. These
+duties included measures for the strengthening of the internal political
+power of Hitler and his Party. The Prosecution referred in this
+connection to the collaboration of Frick in the legal decrees by means
+of which the opposition against Hitler’s system of government was
+destroyed in parliament and in the country; further, to the legislative
+measures which eliminated real self-government in the cities and
+communities, and to legislative and administrative decrees by which
+opponents of the National Socialist system were excluded from taking any
+part in the business of the State and in economic life.
+
+The Prosecution has submitted that without these measures Hitler could
+not have conducted another war, for the beginning of which the complete
+destruction of opposition in the country was said to be a necessary
+prerequisite—particularly the establishment of Hitler’s absolute
+dictatorship. Yet in all the measures I have enumerated, a direct
+connection with the preparation for war is lacking. For these measures
+had equal meaning and significance, unconnected with a subsequent war,
+merely as projects of a National Socialist domestic policy. It has not
+been proved that beyond that the Defendant Frick was informed of
+Hitler’s more far-reaching plans, namely, after consolidating his power
+at home to pursue the aims of the Party’s foreign policy not by peaceful
+but by military means.
+
+By establishing retrospectively that the strengthening of Hitler’s inner
+political authority was a necessary condition for his intentions for war
+as revealed later, nothing is achieved unless proof is forthcoming that
+Hitler had from the beginning aimed at power in the domestic sphere only
+as a first step toward the waging of wars, and that Frick was aware of
+this when he took part in the measures of domestic policy of which he is
+accused. Otherwise, as purely domestic measures, they do not come under
+the jurisdiction of this Tribunal according to the provisions of the
+Charter.
+
+But there is no such evidence, and it is much rather to be assumed that
+Frick, as a typical official connected with domestic politics,
+considered his measures as absolutely independent acts which had nothing
+whatsoever to do with the solutions by force of questions of foreign
+policy. Nor can another view of the situation be derived from the
+measures dealing directly with Germany’s rearmament, that is, the
+reintroduction of general conscription and the occupation of the
+demilitarized zone of the Rhineland. In his capacity as Reich Minister
+of the Interior, Frick issued the orders of the civil administration for
+the mobilization of men liable for military service, and consequently he
+himself also signed the Armed Forces Law.
+
+Yet even these measures in themselves were not to be recognized as
+preparation for a war of aggression. The reintroduction of compulsory
+military service and the assumption of military sovereignty over the
+demilitarized Western Zone were explained by Hitler himself, to his
+collaborators and the world, by arguments whose soundness was then
+widely accepted, and after the first shock many foreign statesmen still
+believed in Hitler’s well-founded assurances of peace, and advocated the
+opinion that there was no reason to fear any belligerent intentions on
+the part of Hitler.
+
+To be sure, Hitler personally declared to his Commanders-in-Chief on 23
+November 1939 that he had created the Armed Forces in order to make war.
+I refer to Document 789-PS; Exhibit Number USA-23. But Hitler previously
+cleverly obscured this intention by another argument which at that time
+still found credence in Germany and abroad, and—as proved by the
+evidence—even those collaborators in his own Cabinet who had not been
+initiated into his secret plans believed in it.
+
+Thus it is that several defendants refer to the fact that they approved
+of the reconstruction of the German Armed Forces in the face of the
+provisions of the Versailles Treaty, but that they did not want a war
+and did not consider that by their collaboration they were participating
+in the planning of a war of aggression. As for the Defendant Frick, the
+view of the defense is that there is no proof that Hitler had informed
+him of his plans for war, and therefore his collaboration in the
+measures concerned with the reconstruction of the German Armed Forces
+cannot be charged against him as intentional collaboration in the
+planning of wars of aggression. A similar situation arises with regard
+to the defendant’s activity in organizing the civil administration in
+general for the eventuality of war, a task entrusted to the defendant as
+Plenipotentiary for Administration of the Reich by the second Reich
+Defense Law dated 4 September 1938.
+
+I beg to point out again that the position of Plenipotentiary for
+Administration of the Reich was created only by this second Reich
+Defense Law of 4 September 1938, and thus was not included in the first
+Reich Defense Law of 21 May 1935.
+
+To be sure, long before, even before 1933, experts from the various
+ministries held conferences dealing with the subject of Reich defense,
+meeting at irregular intervals after 1933 as the Reich Defense
+Committee, as shown in the documents submitted by the Prosecution. These
+meetings had nothing to do with an agreement to wage a war of
+aggression. They dealt with general questions of Reich defense, as is
+customary also in other countries. By the Reich Defense Law of 21 May
+1935, the organization for Reich defense was more closely co-ordinated,
+particularly by the appointment of a Plenipotentiary for War Economy,
+and at his interrogation the Defendant Schacht explained in detail that
+the purpose in creating that position was not preparation for a war of
+aggression (according to the duties and regulations to be found in the
+first Reich Defense Law) but the organization of the economy for defense
+in the event of a war of aggression by other states.
+
+The same holds true with regard to the position of Plenipotentiary for
+Reich Administration as created by the second Reich Defense Law of 4
+September 1938, which was conferred on the Defendant Frick by virtue of
+his position as Reich Minister of the Interior. This position signified
+the co-ordinated establishment of the entire civil administration for
+the purpose of Reich defense. Regardless of whether, according to
+documents which have been submitted to the Tribunal, Hitler already
+wanted war at the time when he authorized the second Reich Defense Law,
+it is nevertheless relevant for the defense of the defendant whether
+Frick at that time was able to recognize the aggressive intentions of
+Hitler from the law itself and from his preliminary work thereon or from
+other evidence or information which was communicated to him then. From
+the law itself it cannot be discerned that Hitler’s intention was to use
+it in the sphere of civil life as an instrument of preparation for a war
+of aggression.
+
+The kind of tasks which were given to the Defendant Frick in his
+capacity as Plenipotentiary for Reich Administration had to do merely
+with the concentration of domestic administration of Germany in case of
+a possible war or threat of war, and nothing else can be seen from
+Document Number 3787-PS (Exhibit Number USA-782), which was submitted
+subsequently.
+
+The law is so formulated that it always refers only to the defense of
+the Reich in case of war. It speaks about the “state of defense” and
+mentions the case of a “surprise threat to the Reich territory,” in the
+event of which certain measures must be taken. Beyond this the law does
+not vouchsafe any hint, which would be in keeping with Hitler’s
+oft-repeated principle not to divulge any more of his plans than the
+person concerned had to know for his own work—a principle which he
+strictly adhered to even with his closest collaborators. In view of this
+principle it should not be assumed, nor has it been at all proved, that
+when the order for this law was given to the Ministry of the Interior
+any other information was imparted than the necessity for taking
+precautionary measures, by concentrating the full strength of the
+domestic administration of the country, against a surprise threat to
+Reich territory through a possible attack by other states.
+
+It is not necessary for me to state in detail that such a measure cannot
+be considered as a premeditated preparation for a war of aggression when
+it had been explained to the competent authorities of the domestic
+administration that it was essential for the defense of the Reich
+against the threatening attack by another state. Hitler knew very well
+how to hoodwink all those who had no need to know about his secret
+plans, yet nevertheless should understand the reasons for the armament
+and the organization of the state ordered by him for the eventuality of
+war.
+
+I will deal now very briefly with some further documents bearing on the
+activity of the Defendant Frick as Plenipotentiary for Reich
+Administration. Frick, in his speech of 7 March 1940, referred to this
+position—Document Number 2608-PS, Exhibit Number USA-714—and stated
+that the planned preparation of the administration for the possible
+event of war had been already effected during peacetime by the
+appointment of a Plenipotentiary for Reich Administration. This speech
+therefore merely confirms that which is already revealed by the text of
+the law. The same applies to Document 2986-PS, Exhibit Number USA-409,
+an affidavit by the defendant to the same effect. Therefore, according
+to this law, the position of the Plenipotentiary for Reich
+Administration, combined with the appointment of a Plenipotentiary for
+Economy and the post of Chief of the OKW, cannot be described as a
+“triumvirate” holding governmental authority in Germany. Nothing has
+ever become known either inside or outside Germany of a government by
+such a triumvirate, and the witness Lammers has also referred to the
+strictly subordinate tasks performed by these persons by means of
+ordinances—tasks which had nothing to do with the preparation of a war
+of aggression.
+
+Another field of the defendant’s activity is likewise appraised by the
+Prosecution as participation in preparation for a war of aggression,
+namely, Frick’s work for the Association for Maintaining Germanism
+Abroad. I refer to Exhibit Number Frick-14 and Document Number 3258-PS,
+the latter submitted as Exhibit Number GB-262. Both documents reveal
+that Frick supported the said association as a union for the fostering
+of German cultural relations abroad and promoted its cultural efforts.
+It cannot, however, be gathered from the documents that Frick engaged in
+any capacity whatsoever for the furtherance of the aims of a so-called
+“Fifth Column” abroad. Another document from which the Prosecution
+deduced the approval of the policy of aggressive war by Frick is the
+affidavit of Messersmith, Document Number 2385-PS, Exhibit Number
+USA-68. This affidavit has been characterized by several defendants as
+inaccurate, and the Defendant Schacht in particular showed at his
+examination that in essential points it cannot be correct at all. The
+Prosecution was not able to produce the witness for cross-examination. I
+object on behalf of Frick against any use of the affidavit, all the more
+so since an additional clarifying interrogation of the witness through a
+written questionnaire only led to the result that the witness, by using
+general phrases, avoided giving concrete answers to the questions put to
+him. The answers to the questionnaire show plainly enough that
+Messersmith cannot make concrete statements at all and that in his
+affidavit he obviously was considerably deceived himself as to the
+extent of his memory.
+
+I do not believe that his affidavit, which has been refuted in essential
+points, can be made use of for passing legal judgment. As to the
+question whether the Defendant Frick participated in conscious
+preparation for a war of aggression, the Prosecution further submitted
+Document D-44, Exhibit Number USA-428. From this document it is seen
+that the Reich Ministry of the Interior is supposed in the year 1933 to
+have issued a directive that official publications were not to be drawn
+up in a form which might enable people abroad to infer an infraction of
+the Versailles Treaty from such publications. This document does not
+reveal whether by these directives actual treaty violations were to be
+masked or whether it was only a question of avoiding the appearance of
+treaty violations.
+
+The same problem applies to Document 1850-PS, Exhibit Number USA-742.
+This contains the minutes of a conference between the Leadership of the
+SA and the Reich Defense Minister, who proposed to the SA in 1933 that
+budgetary funds of the Reich should be set aside by the Reich Ministry
+of the Interior for the military training of the SA. The document does
+not throw any light upon the attitude of the Reich Ministry of the
+Interior toward this proposal, and even if it had accepted it, this
+again would have proved only that the Reich Ministry of the Interior
+furthered the restoration of the Armed Forces, a fact which anyhow is
+already proved.
+
+Thus, none of these documents furnishes proof that the Defendant Frick
+recognized as preparation for a war of aggression the measures ordered
+by Hitler as necessary for the defense of the Reich.
+
+It is true that during the war, in 1941, a few days before the outbreak
+of the war with the Soviet Union, a conference took place between the
+Defendant Rosenberg and representatives of various ministries concerning
+measures in case of a possible occupation of parts of the Soviet Union.
+This is shown in Document 1039-PS, Exhibit Number USA-146, Rosenberg’s
+report concerning these discussions, in which it is stated that
+negotiations took place with “Reich Minister Frick (State Secretary
+Stuckart).” This parenthesis means that the Reich Ministry of the
+Interior was represented in these negotiations by State Secretary
+Stuckart, therefore that Frick did not personally participate in the
+negotiations. As the negotiations took place only a few days before the
+beginning of the war in the East, it is not proved by the document that
+Frick himself was informed about the negotiation before the beginning of
+the war which, as it is generally known, was afterward proclaimed by
+Hitler as a necessary measure of defense against an imminent attack by
+the Soviet Union. It has been made clear by abundant evidence in this
+Trial how far Hitler kept his true aggressive intentions secret, and how
+well he knew how to cover up the true aim of all his political measures
+for years with thousands of convincing reasons to justify the individual
+measures of his policy of aggression.
+
+There was a very small circle of collaborators whom Hitler informed
+about his war plans, but this circle was not selected according to the
+position of the person concerned in the Cabinet, or according to his
+position in the Party hierarchy, but exclusively from the point of view
+of whether it was necessary for the person concerned, with respect to
+his own tasks in the field of preparations for the war, to know the
+aggressive character of Hitler’s general policy or even his detailed
+plans of aggression. Document 386-PS, Exhibit Number USA-25, shows how
+systematically the principle of secrecy was kept, even as regards the
+older members of the Party and the administrators of important
+departments in the Reich Cabinet. Whoever, such as the Minister of the
+Interior, had merely to carry out measures within the framework of
+preparations for war which could well be similar to tasks of a purely
+defensive character was, in accordance with Hitler’s principle, not
+informed of the latter’s aggressive intentions. For this reason, the
+presence of the Defendant Frick is not shown in even a single one of
+these secret conferences in which Hitler informed a circle of selected
+men about his plans for foreign policy and his war aims. In the Document
+386-PS just mentioned, Hitler especially emphasized and gave reasons for
+the exclusion of the Reich Cabinet as a body to which such plans should
+be made known.
+
+In another record concerning a similar conference—Document L-79,
+Exhibit Number USA-27—the additional principle is laid down that no one
+should be told anything concerning the war plans who does not need to
+know these plans for his actual work.
+
+Frick’s name is not only missing from the list of those present at
+Hitler’s conferences on his policy of aggression which took place before
+the war, but the same applies also to the numerous conferences
+concerning Hitler’s further war aims and aggressive intentions which
+were held during the war. The Defendant Frick was no more informed of
+the later attacks or included in their preparation, as is shown by the
+list of those present at Hitler’s lectures concerning his plans, which
+have in part been submitted here.
+
+Frick, purely an expert in domestic administration who was not
+considered competent for military questions and questions of foreign
+policy, was deemed good enough to organize the civilian administration
+for the eventuality of any possible war, but in Hitler’s opinion, his
+foreign policy and military plans were none of Frick’s business.
+However, the Prosecution asserts further that after the conquest of
+foreign territories and their occupation, the Defendant Frick regulated
+the administrative policy in those territories and that he is
+responsible for it. The Prosecution considers this activity, of the
+defendant, according to Article 6, Letter (a) of the Charter, as
+“participation in the execution of wars of aggression.” According to the
+submission of the Prosecution, Frick exercised an over-all control of
+the occupied territories, especially in his capacity as chief of the
+Central Office for the occupied territories. On the basis of the same
+function, he is deemed to be responsible for all War Crimes and Crimes
+against Humanity which were committed in the occupied and incorporated
+territories before and during the war, up to his dismissal as Reich
+Minister of the Interior on 20 August 1943.
+
+It is a question of legal interpretation whether the activity in the
+administration of occupied territories, pursuant to Article 6, Letter
+(a) of the Charter, is to be considered as the “execution of wars of
+aggression,” or whether criminality comes into consideration only under
+the point of view of crimes against the rules of war or against
+humanity. In deciding this question it appears important to me that it
+is not one of the tasks of an official of a civil administration to
+examine, after the conclusion of military operations, whether it is a
+case of legal or illegal occupation according to the standards of
+international law. An obligation for such an examination would be an
+exaggerated demand to make of the department of the civil administration
+or the administrative chief, whose activity cannot be described as
+illegal on the grounds that the territory administered by him had been
+annexed a short or even long time ago in violation of the regulations of
+international law. There is no obligation for such examination in the
+practice of civil administration. The Charter moreover does not demand
+such an interpretation because, when naturally construed, the military
+operations themselves might be understood to constitute an execution of
+wars of aggression, but not the later civil administration of conquered
+territories.
+
+The punishment of crimes which occurred in the administration of the
+occupied territories would not be made impossible through such an
+interpretation. In any case these crimes are subject to punishment as
+Crimes against Humanity or against the rules of war according to the
+Charter. And now mention must be made of those territories in particular
+for which the Defendant Frick bears a responsibility.
+
+First of all there are the territories which were incorporated in
+accordance with constitutional law into the commonwealth of the German
+Reich, which are therefore called “incorporated territories.” By their
+constitutional incorporation these territories came under the
+administration of the Reich, but only to that extent did they come under
+the authority of the Reich Minister of the Interior, in that the
+Defendant Frick bears the constitutional responsibility of a minister
+for the internal administration of these territories up to 20 August
+1943. In the East, this mainly concerned the territories of West
+Prussia, Posen, and Danzig, in other words, the so-called returned
+Eastern territories which belonged, until the Versailles Treaty, to the
+commonwealth of the German Reich. In the East, the Memel district
+received the same constitutional treatment; in the West, the
+Eupen-Malmedy district; and in the Southeast, the Sudetenland.
+Furthermore the country of Austria was incorporated into the
+commonwealth of the German Reich. For all those territories Frick has a
+share in the laws and administrative measures brought about by the
+incorporation. He bears the usual responsibility of a Minister of the
+Interior for the domestic administration of these territories up to the
+time of his dismissal in August 1943. For the territory of Bohemia and
+Moravia on the other hand there existed a special Protectorate
+Government, which was described as autonomous in the decree concerning
+the establishment of the Protectorate—Document 2119-PS—and was
+therefore not controlled by the Reich Ministry of the Interior. In a
+similar way, an administration not dependent on the Reich Ministry of
+the Interior existed in the Polish territories, which were collectively
+designated “Government General” and were put under the jurisdiction of a
+“Governor General.” In contrast to the so-called “incorporated Eastern
+territories,” the Reich Ministry of the Interior had no right to issue
+orders or to handle administrative matters in the Government General, as
+can be seen from Document 3079-PS which contains Hitler’s decree
+concerning the administration of the occupied Polish territories. The
+same appears from numerous other documents, among them Document
+USSR-223, the Frank diary, in which he states that no Reich central
+offices are authorized to intervene in the government of his territory.
+
+The same applied to all other occupied territories for which a special
+administration was established under any legal form. These separate
+administrations were not dependent on the corresponding departmental
+ministries in the Reich, but were under the jurisdiction of the
+administrative chief for the corresponding territories, who was himself
+directly subordinate to Hitler.
+
+This applies to the occupied Soviet Russian territories, the entire
+administration of which was under the jurisdiction of a Reich Minister
+for the Occupied Eastern Territories. The same applies to Norway, where
+a Reich Commissioner was appointed. In a similar way, a Reich
+Commissioner was appointed for the Netherlands, who was also independent
+of the Reich Ministry of the Interior and was directly subordinate to
+Hitler. In Luxembourg, Alsace, and Lorraine, there were chiefs of civil
+administrations who were also not dependent on the Reich Ministry of the
+Interior, while in Belgium and northern France there was a military
+administration of which the same was true.
+
+In the same way the administrative chiefs of the territories which were
+occupied in the Southeast of Europe were completely independent of the
+Reich Ministry of the Interior. For part of the occupied territories
+there exists, in the decrees issued at the time concerning the creation
+of a separate civil administration, a stipulation that the Reich
+Minister of the Interior was designated the central agency, and from
+this formulation the Prosecution has deduced a responsibility of the
+Defendant Frick for the administration of all the territories, as is
+Stated in the Indictment.
+
+The actual tasks of the central agency can be seen from the order
+concerning the establishment of a central agency for Norway—Document
+3082-PS, or Number 24 in the Frick document book. The witness Dr.
+Lammers has given a further explanation of the tasks. At that time it
+was the primary task of the central agency to put personnel at the
+disposal of the chiefs of the civil administrations in the occupied
+territories on request. Therefore, if a civil official was needed for
+any district, the administration of the district concerned applied to
+the central agency in the Reich Ministry of the Interior, which then put
+some official from the Reich at the disposal of the chief of the civil
+administration. The Reich Ministry of the Interior was especially fitted
+for this, as it had at its disposal numerous officials of the domestic
+administration in Germany.
+
+But the transfer of an official from his own department to another
+office, which will alone give orders to that official from that moment
+on, does not establish responsibility for the further activity of that
+official in his new department, to whom the Reich Ministry of the
+Interior could issue no orders whatsoever. To take as an example: If the
+Minister of Justice transfers one of his officials to the Foreign
+Minister, naturally only the Foreign Minister is responsible for the
+further activity of this official. This activity of the central agency
+therefore does not justify the assumption of responsibility by Frick for
+the administration of the occupied territories.
+
+The requisitioning of officials for the occupied territories was
+concentrated in the Reich Ministry of the Interior. That is, as the
+examination of the witness Lammers indicated—and I quote from the
+above-mentioned Document 3082-PS—“the unified co-operation adapted to
+the needs of Norway, of the supreme Reich authorities with one another
+and with the Reich Commissioner.”
+
+In like manner, the hearing of evidence for the Defendants Rosenberg,
+Frank, and Seyss-Inquart, who functioned as chiefs of civil
+administrations in the occupied territories, has on no occasion revealed
+any co-operation of any kind with the Defendant Frick either in his
+capacity of Reich Minister of the Interior or Director of the Central
+Agency in this Ministry.
+
+Now, the Prosecution has referred to several documents in order to prove
+that the Defendant Frick exercised extensive control over all occupied
+territories. Actually, however, those documents do not reveal an
+administrative activity of any greater extent than I have just stated.
+Document 3304-PS gives proof of an administrative activity for the
+incorporated Eastern Territories. This coincides with my statement that
+the incorporated Eastern Territories, in their internal administration,
+were subject to the Reich Ministry of the Interior by virtue of their
+constitutional incorporation into the German Reich. The document,
+however, bears no reference to the administration of the Occupied
+Eastern Territories, that is, the Government General or to the occupied
+Soviet Russian territories.
+
+The other document submitted, 1039-PS, Exhibit Number USA-146, proves
+the transfer of administrative personnel from the department of the
+Reich Ministry of the Interior to the Reich Minister for the Occupied
+Eastern Territories, a typical task of the Central Agency which I have
+already discussed. The Prosecution has submitted further documents which
+reveal that the Reich Ministry of the Interior had a hand in the
+bestowal of German citizenship. Even this does not, however, prove any
+administrative authority of the Defendant Frick for the occupied
+territories, but merely a typical activity of a Minister of the Interior
+whose department is competent for the general regulations concerning
+German citizenship, including cases where persons living outside the
+Reich territory are involved. This activity of the Minister of the
+Interior can also furnish no proof of an extensive administrative policy
+and a general responsibility of the Defendant Frick for the
+administration of the occupied territories. In particular, in the
+occupied territories which were not incorporated into the Reich
+territory, Frick had no authority or competence whatsoever as far as the
+tasks of the Police were concerned.
+
+Hitler directly commissioned Himmler to carry out police work in the
+occupied territories—see Document 1997-PS, Exhibit Number USA-319,
+Hitler’s decree concerning police security measures for the Eastern
+Territories, for which Himmler was directly responsible. The same is
+revealed by Document 447-PS, Exhibit Number USA-315, a directive of the
+OKW dated 13 March 1941, to the effect that the Reichsführer SS in the
+Occupied Eastern Territories is charged with special duties in the
+execution of which he will act independently and on his own
+responsibility. The same applies to the police tasks in the other
+occupied territories, which were assigned either to the Reichsführer SS
+Himmler or to the SS and police leaders who took their orders only from
+Himmler, although in many cases they were ostensibly assigned to the
+civil administrative chief in question, such as for example the Governor
+General in Poland (see excerpt from Frank’s diary in the Frick document
+book under Number 25, also USSR-223). In no case, therefore, were police
+tasks in the occupied territories under the Defendant Frick’s
+jurisdiction. Consequently, the Defendant Frick bears no responsibility
+for crimes against the laws of war and against humanity in the occupied
+territories, since in these territories he could neither order crimes
+nor prevent them.
+
+Concerning the territory of the German Reich I must now examine the
+claim of the Prosecution as to the responsibility of the Defendant Frick
+for all the police measures, including the Gestapo, as well as for the
+establishment and administration of concentration camps. May I first
+refer to the documents submitted by me in evidence, which reveal that
+the Police, including the political police, was in 1933 still the
+concern of the individual states within the Reich, such as Prussia,
+Bavaria, _et cetera_.
+
+In Prussia, the Secret State Police (Gestapo) and the concentration
+camps were established and administered by Göring in his capacity as
+Prussian Minister of the Interior. The tasks of the political police
+were then transferred by a Prussian law, dated 30 November 1933, to the
+office of the Prussian Prime Minister, which was also administered by
+Göring. So when the offices of the Reich and the Prussian Minister of
+the Interior were merged, in the spring of 1934, Frick did not assume
+the tasks of the political police which still remained incumbent upon
+Göring in his capacity as Prime Minister.
+
+A similar regulation prevailed in the other states, where Himmler was
+gradually given the duties of special deputy for the political police.
+During this period, the Reich Minister of the Interior had only the
+right of so-called “Reich supervision” over the states, which Frick made
+use of for the enactment of general instructions and legal ordinances;
+and this is the only point where Frick, as Minister of the Reich, could
+exercise any influence on the affairs of the political police and
+concentration camps.
+
+Frick made use of this possibility, in accordance with his basic
+attitude as confirmed by the witness Gisevius, to prevent and repress
+arbitrary actions by the political police as far as was in his power in
+the circumstances then prevailing. He endeavored, by the enactment of
+provisions of law and procedure, to restrict the arbitrary practices of
+the political police in the states.
+
+I refer to Document 779-PS, submitted by me as Exhibit Number Frick-6.
+This is a decree dated 12 April 1934, containing restrictive provisions
+of this sort under a significant preamble—which I quote: “In order to
+remedy abuses occurring in the infliction of protective custody.” This
+is followed by directives to the governments of the states forbidding
+the application of preventive custody in numerous cases where it had
+previously been improperly ordered by the Gestapo. In this struggle of
+Frick against arbitrary actions by the political police in the states,
+the police had, it is true, ultimately come out better because they were
+under the direction of Göring and Himmler, with whom the “bureaucrat”
+Frick—as Hitler disdainfully called him—could not compare as regards
+influence in the Party and State. For that reason the political police
+in the states in practice frequently disregarded Frick’s ordinances. But
+Frick did not stand by idly as long as there was reason to hope that
+through his intervention the unrestrained practices of the political
+police in the states could be directed into orderly and legally
+regulated channels. I refer to Document 775-PS, Exhibit Number Frick-9,
+a memorandum from Frick to Hitler which clearly and unequivocally calls
+a spade a spade, mentioning legal insecurity, unrest, and embitterment,
+and severely criticizing individual cases of misuse of the right to
+order protective custody by the political police of the states. Here I
+would insert that the same document also proves that in the struggle
+over the churches, the defendant clearly took their side. This is also
+proved by Exhibit Number Neurath-1.
+
+In his testimony the witness Gisevius refers to an additional memorandum
+which he himself drew up for Frick as a further attempt to restrain
+through severe criticism and by suggestions for legal control the
+arbitrary practices of the political police in the states. All of these
+attempts failed because Frick’s political influence was too
+insignificant and he could not assert himself against Göring and
+Himmler, and because at the time Frick himself could not yet see that
+the practices of Göring and Himmler were essentially in harmony with
+what Hitler actually wanted himself. Thus the documents submitted by the
+Prosecution, taken in conjunction with the evidence offered by the
+Defense, show that in the domain of the political police and in ordering
+protective custody, Frick had a certain competency at a time when the
+police was still a service administered by the individual states. This
+evidence also shows that during that time Frick’s jurisdiction was very
+limited and it further shows that Frick, acting within the bounds of his
+competency, took action solely in order to intervene against the terror
+and arbitrary actions of the Gestapo through general instructions and
+through repeated complaints in individual cases, so that the conclusion
+is not justified that Frick in any way actively participated in the
+Gestapo’s measures of terror and violence.
+
+At a later period the legal situation changed. With Hitler’s decree of
+17 June 1936—Document 2073-PS, Document Book Frick Number 35—police
+tasks for the entire Reich were combined and uniformly transferred to
+Himmler, whose department was formally made a part of the Ministry of
+the Interior under the title “Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German
+Police in the Reich Ministry of the Interior.”
+
+The question now is whether this new regulation conferred on Frick, in
+his capacity as Reich Minister of the Interior, any authority of command
+or any right to issue instructions which could be enforced with regard
+to the political police, its offices and its functionaries. When
+Himmler, in accordance with his own wish, which he could gratify because
+of his influence on Hitler, was appointed Police Chief for the entire
+Reich, there did not exist in Germany a police or security ministry,
+properly speaking.
+
+This is the reason why the uniform direction of the police through
+Himmler in person was formally attached to the Reich Ministry of the
+Interior. But Himmler wanted to be more than a department chief in the
+Ministry of the Interior. Therefore a position entirely novel in German
+administrative law was created for him and his purposes. The entire
+sphere of the police was separated from the rest of the activities of
+the Ministry of the Interior and placed under Himmler’s special
+jurisdiction under a newly created title of office which, as a
+government office, contained the words “Reichsführer SS,” thereby making
+it possible for Himmler to carry out political police tasks under a
+title of office characterizing him as Reichsführer SS and in that
+capacity giving him independence from any instructions issued by a
+minister of state.
+
+In order to accentuate further the independence of his office within the
+bureaucratic hierarchy as well, Himmler was given the additional right
+from the very beginning to represent police matters before the Cabinet
+independently and on his own responsibility, like any Reich minister;
+this is also shown in the decree concerning his appointment, Document
+2073-PS. This decree is a typical example of the overlapping of
+competencies which Hitler favored to excess in his government system.
+Himmler became part of the Ministry of the Interior and, as an official
+of the Ministry of the Interior, was formally bound to abide by
+instructions of the Minister. However, he was also an independent Chief
+of Police with the right to represent before the Cabinet on his own
+responsibility matters pertaining to the Police, thus excluding Frick in
+that respect. In addition to that, his orders simultaneously carried the
+authority of the Reichsführer SS, in which Frick had no authority at all
+to interfere.
+
+In actual effect this involved arrangement also enhanced the tremendous
+influence of Himmler on Hitler. In keeping with his convictions, and to
+safeguard a well-ordered state apparatus, Frick repeatedly tried to
+intervene through general instructions intended to restrain the
+arbitrary acts of the political police. As late as 25 January 1938 he
+tried through a decree to curtail the admissibility of protective
+custody and he forbade it in a number of cases of improper application.
+I refer to Document 1723-PS, Exhibit Number USA-206, an extract of which
+under Number 36 appears in the Frick document book. He prohibited
+protective custody in lieu of, or cumulative to, a legal penalty,
+forbade its application by police authorities of the intermediate or
+subordinate levels, and gave orders that the accused should be heard
+before arrest. He decreed periodical examination of the reasons for the
+continuance of confinement and on principle forbade the protective
+custody of foreigners, whom the Police had authority only to expel from
+the Reich in case of acts endangering the State.
+
+An obvious argument is that the Gestapo in practice disregarded all
+these instructions of Frick and that Himmler and his subordinates
+maintained an absolute reign of terror and violence. This is correct and
+has been confirmed in detail by the witness Gisevius. But something else
+appears of importance to me in the defense of Frick: To show that Frick
+himself disapproved of such arbitrary acts and that he tried to do all
+in his power to prevent them. Finally, however, Hitler forbade even
+this. He informed him through Lammers—as confirmed by the latter as
+witness—that he was not to concern himself with police matters, that
+Himmler could manage that better by himself and that the Police was
+doing well under Himmler.
+
+Thus Himmler finally got complete control of the Police, and he gave
+outward expression to this by later dropping, with Hitler’s consent,
+from his official title, the words “in the Reich Ministry of the
+Interior,” simply referring to himself as “Reichsführer SS and Chief of
+the German Police,” which is also shown in the testimony of the witness
+Lammers.
+
+I believe that, in view of the circumstances, the problem of the
+Defendant Frick’s criminal responsibility for the political police and
+their arbitrary measures is not established by the fact that the entire
+Police was formally incorporated in the Reich Ministry of the Interior
+after the year 1936, since it has been proved! that Frick himself did
+not participate in arbitrary acts, but on the contrary tried again and
+again to intervene against such arbitrary practice with all the power he
+possessed, which however was no match for the personality of Himmler and
+his influence with Hitler.
+
+In order to insure fair judgment, I request that the actual situation as
+to power of command and authority, and not the purely superficial
+circumstances of a formal incorporation of the tasks involved in the
+Reich Ministry of the Interior, be taken into account.
+
+I insert the following here: The Prosecution, during their presentation
+on 3 July 1946, submitted Document D-181, Exhibit GB-528, and stated in
+connection with that document that it proved that the political police
+were not only formally incorporated in the Ministry of the Interior, but
+that Frick was in fact responsible for the measures of the Police.
+Actually the document shows only that Frick as Minister of the Interior
+was officially contacted in the matter of the sterilization of those
+suffering from so-called hereditary diseases. The document has nothing
+to do with any measures of the Police, least of all with any measures of
+the political police. Moreover there is no information in it regarding
+Himmler’s position in the Ministry of the Interior.
+
+Now I will continue with my plea: In this connection, I must briefly
+deal with the reference of the Prosecution to the fact that Hitler’s
+decree concerning the appointment of Himmler as Chief of the German
+Police—Document 2073-PS—had been countersigned by Frick himself.
+
+I believe that the relationship between Frick and Himmler, as well as
+their divergent relations to Hitler, are sufficiently clear to justify
+the conclusion that the appointment of Himmler simply amounted to an
+agreement between Hitler and Himmler, to which Frick would have objected
+in vain. We are confronted with the same problem which applies to so
+many defendants, namely, that of the formal countersigning of an order
+issued by Hitler, which was then signed as a matter of form by the head
+of a department, although that department head had no influence on the
+order and could not have prevented it, especially as it would have had
+full constitutional effect as a Führer decree without the minister’s
+additional signature.
+
+I now have to deal with several documents which the Prosecution consider
+to have a bearing on actual activity by the Defendant Frick within the
+sphere of tasks of the political police. I have already dealt with
+Document 3304-PS, to which the Prosecution referred in this connection.
+It concerns an ordinance on the assignment of a Higher Police Leader to
+the Reichsstatthalter (Reich Governor) in the Eastern territories which
+were incorporated into the commonwealth of the German Reich, and hence
+deals with the administrative organization of the Reich Governor’s
+office in a part of the Reich. This decree therefore falls within the
+scope of the general competence of the Ministry of the Interior, and
+accordingly does not furnish proof of any specific police activity.
+Moreover, this decree has nothing to do with any arbitrary acts of the
+Gestapo.
+
+On the same lines in the decree of 20 September 1936—Document
+2245-PS—concerning the appointment of police experts in the Prussian
+provincial administrations, which were also subordinate to the Reich
+Ministry of the Interior as offices of the general internal Reich
+administration, the assignment of a police expert to the office of
+general administration in the province is a measure of internal Reich
+administration. This measure, too, had no connection with arbitrary acts
+of the Gestapo, and more particularly it does not prove that the
+defendant issued any instructions to the Gestapo.
+
+The situation is no different with respect to the documents which have
+been appraised by the Prosecution as demonstrating the participation of
+the defendant in the establishment and administration of concentration
+camps, or as a sign of approval of terror methods used by the Gestapo.
+In their statement of 22 November 1945, the Prosecution referred to
+Document 2533-PS as proof of the approval of these arrangements by the
+Defendant Frick. I need not go further into the contents of the
+document; it represents an article by the Defendant Frank in the journal
+of the Academy of German Law, of which Frick has erroneously been called
+the author by the Prosecution.
+
+A further document does not, in the opinion of the Defense, contain
+sufficient evidentiary value to be utilized in giving legal judgment. I
+have in mind Document 2513-PS, Exhibit Number 235, which contains an
+excerpt from a speech which Frick allegedly made in the year 1927. But
+the excerpt is taken from a provincial Social Democrat newspaper, a
+small paper opposed to Frick, the reporter thus having no authentic copy
+of the speech at his disposal—and we all know what mistakes and
+misunderstandings are apt to be contained in such short reports, the
+wording of which cannot be checked by the speaker himself. Thus this
+document, according to which Frick is said to have stated that history
+is written not only with the ballot, but with blood and iron, is not a
+reliable source.
+
+The Prosecution refers to dealings concerning the expropriation of land
+in order to extend the grounds of the Auschwitz Concentration Camp. The
+general domestic administration is competent for expropriation matters,
+and for this reason an official from the Ministry of the Interior was
+called into negotiations, who stated, however—Page 2 of the English
+translation of the document—that he was not authorized to dispose of
+the freehold of the land. Thus one cannot from this document either
+construe any political police activity on the part of the defendant, or
+an approval of the concentration camp system. Finally, in this
+connection the Prosecution states that the Defendant Frick personally
+visited the Oranienburg and Dachau Concentration Camps. The defendant
+does not deny the visit to Oranienburg in 1938, about which witness
+Hoess testified. At that time, as witness Hoess himself testified, the
+outward aspect of the camps was still generally that of a military
+training area. In any case, an official visitor to a camp at that time
+could not observe any indication of murder, ill-treatment, or similar
+crimes, so that such a visit is not a decisive argument for knowledge of
+crimes in the concentration camps.
+
+On the other hand, Frick never visited the Dachau Concentration Camp,
+contrary to the testimony of the witness Blaha. I refer to the testimony
+of Gillhuber in regard to this, who as the constant companion of Frick
+must have known about such a visit if it had taken place. I take the
+liberty of pointing out that the two other constant companions of Frick
+were also named by me as witnesses, but in agreement with the
+Prosecution were considered by the Tribunal as unnecessary on the
+grounds that one of the companions would be sufficient as a witness.
+
+Before concluding this chapter, I still have to go into the matter of an
+allusion made by the Prosecution which described Frick at one time as
+the Chief of the Reich Security Main Office. I beg to refer to the
+testimony of the witness Ohlendorf, who stated to the Court that the
+Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) was a creation of Himmler, who
+combined in this office his state police tasks and his functions as
+Reichsführer SS, with which Frick had no connection of any kind, much
+less any powers of command. The sole chief of this office was thus
+Himmler himself.
+
+I must go further into the charges which are made against the Defendant
+Frick with respect to the persecution of members of the Jewish race.
+Frick did collaborate in legal measures, particularly the Nuremberg
+Laws, and in administrative measures which he regarded as an expression
+of a National Socialist racial policy. On the other hand there is no
+proof that Frick himself shared in or knew of the measures of physical
+extermination which, on Hitler’s direct orders, were carried out by
+Himmler and his organizations and kept absolutely secret from those who
+themselves had no part in these frightful events. Further, in his
+capacity as Minister of the Interior, the defendant is also accused of
+collaboration in the killing of the sick and insane. Hitler’s basic
+order is contained in Document 630-PS, Exhibit Number USA-342. This
+document shows that Hitler did not give an order for this to any
+government office but to two separate individuals, namely, Bouhler and
+Dr. Brandt, so that this was quite outside the ministries’ authority.
+Moreover, contrary to all rules, Hitler did not sign this order himself
+in an official capacity as Führer and Reich Chancellor, but used private
+stationery with the heading “Adolf Hitler.” This shows, a fact that the
+witness Lammers has confirmed, that Hitler did not give an order for
+these measures to the Ministry of the Interior or some other government
+office, but to two of his Party comrades, and the Party emblem is the
+only sign on this stationery. On the other hand, the documents submitted
+by the Prosecution prove that complaints were made which also reached
+the Ministry of the Interior, but they do not prove that, in
+contradiction to Document 630-PS, Frick personally was contacted on the
+subject of measures for the killings, or that he could have prevented
+them.
+
+After his dismissal as Minister of the Interior on 20 August 1943 Frick
+was appointed Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia. Here he was given
+a task which from the start was definitely limited in its competence.
+
+I refer to Document 3443-PS, which is also included as USSR-60 and under
+Number 29 in the Frick document book, and to 1366-PS, submitted by me as
+Exhibit Number Frick-5a. Furthermore, I refer to the testimony of the
+witness Lammers. The office of the Reich Protector was originally the
+unified representation of Reich authority in the Protectorate. In actual
+practice, however, its authority passed more and more to Frank, the
+Reich Protector’s State Secretary at that time.
+
+With the appointment of Frick in August 1943 through a Führer decree
+which was not made public, the executive authority was now formally
+transferred to Frank, who from that date received the official title of
+“The German Minister of State in Bohemia and Moravia.” From that time on
+the Reich Protector retained essentially the right of representation and
+the right of pardon, improper use of which by Frick has been neither
+maintained nor proved by the Prosecution. On the other hand Frank, as
+“German Minister of State” according to the above-mentioned Führer
+decree, derived his executive authority directly from Hitler by whom he
+had been directly appointed, and from whom he received his instructions
+without Frick’s interpolation, Frick being in no way competent to
+exercise any influence thereon. Considering this state of affairs, the
+Defendant Frick cannot be incriminated by Document 3589-PS, Exhibit
+Number USA-720.
+
+I now come to the Prosecution’s charge that Frick, by his membership in
+certain organizations, is responsible for certain criminal actions. The
+SS was one of these organizations mentioned by the Prosecution, to
+which, however, Frick never belonged. Thus he was never a general in the
+SS, as stated by the Prosecution. I would assume this to be merely an
+error on the part of the Prosecution. In any case, the Prosecution did
+not submit any form of proof. Frick was likewise never a member of the
+SA, as shown—probably by mistake—in the chart indicating the
+defendants’ membership in various organizations. For this too, there is
+no proof.
+
+The Prosecution has further charged Frick with being the supreme head of
+the Gestapo, and therefore designated him as a member of this
+organization, with the argument that since the appointment of Himmler in
+1936 as Chief of the German Police the Gestapo has been formally
+incorporated into the Reich Ministry of the Interior. But the Gestapo
+had its own chief in the person of Himmler, from whom alone it took
+orders, and Himmler’s formal subordination to the Minister of the
+Interior does not make the latter a member of that organization, which
+was exclusively under Himmler’s orders.
+
+The Defendant Frick is further charged, in his capacity as Reichsleiter,
+with membership in the Political Leadership Corps. My colleague, charged
+with the defense of this organization, will in his turn deal with the
+character of this organization. As to the Defendant Frick, I have only
+to point out that he held the formal position of a Reichsleiter in his
+role as chairman of the Reichstag faction of the NSDAP. The Reichstag
+itself having lost all political importance after 1933, which requires
+no further explanation, this position of Frick’s was in practice equally
+unimportant and could not be compared with the position of a
+Reichsleiter who administered important political departments.
+
+Finally Frick, as Reich Minister, was a member of the Reich Cabinet.
+With regard to the character and the authority of this organization I
+also refer first of all to the statements, which are yet to follow, of
+my colleague who has been appointed defense counsel for this
+organization.
+
+I refer here only to the testimony of Lammers and Gisevius, and further
+to the excerpt from the book of this latter witness, which I have
+submitted as Exhibit Number Frick-13 as evidence of the position and
+authority which the Reich Cabinet had with respect to the dictatorial
+practices of Hitler. From all this, the Defendant Frick appears as a
+person who certainly took action politically to bring Hitler to power,
+and who temporarily exercised a decisive influence on internal policy
+after his goal had been achieved. All his measures, however, had inner
+political aims; they were not intended to have anything to do with the
+foreign political aims of a war of aggression, much less with Crimes
+against Peace or against the rules of warfare—and, as also specified by
+Article 6 of the Charter, only in such cases would this Court have
+jurisdiction, as stated by the Prosecution itself.
+
+When Frick realized later that the policy was taking a course of which
+he could no longer approve, he tried to exert all his influence to bring
+about a change. But he had perforce to find out more and more clearly
+that Hitler would not listen to his remonstrances and complaints. On the
+contrary, he was forced to realize that these complaints destroyed
+Hitler’s confidence in him, and that he preferred to be advised by
+Himmler and similarly minded persons, so that finally, after the year
+1937, Frick was no longer received by Hitler when he wanted to present
+complaints. Frick then gave up such hopeless attempts to bring about a
+change in the situation. Things would not have been altered by his
+resignation either, which the evidence has shown he repeatedly tendered
+in vain. Thus his tragedy lies in his entanglement in a system, in the
+first steps of which he had participated enthusiastically and the
+development of which he had imagined would be quite different. In any
+case, it appears important to me, in judging his personality and his
+actions, that even this presentation of evidence, which has gone on for
+months, has not given any proof of the personal participation of the
+defendant in any crime.
+
+It is not without reason that John Gunther in his book _Inside Europe_,
+which I have presented to the Tribunal as evidence, describes precisely
+the Defendant Frick as “the only honest Nazi.” At the same place Gunther
+goes on to call him a “bureaucrat through and through.” Hitler himself
+kept calling him the “pen pusher” (“Paragraphenschuster”) because
+Frick—which was typical of him—did not become acquainted with him at
+some public meeting, but in his office in the police department in
+Munich in the year 1923.
+
+This man felt enthusiasm for Hitler’s suggestive power, so lacking in
+himself, a Hitler who with big words appealed to his heart, his honor,
+and his patriotism. It was Hitler who made him proud of being able to
+participate in the reconstruction of a German nation which, through
+powerful armed forces, was to be in a position to play a peaceful yet
+active role in world politics.
+
+And it was again Hitler who knew how to make his program appear to the
+bourgeois official Frick as the only way to forestall Bolshevik rule in
+Germany—this and many more superficial truths, twisted statements, and
+devices of propaganda which fooled so many people who fell for the
+suggestive power of Hitler, not realizing in time that they had
+subordinated themselves to the hypnotic will of a criminal, who was
+prepared to overthrow the pillars of civilization for his aims and who
+finally would leave Germany a monstrous spiritual and material field of
+rubble, for the removal of which I pray that this Trial may also
+contribute through a sentence in accordance with law and justice.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Marx.
+
+DR. HANNS MARX (Counsel for Defendant Streicher): Gentlemen of the
+Tribunal, Mr. President.
+
+I begin the speech for the defense of Julius Streicher.
+
+When in May of the past year the final battles of the greatest and most
+horrible war of all time came to an end, the Germans were slow to rise
+again from the stupor in which they had, for the most part, spent the
+last months of the war. Like all the peoples of Europe they had suffered
+unspeakably for years. The last months in particular, with their hail of
+bombs, had brought so much misery to both the country and the people
+that it almost surpassed human endurance. This terror was increased by
+the knowledge that the war was lost, and by the fear of the uncertain
+fate which the occupation period would bring. And when finally the
+period of first anxiety had passed, when the German people were slowly
+beginning to breathe again, paralyzing horror spread once more.
+
+Through the press and radio, through newspapers and motion pictures,
+knowledge was spread of the atrocities which had taken place in the
+East, on the steppes and in the concentration camps. Germany learned
+that people, men of its own blood, had slaughtered millions upon
+millions of innocent Jewish people. Most people felt instinctively that
+these deeds would necessarily be the greatest of all the accusations the
+world had to level against Germany.
+
+The question of whether the German people in its totality had known and
+approved of these actions was, and is, the truly fateful question. It is
+the touchstone by which the decision must be made as to whether or not
+Germany will ever be able to return again as a nation with equal rights
+into the common cultural and spiritual sphere of the world. As in every
+case of guilt, there immediately arose here also the question as to who
+was responsible, and the search for that individual. Who had ordered
+these atrocities, who had carried them out, and how could such
+inconceivable things have happened at all, the like of which cannot be
+found in history even in the earliest days?
+
+During all this asking and guessing, the news arrived that the former
+Gauleiter of Franconia and publisher of Der Stürmer, the present
+Defendant Julius Streicher, had fallen into the hands of the American
+troops. From the echo this news aroused in the press, which was
+exclusively directed and published by the occupying power, as well as in
+the radio news, it was to be gathered that the world was of the opinion
+that in the person of Julius Streicher not only had one of the numerous
+anti-Semitic propaganda agents of the Third Reich been taken prisoner,
+but in short Enemy Number One of the Jews.
+
+Throughout the rest of the world the opinion evidently prevailed that in
+the person of Julius Streicher not only the most active propaganda agent
+for the persecution and extermination of the Jews had been seized, but
+that he had also participated to the highest degree in carrying out
+these acts of extermination. He was said to have been, as one heard, not
+only the greatest hater of the Jews and the greatest preacher of
+extermination of the Jews, but also the person to whose direct influence
+one could trace back the extermination of European Jewry.
+
+It is only from this angle that it can be explained why the Defendant
+Streicher should sit here in the dock, together with the other
+defendants, among those chiefly responsible for the National Socialist
+system. For neither by virtue of his personality nor measured by his
+offices and positions does he belong to the circle of leaders of the
+NSDAP or to the Party’s decisive personalities. This view was probably
+also held in the beginning by the Prosecution, but was abandoned by them
+at an early stage, for the written Indictment already no longer charged
+the Defendant Streicher with any personal and direct part in the
+abominable mass murders. Rather did it state that there was less guilt
+with which he would be charged than in the case of any of the other
+defendants; only his propaganda, his activities by the written and
+spoken word, were made the subject of the accusation against him.
+
+As far as particulars are concerned, the Counts of the Indictment
+against the Defendant Streicher were summed up as follows:
+
+I. Support of seizure of power and consolidation of power of the NSDAP
+after the latter’s entry into the Government.
+
+II. Preparation of aggressive wars by propaganda aimed at the
+persecution of the Jews.
+
+III. Intellectual and spiritual preparation and education to encourage
+hatred against the Jews,
+
+(a) in the German people,
+
+(b) in the German youth, and
+
+(c) in the active extermination of Jewry.
+
+Without Julius Streicher, no Auschwitz, no Mauthausen, no Maidanek, no
+Lublin—thus the Indictment may be summed up briefly.
+
+As far as Count One of the Indictment is concerned, the defendant does
+not deny that as regards the Party’s later seizure of power he supported
+and promoted it with all his might from its earliest inception. His
+support went to the extent of placing a whole movement which he had
+built up personally in Franconia at the disposal of Adolf Hitler’s Party
+which was small after the first World War, as one can imagine, and
+limited to southern Bavaria only. Furthermore, after Hitler’s release
+from the fortress of Landsberg, he immediately joined him again and
+subsequently championed his ideas and goals with the greatest
+determination.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I think this is a good time to break off. The Tribunal
+will adjourn.
+
+ [_The Tribunal adjourned until 12 July 1946 at 1000 hours._]
+
+ NOTES
+
+-----
+
+[1] Proceeding from this interpretation of the Charter there arises the
+need for a discussion on how the Indictment is to be construed with
+respect to the conspiracy charged therein. This construction is based on
+the legal concept of Anglo-American law which determines the
+responsibility of a plurality of persons differently and in a more
+far-reaching way than the German penal code, which contains the
+principles of law to which the accused were subject at the time when
+they committed the deed. The German penal code also provides that a
+person can be held responsible for offenses committed by others provided
+he participated in a common plan which was later carried out by others.
+But the German penal code places decisive weight on determining the
+extent to which the acts committed at a latter date correspond to the
+common plan. Since in the serious crimes which are being prosecuted
+before this Court the determination of the form of guilt in the original
+plan is necessary in order to permit punishment, later acts of
+commission by others can be charged against a defendant only to the
+extent to which they corresponded to arrangements to which the defendant
+deliberately agreed. A defendant who participated in certain plans
+cannot be held responsible for subsequent plans of a wider scope, or for
+acts of commission which far exceeded the original plans without his
+co-operation.
+
+Responsibility for subsequent plans and acts of commission can be
+established according to German law only if it can be proved that the
+defendant, without participating in those subsequent plans and actions,
+at the time of his original participation recognized and approved this
+manner of development and execution and, in other words, deliberately
+encouraged it.
+
+To revert to the example of the Prosecution:
+
+He who participates’ in the plan for robbing a bank is responsible if
+this plan is carried out, even though he does not personally participate
+in the execution. But a person does not at the same time become guilty
+of premeditated murder if the active members subsequently and without
+his participation discuss murdering the guard or in case one of the
+members should shoot one of the guards without prior agreement, because
+the latter has caught him in the act.
+
+Nobody can be convicted of premeditated murder if he did not participate
+in a plan to commit murder, unless it can be proved that when he
+participated in the plan for robbing the bank such killing of a guard
+was already contemplated and that in spite of this he approved the plan
+for the bank robbery. In that case he, too, would have deliberately
+contributed to the murder. In other words, according to the provisions
+of German substantive criminal law there does not exist a liability for
+so-called excesses of the immediate culprits or for an unforeseen
+development of plans not originally conceived on such a wide scope, so
+that a more far-reaching interpretation in line with the concept of
+conspiracy in Anglo-American law, which at the time when the accused
+committed their deed did not exist, would violate the principle which
+prohibits retroactive application of penal laws.
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED
+ AND SEVENTY-SEVENTH DAY
+ Friday, 12 July 1946
+
+
+ _Morning Session_
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn today at 4 o’clock.
+
+DR. MARX: Mr. President, with the permission of the Tribunal I shall now
+continue with the presentation of the final plea for the Defendant
+Streicher. Yesterday I had come to the point where the individual
+accusations against Streicher had been summarized, and I had taken
+liberty of explaining that these accusations are subdivided into three
+different paragraphs:
+
+1. Support of seizure of power and consolidation of the power of the
+NSDAP after its entry into the Government.
+
+2. Preparation of aggressive wars by propaganda aimed at the persecution
+of the Jews.
+
+3. Intellectual and spiritual preparation and education of the German
+people and German youth to effect the destruction of Jewry and to
+encourage hatred of the Jews.
+
+With respect to Count One of the Indictment, the defendant does not deny
+that, with regard to the Party’s later seizure of power, he supported
+and promoted it with all his might from the very beginning. His support
+went to the extent of a whole movement which he had built up personally
+in Franconia and which he put at the disposal of Adolf Hitler’s Party,
+which was quite small after the first World War and limited to Southern
+Bavaria only. Furthermore, after Hitler’s release from the fortress of
+Landsberg he immediately joined him again and subsequently championed
+his ideas and aims with the greatest determination.
+
+Until 1933 the defendant’s activity was limited to propaganda for the
+NSDAP and its aims, particularly in the field of the Jewish question.
+Nothing criminal can be seen in this attitude of the defendant as such.
+Participation in a party within a state which allows such an opposition
+party can be regarded as criminal only if, first of all, the aims of
+such a party are objectively criminal and if, subjectively, a member of
+such a movement knows, approves of, and thereby supports, these criminal
+aims.
+
+The foundation of the entire charges against all the defendants lies in
+this very fact that the NSDAP is accused of having had criminal aims
+from the very beginning. According to the assertion of the Prosecution,
+the members of this Party started out with the plan of subjugating the
+world, of annihilating foreign races, and of setting the German master
+race above the whole world. They are accused of having harbored the will
+to carry out these aims and plans from the very outset by means of
+aggressive wars, murder, and violence. If, therefore, the Defendant
+Streicher’s mere participation in the NSDAP and his support of it are to
+be ascribed to him as a crime, it must be proved that the Party had such
+plans and that the defendant knew and approved of them.
+
+The gentlemen who spoke before me have already demonstrated sufficiently
+that a conspiracy with such aims did not exist. Therefore I can save
+myself the trouble of making further statements on this subject and I
+can refer to what has already been set forth by the other defense
+counsel. I have only to deal with the point that the Defendant Streicher
+did not in any case participate in such a conspiracy, if the latter
+should be considered by the High Tribunal to have existed.
+
+The official Party Program strove to attain power in a legitimate way.
+The aims advocated therein cannot be considered as criminal. Thus, if
+such aims did actually exist, they could only—by the very nature of a
+conspiracy—be known in a restricted circle.
+
+The Party Program was not kept secret but was announced at a public
+meeting in Munich, so that not only the whole public of Germany but also
+that of the entire world could be informed about the aims of the Party.
+Therefore that element supplied by secret agreement towards a common
+aim, which is usually the characteristic sign of a conspiracy, is not
+present.
+
+The evidence too, has shown nothing to the effect that already at that
+time there existed a plan for a war of revenge or aggression connected
+with the previous or simultaneous extermination of the Jews. If,
+nevertheless, a conspiracy should have existed, the latter would have
+confined itself to the restricted circle which revolved exclusively
+around Hitler. But the Defendant Streicher did not belong to that
+circle. None of the offices he occupied provides the least proof of
+that. As an old Party member he was just one among many thousands. As
+honorary Gauleiter, as honorary SA Obergruppenführer, he was also only
+an equal among equals. Thus one cannot find in any of the offices he
+held any connection or complicity with the innermost circle of the
+Party. It is also impossible to discern after the end of 1938 any
+personal relations with the leading men of the Movement, either with
+Hitler himself or with the Defendant Göring, or with Goebbels, Himmler,
+or Bormann.
+
+The Prosecution did not offer any evidence on this point, nor did the
+proceedings produce any proof to that effect. Of all the material
+presented during all these months of the Trial, nothing can be taken as
+even a shadow of proof that the Defendant Streicher was so closely
+connected with the supreme authority of the Party that he could have, or
+even must have, known its ultimate aims.
+
+In the Jewish question too the final aims of the Party—the effects of
+which were manifest in the concentration camps—were not, before the
+seizure of power and for several years after, formulated and determined
+as they appeared in the end. The Party Program itself provided for Jews
+to be placed under aliens’ law, and so the laws issued in the Third
+Reich followed this line. Only later on, it may be added, the program in
+this as in many other points became more radical and finally went
+haywire altogether under the influence of the war. But any proof that
+the Defendant Streicher knew other aims than those of the official Party
+Program has not been offered. Consequently it has not been proved that
+the defendant supported the seizure of power of the Party in cognizance
+of its criminal aims; and only on such a basis could a penal charge be
+brought against him.
+
+The fact that the defendant, as Gauleiter, further endeavored to
+increase and maintain the power of the Party after the seizure of power
+is not disputed by him. But here, too, the defendant’s conduct can only
+be considered punishable if he knew at that time the objectionable aims
+of the Party. As a matter of actual fact it must be said here that the
+Defendant Streicher, in contrast to almost all the other defendants, did
+not remain in his position until the end, not even until the war.
+Officially he was dismissed in 1940 from his position of Gauleiter, but
+actually and practically he had been without any influence and power for
+more than a year before that time. But as long as he could still work
+within the modest framework of his capacity of Gauleiter, no criminal
+plans of the NSDAP were recognizable. In any case not for anybody who,
+like the Defendant Streicher, was outside the close circle surrounding
+Adolf Hitler.
+
+Count Two of the Indictment brought against the Defendant Streicher,
+namely, the persecution of Jews as a means of preparation for a war of
+aggression, can be included here. Up to 1937 the existence of a plan for
+a war of aggression was in no way recognizable. In any case, if Hitler
+had had any intentions in that direction, he did not allow them to be
+recognized from the outside. If, however, anybody had been taken into
+his confidence at that time, it would have been the leading men in
+politics and the Armed Forces, who belonged to the closest circle around
+him. To those, however, the Defendant Streicher by no means belonged. It
+is especially significant here that at the outbreak of the war Streicher
+was not even appointed Wehrkreiskommissar (Commissioner of Military
+Administrative Headquarters) of his Gau. The individual conferences from
+which the Prosecution derives the evidence for the planning of the war
+which broke out later in no case ever saw the Defendant Streicher as
+participant. His name does not appear anywhere, neither in any written
+decree, nor in any minutes. Consequently no proof has been offered that
+Streicher knew of such alleged plans for waging war. This does away with
+the accusation that he preached hatred against the Jews in order to
+facilitate thereby the conduct of the war planned for some later time.
+
+In this connection I should add that one of the main points in the
+program of the NSDAP was the slogan, “Get rid of Versailles!” The
+defendant adopted this point of the program which, however, does not
+mean he envisaged a repeal of the treaty by means of war.
+
+Even the former democratic German governments, in the course of their
+negotiations with their former opponents in the World War, stressed the
+fact at all times that the Versailles Treaty presented no proper basis
+for permanent world peace and particularly for economic adjustment. Not
+only in Germany but everywhere in the rest of the world clear-thinking
+economic circles were against the Versailles Treaty. We may point
+especially to the United States of America as an example of this.
+
+Almost all political parties in Germany, irrespective of their other
+aims, agreed that the Treaty of Versailles should be revised. Neither
+was there any difference of opinion over the fact that such revision was
+possible only on the basis of an agreement. Even to consider any other
+possibility of solution would have seemed Utopian, for the German Reich
+lacked all military power. The NSDAP also strove, at any rate as far as
+could be seen from outward signs, to find a solution to the problem in
+this way. To support such an aim, however, cannot be looked upon as a
+violation of treaty obligations and, therefore, cannot be made the
+object of a charge against the defendant. No proof has been offered that
+he thought of warlike complications or that he desired them.
+
+I now come to the matter of the defendant’s attitude in the Jewish
+question. He is accused of having incited and instigated for decades the
+persecution of the Jews and of being responsible for the final
+extermination of Europe’s Jewry. It is clear that this accusation
+constitutes the decisive point of the Indictment against Julius
+Streicher and perhaps the decisive point of the total Indictment, for in
+this connection the attitude of the German people to this question must
+be tried and judged as well. The Prosecution takes the point of view
+that there is just as little doubt as to the responsibility of the
+defendant as there is doubt about the guilt in which the German people
+are involved. As evidence of this the Prosecution put forward:
+
+(a) The speeches by Streicher before and after the seizure of power,
+particularly one speech in April 1925, in which, he spoke about the
+extermination of the Jews. Herein, in the prosecutor’s opinion, is the
+first evidence to be seen regarding the final solution of the Jewish
+question planned by the Party, namely, the extermination of all Jews.
+
+(b) Active assertion of the person and authority of the defendant,
+especially on “Boycott Day,” 1 April 1933.
+
+(c) Numerous articles published in the weekly paper, _Der Stürmer_,
+among them especially those dealing with ritual murder and with
+quotations from the Talmud. He is said to have knowingly and
+intentionally described therein the Jews as a criminal and inferior race
+and created and wished to create hatred of these people and the wish to
+exterminate them. The defendant’s reply to these points is as follows:
+
+He states that he worked merely as a private writer. His aim was to
+enlighten the German people on the Jewish question as he saw it. His
+description of the Jews was merely intended to show them as a different
+and a foreign race and to make it clear that they live according to laws
+which are alien to the German conception. It was far from his intention
+to incite or inflame his circle of listeners and readers. Moreover, he
+always only propagated the idea that the Jews, because of their alien
+character, should be removed from German national and economic life and
+withdrawn from the close association with the body of the German people.
+
+Further, he always had in mind an international solution of the Jewish
+question; he did not favor a German or even European partial solution
+and rejected it. That was why he suggested, in an editorial in _Der
+Stürmer_ in the year 1941, that the French island of Madagascar should
+be considered as a place of settlement for the Jews. Consequently, he
+did not see the final solution of the Jewish question in the physical
+extermination of the Jews but in their resettlement.
+
+It cannot be the aim of the Defense to go into further details of the
+defendant’s actions as a writer and speaker, particularly with regard to
+_Der Stürmer_ and his reply to the accusations raised against him. His
+ideology and convictions shall not be explained, excused, or defended,
+nor his manner of writing and speaking either. Examination and judgment
+in this respect rest with the Tribunal alone. This much only shall be
+said, that between the defendant’s actions and the expressions
+frequently employed by him there is an antithesis which cannot be
+bridged. It may be stated that the defendant never, when in charge of an
+anti-Jewish undertaking, had coercive measures used against the Jewish
+population, as might necessarily be expected of him if the accusations
+made by the Prosecution were true.
+
+I consider it my duty as defense counsel to broach and examine the
+question as to whether the Defendant Streicher with his speeches, his
+actions and his publications, not only strove towards the result alleged
+by the Prosecution but actually attained it. The question therefore
+should be examined as to whether Streicher actually educated the German
+people to a degree of anti-Semitism which made it possible for the
+leadership of the German nation to commit such criminal acts as actually
+occurred. Furthermore, it must be examined whether the defendant filled
+German youth with hatred against the Jews to the extent that is charged
+by the Prosecution. Finally, the question must be examined whether
+Streicher actually was the man who spiritually and morally prepared the
+executive organs for their active persecution of the Jews.
+
+At the beginning of this exposition it appears important to point out
+that a great many of _Der Stürmer_ articles, from which the Prosecution
+endeavors to deduce an incitement to stamp out and annihilate the Jews,
+were not written by Streicher himself, but by his collaborators,
+especially by the Deputy Gauleiter, Karl Holz, who was well known for
+extremely radical tendencies. Even though the Defendant Streicher bears
+formal responsibility for these articles, which responsibility he
+expressly assumed before the Tribunal, this aspect nevertheless appears
+very important for the extent of his criminal responsibility.
+
+Further it may be said in this connection that, according to the
+unrefuted statement of the defendant, the most caustic articles were
+written in reply to articles and writings in the foreign press, which
+contained very radical suggestions for the destruction of the German
+nation—also, no doubt, due to the existing war psychosis.
+
+The Defendant Streicher—and this cannot be denied and shall not be
+defended—continually wrote articles in _Der Stürmer_ and also made
+speeches in public which were strongly anti-Jewish and at least aimed at
+the elimination of Jewish influence in Germany. During the first years
+Streicher found a comparatively favorable soil for his anti-Jewish
+tendencies. The first World War ended with Germany’s defeat, but wide
+circles did not wish to admit the fact of a military victory of
+Germany’s opponents of that time. They attributed this defeat
+exclusively to a breakdown of national defense and resistance from
+within and depicted Jewry as being the main culprit for this inner
+undermining. In doing this they intentionally overlooked the mistakes
+which had been committed by the Government of that time before and
+during the war with respect to domestic and foreign policy, as well as
+the errors of strategy. A scapegoat was sought on which to lay the blame
+for the loss of the war, and it was thought to have been found in the
+Jews. Jealousy, envy, and also disregard of personal shortcomings
+accomplished the rest in influencing feelings unfavorably toward the
+Jewish population. In addition to that came the inflation and in the
+following years the economic depression with its steadily increasing
+misery which, as experience shows, makes any nation ripe for any form of
+radicalism.
+
+On this ground and in this setting _Der Stürmer_ developed. For these
+reasons it first met with a certain amount of interest and attracted a
+considerable number of readers. But even in the last years before the
+seizure of power it did not have great influence; its distribution
+hardly went beyond Nuremberg and its close vicinity. By means of attacks
+on persons known locally in Nuremberg and in other places, it managed to
+arouse in these localities, from time to time, a certain amount of
+interest and thereby to extend its circle of readers. Certain parts of
+the population were interested in the propagation of such scandal and
+for that reason subscribed to _Der Stürmer_.
+
+But criminal action can only be seen here—and this is presumably the
+opinion of the Prosecution also—if this type of literary and oral
+activity led to criminal results. Now, was the German nation really
+filled with hatred for the Jews by _Der Stürmer_ and by Streicher’s
+speeches in the sense and to the extent asserted by the Prosecution?
+
+The Prosecution submitted the evidence on this point in a very brief
+manner. It draws conclusions, but it has not produced actual proof. It
+alleges the existence of results, but cannot produce evidence for that
+assumption. The prosecutor has maintained that without Streicher’s
+incitements over a number of years the German people would not have
+sanctioned the persecution of the Jews and that Himmler would not have
+found among the German people anyone to carry out the measures for the
+extermination of the Jews. If, however, the Defendant Streicher is to be
+made legally responsible for this, then not only must it be proved that
+the incitement as such was actually carried through and results achieved
+in this direction; but—and this is the decisive point—conclusive proof
+must be produced that the deeds which were done can be traced back to
+that incitement. It is not the question of the result obtained which
+must primarily and irrefutably be proved but the causative connection
+between incitement and result. Now, how is the influence of _Der
+Stürmer_ upon the German people to be estimated, and what picture
+unfolds in the handling of the Jewish problem during the years between
+1920 and 1944?
+
+It is easy to recognize here three stages of development. The first
+period comprises the time of the defendant’s activity between 1922 and
+1933; the second that between 1933 and 1 September 1939, or February
+1940; the third, the time from 1940 to the collapse.
+
+With regard to the first period, it would show a considerable lack of
+appreciation of the tendencies which had already existed in Germany for
+a long time and thereby a completely groundless exaggeration of
+Streicher’s influence, if no mention were made of the fact that long
+before Streicher there was already a certain amount of anti-Semitism in
+Germany. For instance a certain Theodor Fritsch had touched on the
+Jewish question in his journal _Der Hammer_ long before Streicher’s
+time, referring especially to the alleged menace offered by the
+immigration of Jewish elements from the East, which might overflow the
+country and acquire too much control in it.
+
+Immediately after the end of the first World War the so-called “German
+National Protective and Defensive League” (Deutsch-Völkischer Schutz-
+und Trutzbund) appeared on the scene, which in contrast to _Der Stürmer_
+and the Movement brought into being by Streicher, extended over the
+whole of Germany, setting as its aim the repression of Jewish influence.
+Anti-Semitic groups existed in the South as well as in the North long
+before Streicher. In comparison with these large-scale efforts, _Der
+Stürmer_ could only have a regional importance. This alone explains why
+its influence was never at any time or in any place of great importance.
+
+It is a decisive fact, however, that the German nation in its totality
+did not let itself be influenced by all these groups either in its
+business relations or in its attitude towards Jewry and that even during
+the last years before the NSDAP came to power no violent actions against
+the Jews were committed anywhere by the people. However, when towards
+the end of the second decade after the first World War a considerable
+increase of the NSDAP became noticeable, this was not due to
+anti-Semitic reasons but to the fact that the prevailing confusion in
+the various parties had been unable to point to a way out of the
+ever-increasing economic misery. The call for a strong man became ever
+more urgent. The conviction became more and more firmly rooted among the
+broad masses that only a personality who was not dependent on the change
+of majorities would be able to master the situation.
+
+The NSDAP knew how to exploit this general trend for its own ends and to
+win over the nation, sunk in despair, by making promises in all
+directions. But never did the masses think, when electing the NSDAP at
+that time, that its program would produce developments as we have
+witnessed.
+
+With the seizure of power by the NSDAP in 1933, the second epoch was
+introduced. The power of the State was exclusively in the hands of the
+Party and nobody could have prevented the use of violence against the
+Jewish population. Now would have been just the right moment for the
+Defendant Streicher to put into effect the baiting the Prosecution has
+alleged. If by that time wide circles of the population, or at least the
+veteran members of the NSDAP, had been trained to be radical Jew haters,
+as stated by the Prosecution, acts of violence against the Jewish
+population would necessarily have taken place on a greater scale due to
+that feeling of hatred. Pogroms on the largest scale would have been the
+natural result of a truly anti-Semitic attitude of the people. But
+nothing like that happened. Apart from some minor incidents, evidently
+caused by local or personal conditions, no attacks on Jews or their
+property took place anywhere. It is quite clear that a feeling of hatred
+for the Jewish people did not prevail anywhere at least up to 1933, and
+the charge brought by the Prosecution against the defendant that ever
+since the very outset of his fight he successfully educated the German
+people to hate the Jews can thus be dropped.
+
+The year of the seizure of power by the NSDAP also put _Der Stürmer_ to
+a decisive test. Had _Der Stürmer_ been considered by the broad masses
+of the German people as the authoritative champion against the Jews and
+therefore indispensable for that fight, an unusually large increase in
+the circulation would have followed. No such interest was, however,
+shown. On the contrary, even in Party circles demands were made that
+_Der Stürmer_ should be discontinued entirely; or at least that its
+illustrations, style, and tone should be altered. It became more and
+more clear that the already small interest in Streicher’s Jewish policy
+was steadily declining. It must be added that with the seizure of power
+by the Party the total press apparatus came under the control of the
+Party, which immediately undertook to co-ordinate the press, that is, to
+direct it from a central office in the spirit of the National Socialist
+policy and ideology. This was done through the Minister of Propaganda
+and the Reich Press Chief via the official “National Socialist
+Correspondence.” Particularly Dr. Goebbels, the Minister of Propaganda,
+described by various witnesses such as Göring, Schirach, Neurath, and
+others as the most bitter advocate of the anti-Semitic trend in the
+Government, is said to have given each week to the entire German press
+several anti-Jewish leaders, which were printed by more than 3,000
+dailies and illustrated papers. If in addition we take into account that
+Dr. Goebbels was making broadcasts of an anti-Semitic nature, we need no
+further explanations for the fact that the interest in a one-sided
+anti-Semitic journal should diminish and that is what actually happened.
+
+It is particularly significant that at that time it had been repeatedly
+suggested that _Der Stürmer_ should be suppressed altogether. This is
+brought out clearly in the testimony given by Fritzsche, on 27 June
+1946, who stated in addition that neither Streicher nor _Der Stürmer_
+had any influence in the Ministry of Propaganda and that he was
+considered so to speak as nonexistent. It may have been for the same
+reason that _Der Stürmer_ was not even declared a press organ of the
+NSDAP and was not even entitled to show the Party symbol. It was looked
+upon by the Party and State administration, in contrast to all papers
+which were considered to be of any importance, as a private paper
+belonging to a private writer.
+
+The firm which published _Der Stürmer_, and which belonged at that time
+to a certain Härdel, was not inclined, however, to accept so quietly the
+dwindling of its circle of readers, for it was now aided by the fact
+that Streicher had become the highest leader in Franconia; and it knew
+how to make the most of this circumstance. Already at that time pressure
+was exerted on many sections of the population to prove their loyal
+political attitude and trustworthiness by subscribing to _Der Stürmer_.
+The witness Fritzsche also has alluded to this circumstance, stating
+that many Germans only decided to subscribe to _Der Stürmer_ because
+they thought it would be a means of paving the way for their intended
+membership in the Party.
+
+So as not to give a false impression of the circulation figures of _Der
+Stürmer_ during the years between 1923 and 1933, the following analysis
+will show the different stages of its development.
+
+In the years 1923 to 1933 _Der Stürmer_ was able to increase its
+circulation from some 3,000 to some 10,000 copies, and this in turn went
+up to some 20,000 shortly before the seizure of power. On the average,
+however, between 1923 and 1931 the circulation was only some 6,000
+copies. Following the seizure of power, by the end of 1934 it had
+reached an average of some 28,000 copies. It was not until 1935 that
+_Der Stürmer_ became the property of the Defendant Streicher who,
+according to his statement, bought it from the widow of the previous
+owner for 40,000 RM—a not very considerable sum. From 1935 on the
+management of the business was taken over by an expert, who succeeded by
+clever canvassing in increasing the circulation to well over 200,000
+copies; and this figure was later increased still further until it more
+than doubled. The relatively low circulation figures for _Der Stürmer_
+up to the beginning of 1935 show that, despite the Party’s rise to
+power, popular interest in _Der Stürmer_ existed only to a small extent.
+The extraordinary increase in the circulation which began in 1935 is to
+be traced to the adroit canvassing methods already mentioned which were
+carried out by the new director Fink. The use of the Labor Front, as
+explained by the proclamation of Dr. Ley in Number 36 of _Der Stürmer_,
+1935—which copy, Mr. President, I have taken the liberty of submitting
+as an exhibit—and the acquisition thereby of many thousands of forced
+subscribers must be ascribed to the personal relations of the manager
+Fink with Dr. Ley.
+
+In that connection I further refer to a quotation from the _Pariser
+Tageblatt_ of 29 March 1935 reproduced in _Der Stürmer_ of May 1935.
+Here, too, it is stated that the increase of _Der Stürmer’s_ circulation
+cannot be ascribed to the desire of the German people for such kind of
+spiritual food. It is neither presumable nor probable in any way that
+the compulsory subscription to _Der Stürmer_, forced on the members of
+the Labor Front in such a manner, could have actually turned subscribers
+into readers of _Der Stürmer_ and followers of its line of thought. On
+the contrary, it is known that bundles of _Der Stürmer_ in their
+original wrappings were stored in cellars and attics and that they were
+brought to light again only when the paper shortage became more acute.
+
+When, therefore, the Defendant Streicher wrote in his paper in
+1935—Document Number GB-169—that the 15 years’ work of enlightenment
+of _Der Stürmer_ had already attracted to National Socialism an army of
+a million of “enlightened” members, he claimed a success for which there
+was no foundation whatsoever. The men and women who joined the Party
+after 1933 did not apply for membership as a result of the so-called
+enlightenment work of _Der Stürmer_ but either because they believed the
+Party’s promises and hoped to derive advantages from it or because by
+belonging to the Party they wanted, as the witness Severing expressed
+it, to insure for themselves immunity from political persecution. The
+sympathy for the Party and its leadership very soon decreased in the
+most marked manner. Thus the Defendant Streicher, too, lost authority
+and influence to an ever-increasing extent even in his own district of
+Franconia, at least from 1937 on. The reasons for this are sufficiently
+known.
+
+Toward the end of 1938 he saw himself deprived of practically all
+political influence, even in his own district. The controversy between
+him and Göring ended with the victory of the latter. Hitler, when
+pressed to do so by the Defendant Göring, had dropped Streicher
+completely, as the Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe at that time was
+naturally more important and far more influential than the Gauleiter,
+Streicher. The defendant even had to submit to Aryanization as carried
+out in the district of Franconia with its correctness being checked by a
+special commission sent by Göring. In the course of the year 1939
+Streicher was completely pushed aside and was even forbidden to speak in
+public. At the outbreak of the war, in contrast to all other Gauleiter,
+he was not even appointed to the position of Wehrkreiskommissar of his
+own district.
+
+During the last phase, in the war years, the Defendant Streicher had no
+political influence whatsoever. As from February 1940 he was relieved of
+his position as a Gauleiter and lived on his estate in Pleikershof, cut
+off from all connections. Even Party members were forbidden to visit
+him. Since the end of 1938 he had no connections whatsoever with Hitler,
+by whom he had been completely cast off from that time on.
+
+In what way now did _Der Stürmer_ exert any influence during the war
+period? It can be said that during the war _Der Stürmer_ no longer
+attracted any attention worth mentioning. The gravity of the times, the
+anxiety for relatives on the battlefield, the battles at the front, and
+finally the heavy air attacks completely diverted the German people’s
+interest from questions dealt with in _Der Stürmer_. The people were
+weary of the continuous repetition of the same assertions. The best
+proof of how little _Der Stürmer_ was desired as reading matter can be
+seen in the fact that in restaurants and cafés _Der Stürmer_ was always
+available for perusal, whereas other papers and magazines were
+permanently being read. The circulation figures decreased steadily and
+unceasingly in those years. Certainly the influence of _Der Stürmer_ in
+the political sphere no longer amounted to anything.
+
+During the periods mentioned _Der Stürmer_ was rejected by large circles
+of the population from the very outset. Its crude style, its often
+objectionable illustrations, and its one-sidedness aroused widespread
+displeasure. There can be no question of any influence being exercised
+by _Der Stürmer_ upon the German people or even the Party. Although the
+German people for years had been deluged with Nazi propaganda, or rather
+because of that very fact, a journal such as _Der Stürmer_ could exert
+no influence upon its inner attitude. Had the German people—as
+maintained by the Prosecution—actually been saturated with the spirit
+of fanatical racial hatred, other factors certainly would have been far
+more responsible for it than _Der Stürmer_ and would have contributed
+far more essentially to a hostile attitude towards the Jews.
+
+But nothing of such nature can be established. The general attitude of
+the German people was not anti-Semitic, at any rate, not in such a way
+or to such a degree that they would have desired, or approved of, the
+physical extermination of the Jews. Even official Party propaganda with
+regard to the Jewish problem had exerted no influence upon the broad
+masses of the German people, neither had it educated them in the
+direction desired by the State leadership.
+
+This is shown by the fact that it was necessary to issue a number of
+legal decrees in order to segregate the German population from the
+Jewish. The first example of this is the so-called Law for the
+Protection of German Blood and German Honor of September 1935, by the
+provisions of which any racial intermingling of German people with the
+Jewish population was subject to the death penalty. The passing of such
+laws would not have been necessary if the German people had been
+predisposed to an anti-Semitic attitude, for they would then of their
+own accord have segregated themselves from the Jews.
+
+The law for the elimination of the Jews from German economic life,
+promulgated in November 1938, was along the same lines. In a people
+hostile towards the Jews, any trade with Jewish circles would have
+necessarily ceased and their business would have automatically come to a
+standstill. Yet in fact the intervention of the State was needed to
+eliminate Jewry from economic life.
+
+The same conclusion can be drawn from the reaction of the greater part
+of the German populace to the demonstrations carried out against the
+Jews during the night of 9-10 November 1938. It is proved that these
+acts of violence were not committed spontaneously by the German people
+but that they were organized and executed with the aid of the State and
+Party apparatus upon instructions of Dr. Goebbels in Berlin. The result
+and the effect of these State-directed demonstrations—which in a
+cynical way were depicted for their effect abroad as an expression of
+the indignation of the German people at the assassination of the
+Secretary of the Embassy in Paris, Vom Rath—were different from that
+visualized by the instigators of this demonstration.
+
+These acts of violence and excesses based upon the lowest instincts
+found unanimous condemnation, even in the circles of the Party and its
+leadership. Instead of creating hostility towards the Jewish population
+they roused pity and compassion for their fate. Hardly any other measure
+taken by the NSDAP was ever rejected so generally. The effect upon the
+public was so marked that the Defendant Streicher in his capacity as
+Gauleiter found it necessary in an address in Nuremberg to give a
+warning against exaggerated sympathy for the Jews. According to his
+statement he did not do this because he approved of these measures but
+only in order to strengthen by his influence the impaired prestige of
+the Party.
+
+Previously, as appears from the testimony of the witness Fritz Herrwerth
+examined here, he refused SA Obergruppenführer Von Obernitz’s request to
+take part personally in the demonstration planned and called it useless
+and prejudicial. He publicly expressed this point of view later also,
+during a meeting of the League of Jurists at Nuremberg. In doing so he
+risked placing himself in open opposition to the official policy of the
+State.
+
+All these facts show that despite the anti-Jewish propaganda carried on
+by the Government, actual hostility against the Jewish population did
+not exist among the people themselves. Thus it is as good as proved that
+neither Streicher’s publications in _Der Stürmer_ nor his speeches
+incited the German people in the sense maintained by the Prosecution.
+Therefore the general attitude of the German nation provides no proof of
+incitement to hatred of the Jews having been successfully carried out by
+the Defendant Streicher and leading to criminal results. The
+Prosecution, however, has further supported its accusation by the
+specific assertion that only a nation educated to absolute hatred of
+Jews by men like the defendant could approve of such measures as the
+mass extermination of Jews. Thereby the charge is made against the whole
+of the German people that they knew about the extermination of the Jews
+and approved of it; the severity and consequences of such a charge on
+the whole future of the German nation is impossible to estimate.
+
+But did the German nation really approve of these measures? A fact can
+only be approved of if it is known. Therefore should this assertion of
+the Prosecution be considered as proved, then logically it must also be
+considered as proved that the German nation actually had knowledge of
+these occurrences. However, evidence in this respect has shown that
+Reichsführer SS Himmler, who was entrusted by Hitler with the mass
+assassinations, and his close collaborators shrouded all these events in
+a veil of deepest secrecy. By threatening with the most severe
+punishments any violations of the rule of absolute silence which was
+imposed, they managed to lower before the events in the East and in the
+extermination camps an iron curtain which hermetically sealed off those
+facts from the public.
+
+Hitler and Himmler prevented even the corps of the highest leaders of
+the Party and State from gaining any insight and information. Hitler did
+not hesitate to give false information to even his closest
+collaborators, like Reich Minister Dr. Lammers, who was heard here as a
+witness, and to make him believe that the removal of the European Jews
+to the East meant their settlement in the Eastern Territories but by no
+means their extermination. However much the statements of the defendants
+may diverge on many points, in this connection they all agree so
+completely with one another and with the statements of other witnesses
+that the veracity of their testimonies simply cannot be questioned. If
+it was not possible for even the Defendant Frank in his capacity as
+Governor General of Poland to get through to Auschwitz, because without
+Hitler’s special consent even he was denied entrance, then this fact
+speaks for itself.
+
+If even the leading personalities of the Third Reich, with the exception
+of a very small circle, were not informed and if even they had at best
+very vague information, then how could the general public have known
+about it? Under these circumstances the possibilities for finding out
+what was going on in the camps were extremely slight.
+
+For the majority of the people, foreign news did not exist as a source
+of information. Listening to foreign radio stations was punishable with
+the heaviest penalties and therefore did not take place. And if it did,
+the news broadcast by foreign radio stations concerning events in the
+East, although, or rather because, it corresponded to facts, was so
+crass, so horrible beyond any human understanding, that it was bound to
+appear to any normal individual, as in fact it did, as intentional
+propaganda. Germany could only gain factual knowledge of the
+extermination measures against the Jews from people who either were
+working in the camps themselves or came in contact with the camps or
+their inmates or from former concentration camp inmates.
+
+There is no need to explain that members of the camp personnel who were
+concerned with these happenings kept silent, not only because they were
+under stringent orders to do so, but also in their own interest.
+Furthermore, it is known that Himmler had threatened the death penalty
+for information from the camps and for spreading news about the camps
+and that not only the actual culprit but also his relatives were
+threatened with this punishment. Finally, it is known that the
+extermination camps themselves were so hermetically sealed off from any
+contact with the world that nothing concerning the events which took
+place in them could penetrate to the public.
+
+The prisoners in the camps who came into contact with fellow-workers in
+their work kept silent because they had to. People who came to the camps
+were also under the threat of this punishment insofar as they could
+obtain any insight into things at all, which was all but impossible in
+the extermination camps. From these sources, therefore, no knowledge
+could come for the German people.
+
+But the order for absolute silence was compulsory to a still greater
+measure for every concentration camp inmate who had been released.
+Hardly anybody ever came back to life from the actual murder camps; but
+if, once in a while, a man or woman was released, in addition to the
+other threatened punishments the threat of being sent back to the camp
+hung over them if they violated the order for silence. And this renewed
+detention would have meant gruesome death.
+
+It was therefore nearly impossible to learn from released concentration
+camp prisoners positive facts concerning the occurrences in the camps.
+If this was the case with regard to normal concentration camps in
+Germany, it applied in a still greater measure to the extermination
+camps. Every lawyer who, as I did, defended people before detention in a
+concentration camp and who was visited by them again after their
+release, will be able to confirm that it was not possible, even in such
+a position of trust and under the protection of professional legal
+secrecy, to get former concentration camp inmates to talk.
+
+If men such as Severing, who testified here—a Social Democrat of long
+standing, who was highly trusted by his party comrades and who was,
+because of this, in touch with many former concentration camp
+inmates—came to know of the real facts connected with the extermination
+of the Jews only very late and even then to a very restricted extent,
+then such considerations must apply even more to any normal German.
+
+It can be derived with absolute certainty from these facts that the
+leaders of the State, that Hitler and Himmler, wanted under all
+circumstances to keep secret the extermination of the Jews; and this
+forms the base for another argument—in my opinion, a cogent
+one—against the anti-Semitism of the German people asserted by the
+Prosecution. If the German people had indeed been filled with such
+hatred of Jewry as the Prosecution affirms, then such rigorous methods
+for secrecy would have been superfluous.
+
+If Hitler had been convinced that the German nation saw in the Jews its
+principal enemy, that it approved of and desired the extermination of
+Jewry, then he would obviously have published the planned and also the
+effected extermination of this very enemy. As a sign of the “total war”
+constantly propagandized by Hitler and Goebbels, there would indeed have
+been no better means to strengthen the faith in victory and the will of
+the people to fight than the information that Germany’s principal enemy,
+these very Jews, had already been annihilated.
+
+So unscrupulous a propagandist as Goebbels certainly would not have
+failed to use such a striking argument if he could have based it on the
+necessary presupposition, that is, the German people’s absolute
+determination to exterminate the Jews. However, the “final solution” of
+the Jewish question had by all possible means to be kept secret even
+from the German people who had for years been subjected to the heaviest
+pressure by the Gestapo. Even leading men in the State and the Party
+were not allowed to be told of it.
+
+Hitler and Himmler were evidently themselves convinced that even in the
+midst of a total war, and after decades of education and gagging by
+National Socialism, the German nation—and above all its Armed
+Forces—would have reacted most violently on the publication of such a
+policy against the Jews. The policy of secrecy followed here cannot be
+explained by any considerations of the enemy nations. In the years 1942
+and 1943 the whole world was already engaged in a bitter war against
+National Socialist Germany.
+
+An intensification of this struggle seemed hardly possible, at any rate
+not by the mere publishing of facts which had long since become known
+abroad. Apart from this, considerations of making a still worse
+impression on the enemy countries could hardly influence men such as
+Hitler, Goebbels, and Himmler.
+
+If they had expected to achieve even the slightest tangible results by
+proclaiming to the German people the extermination of the Jews, they
+would certainly not have omitted to proclaim it. On the contrary, they
+would have tried in every way to strengthen by this means the German
+people’s faith in victory. The fact that they did not do this is the
+best proof that even they did not consider the German people radically
+anti-Semitic, and it is also the best proof that there can be no
+question of such anti-Semitism on the part of the German people.
+
+I may therefore sum up by saying that all this stands in contradiction
+to the Prosecution’s assertion that the Defendant Streicher brought up
+the German people to hate the Jews to an extent which made them approve
+of the extermination of Jewry. Therefore, even if the defendant by means
+of his proclamations had aimed at achieving such an end he was not
+successful.
+
+In this connection, light must also be thrown upon the part attributed
+by the Prosecution to the Defendant Streicher, namely that he had
+educated German youth in the spirit of anti-Semitism and had inculcated
+the poison of anti-Semitism so deeply into their hearts that these
+pernicious effects would be felt long after his death.
+
+The main reproach made against the defendant in this connection is based
+on the fact that young people, as a result of Streicher’s education in
+hatred toward the Jews, are supposed to have been ready to commit crimes
+against Jews which otherwise they would not have committed, and that
+youth thus educated might be expected to perpetrate such crimes in the
+future too. Here the Prosecution relies mainly on the juvenile
+literature published by Der Stürmer and some announcements addressed to
+youth which appeared in this paper.
+
+Far be it from me to gloss over these products or to defend them.
+Evaluation of them can and must be left to the Tribunal. In accordance
+with the basic principle of the Defense, the only question to be taken
+up here will be whether or not the defendant in any way influenced the
+education of youth in a manner to promote criminal hatred of Jews.
+
+As for the books which have been mentioned here, it must be said that
+German youth scarcely knew of their existence—much less did they read
+them. No evidence has been produced in support of the Prosecution’s
+assumption to the contrary. The healthy common sense of German youth
+refused such stuff. German boys and girls preferred other reading
+material. It may be emphasized in this connection that neither the text
+nor the illustrations in these books could attract youth in any way.
+They were, on the contrary, bound to be shunned.
+
+Of special importance in regard to this point is the fact that,
+Defendant Baldur von Schirach, the man responsible for educating the
+whole body of German youth, testified under oath that the
+afore-mentioned juvenile books published by this company were not
+circulated by the Hitler Youth Leadership and did not find a circle of
+readers among the Hitler Youth. The witness made the same assertions in
+regard to _Der Stürmer_. One of his closest co-workers, the witness
+Lauterbacher, stated in this connection that _Der Stürmer_ was actually
+banned for the Hitler Youth by the Defendant Von Schirach. It is clear
+that the very style and illustrations of _Der Stürmer_ were ill-adapted
+to attract the interest of young persons or to offer them ethical
+support. The step taken by the Reich Youth Leadership is therefore quite
+understandable.
+
+Although some of _Der Stürmer_ articles submitted by the Prosecution
+seem to indicate that _Der Stürmer_ was read in youth circles and
+produced a certain effect there, it must be borne in mind that these
+were typical commissioned articles, that is, commissioned for propaganda
+purposes. There is no evidence whatsoever to support the Prosecution’s
+assertion that German youth harbored criminal hate toward Jews.
+Therefore, neither the German people nor its youth ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Marx, perhaps this would be a convenient time to
+break off.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. MARX: One might now be tempted to assume that _Der Stürmer_
+exercised a particularly strong influence upon the Party organizations,
+the SA and SS; but this was not the case either. The SA, the largest
+mass organization of the Party, rejected _Der Stürmer_ just as did the
+mass of the people. Its publications were _Der SA-Führer_ and _Die SA_.
+The mass of the SA took these as the foundation of their ideology. These
+publications do not contain even one article from the pen of the
+Defendant Streicher. If the latter had really been the man the
+Prosecution believes him to be, the most authoritative and influential
+propagandist of anti-Semitism, he would of necessity have been called
+upon to collaborate in these publications, which were issued to instruct
+the SA on the Jewish question. A publication intended to provide
+ideological instruction could never have dispensed with the
+collaboration of such a man.
+
+The fact that not one word by Julius Streicher himself ever appeared in
+these papers demonstrates afresh that the picture drawn of him by the
+Prosecution does not correspond in any way with the actual facts. The
+Defendant Streicher could gain no influence over the SA through his
+paper and the columns of _Der SA-Führer_ and _Die SA_ were closed to
+him. Even the highest SA leaders refused to advocate his ideas. The SA
+Deputy Chief of Staff, SA Obergruppenführer Jüttner, testifying before
+the commission on 21 May 1946, made the following statement in this
+connection:
+
+ “At a leader conference, the former SA Chief of Staff, Lutze,
+ stated that he did not want propaganda for _Der Stürmer_ in the
+ SA. In certain groups _Der Stürmer_ was even prohibited. The
+ contents of _Der Stürmer_ disgusted and repelled most of the SA
+ men. The policy of the SA with regard to the Jewish question was
+ in no way directed at the extermination of the Jews; it aimed
+ only at preventing a large-scale immigration of Jews from the
+ East.”
+
+The ideology of _Der Stürmer_ was thus rejected on principle by the
+individual SA man as well as by the SA leaders, and there is therefore
+no question of Streicher’s having influenced the SA.
+
+Not only was the Defendant Streicher not asked to collaborate in SA
+publications, but his articles did not appear in any other newspapers
+and publications. He was given no chance of contributing either to the
+_Völkischer Beobachter_ or to other leading organs of the German press,
+although the Propaganda Ministry intended enlightenment on the Jewish
+question to form one of the noblest tasks of the German press.
+
+The Defendant Streicher was given no opportunity, either by the State
+leadership or by the Propaganda Ministry, of impressing his ideas upon a
+wider circle. The Defendant Fritzsche, the man who shared the decisive
+authority in the Propaganda Ministry, testified that Streicher never
+exerted any influence upon propaganda and that he was completely
+disregarded. In particular, he was not entrusted with radio talks,
+although talks given over the radio would have had much greater effect
+on the masses than an article in _Der Stürmer_, which necessarily
+reached only a limited circle. The fact that even the official
+propaganda of the Third Reich made no use of the Defendant Streicher
+makes it clear that no results could be expected from his activities,
+and that, in fact, he had no influence at all. The official leaders of
+the German State recognized Streicher for what he actually was, the
+insignificant publisher of an entirely insignificant weekly. It must be
+stressed once more as clearly as possible that the fundamental attitude
+of the German people was no more radically anti-Semitic than that of
+German youth or the Party organizations. Success in instigating and
+inciting to criminal anti-Semitism is, therefore, not proven.
+
+I now come to the last and decisive part of the accusation, that is, to
+the examination of the question: Who were the chief persons responsible
+for the orders given for the mass-extermination of Jewry; how was it
+possible that men could be found who were ready to execute these orders;
+and whether without the influence of the Defendant Streicher, such
+orders would not have been given or executed.
+
+The main person responsible for the final solution of the Jewish
+question—the extermination of Jewry in Europe—is without doubt Hitler
+himself. Though this greatest of all trials in world history suffers
+from the fact that the chief offenders are not sitting in the dock,
+because they are either dead or not to be found, the facts ascertained
+have nevertheless resulted in cogent conclusions concerning the actual
+responsibility.
+
+It can be considered as proved beyond any doubt that Hitler was a man of
+unique and even demoniacal brutality and ruthlessness who, in addition,
+later lost all sense of proportion and all self-control. The fact that
+his chief characteristic was ruthless brutality became apparent for the
+first time in its force when the so-called Röhm Putsch was suppressed in
+June 1934. On this occasion Hitler did not hesitate to have his oldest
+fellow combatants shot without any kind of trial. His unrestrained
+radicalism was further revealed in the way in which the war with Poland
+was conducted. He ordered the ruthless extermination of leading Polish
+circles merely because he feared an antagonistic attitude toward Germany
+on their part. The orders which he gave at the beginning of the Russian
+campaign were still more drastic. At that time he already ordered
+partial operations for the extermination of Jewry:
+
+These examples show beyond doubt that respect for any principle of
+humanity was alien to this man. Furthermore the proceedings, by the
+depositions of all the defendants, have clearly established the fact
+that in basic decisions Hitler was not open to any outside influence.
+
+Hitler’s basic attitude toward the Jewish question is well known. He had
+already become an anti-Semite during the time he spent in Vienna in the
+years before the first World War. There is, however, no actual proof
+that Hitler from the very beginning had in mind such a radical solution
+of the Jewish question as was finally effected in the annihilation of
+European Jewry. When the Prosecution declares that from the book _Mein
+Kampf_ a direct road leads to the crematories of Mauthausen and
+Auschwitz, this is only an assumption; and no evidence for it has been
+given. The evidence rather suggests the fact that Hitler also wanted to
+see the Jewish problem in Germany solved by way of emigration. This
+thought, as well as the position of the Jewish part of the population
+under the laws governing aliens, formed the official State policy of the
+Third Reich. Many of the leading anti-Semites considered the Jewish
+question as settled after the laws of 1935 had been promulgated. The
+Defendant Streicher shared this opinion. The stiffening of Hitler’s
+attitude to the Jewish question cannot be traced back beyond the end of
+1938 or the beginning of 1939. Only then did it become apparent that in
+case of war—which he believed was propagated by the Jews—he was
+planning a different solution. In his Reichstag speech on 30 January
+1939 he predicted the extermination of Jewry should a second World War
+be let loose against Germany. He expressed the same ideas in a speech
+made in February 1942, on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the
+day on which the Party was founded. And, finally, his testament, too,
+confirms his exclusive responsibility for the murdering of European
+Jewry as a whole.
+
+Though Hitler had adopted an increasingly implacable attitude on the
+Jewish question ever since the beginning of the war, there is nothing to
+show that he visualized the extermination of the Jews in the early
+stages of the war. His final resolution to this effect was undoubtedly
+formed when Hitler, probably as early as 1942, saw that it was
+impossible to secure a victory for Germany.
+
+It can be assumed almost with certainty that the decision to exterminate
+the Jews originated—as did almost all of Hitler’s plans—exclusively
+with himself. It cannot be ascertained with certainty how far others who
+were closely attached to Hitler brought their influence to bear on him.
+If such influence did exist, it can only have come from Himmler,
+Bormann, and Goebbels. It can at least be stated beyond any doubt that
+during the decisive period from September 1939 to October 1942 Streicher
+did not influence him, nor, under the circumstances, could he have done
+so. At that time Streicher was living—deprived of all his offices and
+completely left in the cold—at his farm at Pleikershof. He had no
+connection with Hitler either personally or by correspondence. This has
+been proved beyond all doubt by the statements made by the witnesses
+Fritz Herrwerth and Adele Streicher, and by the statement under oath of
+the defendant himself. It cannot, however, be maintained in earnest that
+his reading of _Der Stürmer_ moved Hitler to give orders for wholesale
+murder. This should make it clear that the Defendant Streicher had no
+influence whatever on either the man who made the decision to
+exterminate Jewry, or on the orders issued by him.
+
+In October 1942 Bormann’s decree ordering the extermination of Jewry was
+issued (Document 3244-PS). It has been established beyond all question
+that this order came from Hitler and went to Reichsführer SS Heinrich
+Himmler, who was charged with the actual extermination of the Jews. He
+for his part charged the Chief of the Gestapo, Müller, and his
+commissioner for Jewish affairs, Eichmann, with the final execution of
+the order. These three men are the three who are chiefly responsible,
+next to Hitler. It has not been proved that Streicher had any
+possibility of influencing them, or that he did actually influence them.
+He states—and there is no proof to the contrary—that he never knew
+either Eichmann or Müller, and that his relations with Himmler were
+slight and far from friendly.
+
+Casually it might be mentioned that Himmler was one of the most radical
+anti-Semites of the Party. From the beginning he had advocated a
+merciless fight against the Jews; and in any case, judging by what we
+know of him, he was not the man to allow himself to be influenced by
+others in matters of principle. Apart from that, however, a comparison
+of the two personalities shows that Himmler was in every way the
+stronger and superior man of the two, so that for this reason alone the
+exertion of any influence by the Defendant Streicher on Himmler may be
+ruled out. I believe I may refrain from further illustration of this
+point.
+
+I now come to the question of whether the activity of the Defendant
+Streicher had a decisive influence on the men who actually carried out
+the orders; that is, on members of the Einsatzgruppen on the one hand,
+and on the execution Kommandos in the concentration camps on the other;
+and whether any spiritual and intellectual preparation was necessary to
+make these men willing to execute such measures.
+
+In his speeches in Nikolaev, Posen, and Kharkov—which have often been
+mentioned here—the Reichsführer SS stated unequivocally not only that
+he besides Hitler was responsible for the final solution of the Jewish
+question, but also that the execution of the orders was only made
+possible by the employment of forces which he himself had selected from
+among the SS. We know from Ohlendorf’s testimony that the so-called
+Einsatzgruppen consisted of members of the Gestapo and the SD, companies
+of the Waffen-SS, members of the police force with long service records,
+and indigenous units.
+
+It must be stated as a matter of principle that the Defendant Streicher
+never had the slightest influence on the ideological attitude of the SS.
+The extensive evidence material of this Trial contains no shadow of
+proof that Streicher had any connections with the SS. The alleged Enemy
+Number One of the Jews, the great propagandist of the persecution of the
+Jews—as he has been pictured by the Prosecution—the Defendant
+Streicher never had the opportunity of writing for the periodical _Das
+Schwarze Korps_ or even for the _SS Leithefte_. These periodicals alone,
+however, as the official mouthpieces of the Reichsführer SS, determined
+the ideological attitude of the SS. These SS periodicals also determined
+their attitude toward the Jewish question. In these circles _Der
+Stürmer_ had just as small a public; it was rejected, just as it was in
+other circles. Himmler himself rejected Streicher ironically as an
+ideologist. Therefore the Defendant Streicher could not have had any
+influence on the ideology of the SS members of the Einsatzgruppen, much
+less on the old members of the Police, and least of all on the foreign
+units. Nor could he dictate the ideology of the execution squad’s in the
+concentration camps. Those men originated for the most part from the
+Death’s Head Units, that is the old guard units, of whom the above
+statement is true to a greater degree. Added to this is the fact that
+the experienced members of the Police, as well as the SS men with long
+service records, were trained in absolute obedience to their leaders.
+Absolute obedience to a Führer command was a matter of course for both.
+
+Even those experienced police force members, however, accustomed as they
+were to absolute obedience, even the veteran SS men, could not simply be
+charged by Himmler with carrying out the executions of the Jews. Rather
+did he have to select men whom he trusted to lead these execution squads
+and to make them personally responsible for their assignments, pointing
+out explicitly that he would take all responsibility and that he himself
+was only passing on a definite order from Hitler.
+
+Even these men, whom the Prosecution alleges to have been the elite of
+Nazism, were so far from being enemies of the Jews in the meaning of the
+Indictment, that the entire authority of the head of State and Führer,
+and of his most brutal henchman, Himmler, was required to force upon the
+men responsible for carrying out the execution orders the conviction
+that their order was based on the will of the authoritarian head of the
+State; an order which, according to their conviction, had the power of a
+fundamental State law and therefore was above all criticism.
+
+The men charged to carry out the annihilation, therefore, obeyed their
+orders not for ideological reasons and not because they were incited to
+do so by Streicher, as the Prosecution contends, but solely in obedience
+to an order from Hitler transmitted to them through Himmler, and knowing
+that disobedience to a Führer order meant death. In this respect, too,
+therefore, Streicher’s influence has not been proved.
+
+The accusations brought against the defendant by the Prosecution are
+herewith exhausted. But, in order to reach a conclusion and to form a
+judgment of the defendant which will take the actual findings fully into
+account, it seems advisable to give once more a short account of his
+personality and his activities under the Hitler regime.
+
+The Prosecution considers him to be the leading anti-Semite and the
+leading advocate of a ruthless determination to annihilate Jewry. This
+conception, however, does justice neither to the part played by the
+defendant and the influence actually exercised by him, nor to his
+personality. The manner of the defendant’s employment in the Third Reich
+and the way in which he was called upon to co-operate in the propagation
+and final solution of the Jewish question shows the Prosecution’s
+conception to be false. The only occasion on which the defendant was
+called upon to take an active part in the fight against Jewry was in his
+capacity as chairman of the Action Committee for the Anti-Jewish Boycott
+Day on 1 April 1933. His attitude on that day is in direct opposition to
+his violent utterances in _Der Stürmer_ and makes it evident that the
+passages in his paper which have been attacked were pure propaganda.
+Although on that day he could have drawn upon the whole power of State
+and Party against Jewry, he was content to order that Jewish places of
+business be marked as such and put under guard. In addition, he gave
+explicit instructions that any molestation of the Jews or acts of
+violence, or any damage to Jewish property, was forbidden and would be
+punished. In the later stages no further use at all was made of the
+defendant. He was not even consulted on the ideological basis for the
+settlement of the Jewish question. He was unable to voice his ideas in
+the press or over the air. He was not asked to write on the
+clarification of the Jewish question either in the _Schulungsbriefe_ of
+the Party or the periodicals belonging to the organizations.
+
+Not he but the Defendant Rosenberg was charged by Hitler with the
+ideological training of the German people. The latter was responsible
+for the Institute for Research into the Jewish Question, set up in
+Frankfurt, and not the Defendant Streicher; in fact, the latter was not
+even considered as a collaborator in this institute. The Defendant
+Rosenberg was commissioned with the arrangement of an Anti-Jewish World
+Congress in 1944. It is true that this assembly did not take place, but
+it is significant that the plans made for it did not include the
+participation of the Defendant Streicher.
+
+The whole of the anti-Jewish laws and decrees of the Third Reich were
+drafted without his participation. He was not even called in to draft
+the racial laws proclaimed at the Party rally in Nuremberg in 1935. The
+Defendant Streicher did not take part in a single conference on even
+moderately important questions in either peace or wartime. His name does
+not appear on any list of participants or on any minutes. Not even in
+the course of the discussions themselves is one single reference made to
+his name.
+
+The fight against Jewry in the Third Reich grew more and more embittered
+from year to year, especially after the outbreak of war and during its
+course. In contrast to this, however, the influence of the Defendant
+Streicher yearly grew weaker. Already by 1939 he was almost entirely
+pushed aside and had no relations with Hitler or other leading men of
+State and Party. In 1940 he was relieved of his office as Gauleiter and
+after that he played no further part in political life.
+
+If the Defendant Streicher had really been the man the Prosecution
+believes him to be, his influence and his activity would have increased
+automatically with the intensification of the fight against the Jews.
+His career would not have ended, as it actually did, in political
+powerlessness and banishment from the scene of action, but with the
+commission to carry out the destruction of Jewry.
+
+It cannot be denied that by writing _ad nauseam_ on the same subject for
+years in a clumsy, crude, and violent manner, the Defendant Streicher
+has brought upon himself the hatred of the world. By so doing, he has
+created a strong feeling against himself which led to his importance and
+influence being rated far higher than they actually were, for which he
+now runs the risk of having the extent of his responsibility similarly
+misjudged.
+
+The defense counsel, who in this case had a difficult and thankless
+task, had to limit himself to presenting those aspects and facts which
+allow the true significance of this man and the role he played in the
+tragedy of National Socialism to be recognized. But it cannot be the
+task of the Defense to deny indisputable facts and to defend acts for
+which absolutely no excuse exists.
+
+The fact remains, therefore, that this defendant took part in the
+demolition of the main synagogue of Nuremberg, and thus allowed a place
+of religious worship to be destroyed. The defendant states as an excuse
+that his aim in so doing was not the demolition of a building meant for
+religious worship, but the removal of an edifice which appeared out of
+place in the Old Town of Nuremberg, and that his opinion had been shared
+by art experts. The truth of this was proved by the fact that he left
+the second Jewish house of worship untouched until it finally, and
+without his connivance, went up in flames during the night of 9 to 10
+November. However that may be, the defendant shows the same lack of
+scruple here as he does in his other actions. He must account here for
+his actions in this connection alone; the Defense cannot shield him. But
+here, too, the fact that the population of Nuremberg disapproved of
+these actions clearly and unmistakably must be stressed. It was clear to
+any impartial observer that the people viewed such actions with icy
+detachment and that only brute force could compel them to tolerate such
+measures and to look on at such senseless proceedings.
+
+It is just as impossible for the Defense to express any opinion on the
+revival of the ritual murder myth. No interest whatsoever was taken in
+these articles; but their tendency is obvious. The only point in the
+defendant’s favor, apart from the good faith with which we must credit
+him, is the fact that the author of these articles was not himself, but
+Holz; he must, however, put up with the charge that he allowed it to
+happen.
+
+It must appear incomprehensible that the defendant continued to play a
+part in the publication of _Der Stürmer_ long after he had been
+politically crippled and vanished from the scene of action. This very
+fact reveals his one-track mind better than anything else.
+
+When the Prosecution accuses the defendant of having aimed at the
+physical annihilation of the Jews and prepared the way for this later
+result by means of his publications, I would like to refer to the
+statements given by the defendant under oath at his interrogation, to
+which I am here referring in their entirety.
+
+The defendant claims that in the long series of articles published by
+_Der Stürmer_ since its foundation there were none demanding actual
+deeds of violence against the Jews. He also claims that among the
+issues, of which there were over one thousand, only about 15 were found
+to contain expressions which could form the basis for a charge against
+him in the meaning of the Indictment.
+
+On the contrary, the defendant argued that his articles and speeches had
+always shown an unmistakable tendency to achieve a solution of the
+Jewish problem in its entirety throughout the world, since any kind of
+partial solution would serve no useful purpose and failed to reach the
+heart of the problem. Basing himself on this very point of view he had
+always expressed himself unequivocally as opposed to any kind of
+violence, and he would never have approved of an action such as that
+finally carried out by Hitler in such a gruesome manner.
+
+This must raise serious doubts as to whether the defendant can be proved
+to have agreed with the mass murders practiced on Jewry, and I leave
+this decision to the Tribunal. In any case, he himself refers to the
+fact that he had no reasonably certain knowledge of these wholesale
+murders until 1944, a fact corroborated by the statements of the
+witnesses Adele Streicher and Hiemer.
+
+He considered the articles published in the _Israelitisches Wochenblatt_
+as propaganda and consequently did not believe them. In this connection,
+the fact that up to the autumn of 1943 he did not in any article express
+satisfaction concerning the fate of Jewry in the East is in his favor.
+Although he did write then on the disappearance of the Jewish reservoir
+in the East, there is nothing to show that he had any reliable source of
+information at his command. He might, therefore, very well have believed
+that this process of disappearance was not identical with physical
+annihilation but might represent the evacuation of the Jewish population
+assembled there to neutral countries or the territory of the Soviet
+Union. As no evidence has been presented to show that the defendant had
+received hints from any quarter in regard to the intended extermination
+of Jewry, he could not have conceived of such a diabolical occurrence
+which appears to be utterly inconceivable to the human mind. And it
+certainly cannot be assumed that the mental capacity of the defendant
+should have enabled him to foresee a solution of the Jewish question
+such as could only have originated in the brain of a person who was no
+longer in his right senses.
+
+The defendant describes himself as a fanatic and seeker of truth. He
+professes to have written nothing and to have expressed nothing in his
+speeches which he had not taken from some authentic source and properly
+confirmed.
+
+There is no doubt that he was a fanatic. The fanatic, however, is a man
+who is so possessed or convinced of an idea or illusion that he is not
+open to any other consideration, and is convinced of the correctness of
+his own idea and no other. A psychiatrist might regard it as a sort of
+mental cramp. Fanaticism of any kind is not far removed from maniacal
+obsession. As a rule it goes along with considerable overestimation of
+oneself and overevaluation of one’s own personality and its influence on
+the world around it.
+
+Not one of the defendants here on trial shows such a wide discrepancy
+between fact and fancy as does the Defendant Streicher.
+
+The Prosecution showed him as he appeared to the outside world. What he
+really was—and is—has been shown by the Trial. But only actual facts
+can form the basis for the judgment. Base your judgment also, Gentlemen,
+on the fact that the defendant in his position as Gauleiter of Franconia
+also showed many humane characteristics—that he had a large number of
+political prisoners released from concentration camps, which even caused
+criminal proceedings to be started against him. It should also be borne
+in mind that he treated the prisoners of war and the foreign laborers
+working on his estate very well in every respect.
+
+Whatever the judgment against the Defendant Streicher may be, it will
+concern the fate of a single individual. It seems to be established,
+however, that the German people and this defendant were never in
+agreement on this essential question. The German people always
+disapproved of the aims of this defendant as expressed in his
+publications, and retained its own opinion of and attitude toward the
+Jews.
+
+The Prosecution’s assumption that the tendentious articles in _Der
+Stürmer_ found an echo or a ready acceptance among the German
+population, or even produced an attitude which would readily accept
+criminal measures, is herewith fully refuted.
+
+The overwhelming majority of the German nation preserved their sound
+common sense and showed themselves disinclined toward all acts of
+violence. The nation may therefore claim to be declared free of all
+moral complicity in, and co-responsibility for, those crimes before the
+public tribunal of the world, so as to be able again to take its place
+in the ranks of the nations.
+
+I leave the decision on the guilt or innocence of this defendant in the
+hands of the High Tribunal.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Sauter for the Defendant Funk.
+
+DR. FRITZ SAUTER (Counsel for Defendant Funk): Gentlemen of the
+Tribunal, I have the task of examining the case of the Defendant Dr.
+Walter Funk. That is to say, I am to deal with a topic which
+unfortunately is especially dry and prosaic. May I first make a short
+statement.
+
+I shall on principle refrain from making any statements on legal,
+political, historical, or psychological matters which may be too
+general, although the temptation to make such general statements,
+particularly within the framework of these proceedings, may be
+considerable. General statements of the kind have already been made in
+abundance by my colleagues and will probably be still further
+supplemented. Therefore, I shall limit myself to examining and
+presenting to you from the point of view of the Defense the picture
+which the evidence in this Trial shows of the personality of the
+Defendant Funk, his actions, and their underlying motives.
+
+Gentlemen of the Tribunal, the entire course of this Trial and the
+particular evidence offered in his own case have shown that the
+Defendant Funk did not play a decisive part in the National Socialist
+regime at any time and in any of the cases indicted here.
+
+Funk’s authority of decision was always limited by the superior powers
+of others. The defendant’s statement, made during his personal
+examination, that he was allowed to come up to the door, but was never
+permitted to enter, has been shown by the evidence to be quite correct.
+
+Funk was entrusted with tasks by the Party—as distinct from the
+State—only during the last year prior to the seizure of power, that is,
+in 1932. These, however, were of no practical significance, as they were
+of very short duration. Funk was never appointed to any Party office
+after the seizure of power. He was never a member of any Party
+organization—SS, SA, or Corps of Political Leaders. Funk was a member
+of the Reichstag for only a little more than 6 months shortly before the
+seizure of power. Consequently he was not a member of the Reichstag when
+the fundamental laws for the consolidation of National Socialist power
+were passed. The Reich Cabinet passed the laws for which Funk is held
+responsible, in particular the Enabling Act, at a time when Funk had not
+yet been made a member of the Cabinet. At this, it will be remembered,
+he did not become a member until the close of 1937 by virtue of his
+appointment as Minister of Economics, that is, at a time when no further
+Cabinet sessions were held. As Press Chief of the Reich Cabinet Funk had
+neither a seat nor a vote in the Cabinet and could exert no influence
+whatsoever upon the contents of the bills drafted. I refer to Lammers’
+statement in this connection. The same applies to the racial laws, the
+so-called Nuremberg Laws.
+
+Funk’s relations with the Führer only became closer for a period of 18
+months during which he had to give regular press reports to Hitler in
+his capacity as Press Chief of the Reich Cabinet, that is, from February
+1933 to August 1934, up to the death of Reich President Von Hindenburg.
+Later, Funk reported to Hitler only on very rare occasions. In this
+connection the witness Dr. Lammers makes the following statement:
+
+ “Later he (Funk) only visited Hitler in his capacity of Reich
+ Minister of Economics on very rare occasions. He was frequently
+ not invited to attend conferences—even those to which he should
+ have been invited. He complained to me about this frequently.
+ The Führer often raised objections, saying that there were
+ various reasons against Funk and that he himself viewed Funk
+ skeptically and did not want him.”
+
+That is the testimony given by Dr. Lammers on 8 April 1946. When asked
+whether Funk had often complained to him about his unsatisfactory
+position as Reich Minister for Economics and about the anxiety caused
+him by conditions generally, Dr. Lammers replied:
+
+ “I know that Funk was very much worried and that he wanted an
+ opportunity to discuss his anxieties with the Führer. He was
+ extremely anxious for an opportunity of reporting to the Führer
+ in order to obtain information, at least, about the war
+ situation.” (That was in 1943 and 1944). And Lammers continues:
+ “With the best intentions in the world, Funk could not obtain an
+ audience from the Führer, and I was unable to get him to the
+ Führer.”
+
+Funk explains the striking fact that he was invited to attend only four
+or five Führer conferences during the whole of his ministerial activity
+by saying that Hitler did not need him. Up to 1942 Hitler issued his
+instructions in economic affairs to Göring, who in his capacity of
+Delegate for the Four Year Plan was responsible for the entire economy.
+From the beginning of 1942 Hitler also issued instructions to Speer, who
+as Armament Minister had special authority to issue directives to all
+branches of production and from 1943 personally directed the entire
+production. Funk therefore never played the principal part in the
+economy of the National Socialist Reich, but always only a subordinate
+role. This was specifically confirmed by his Codefendant Göring in his
+statement on 16 March:
+
+ “Naturally, in view of the special powers delegated to me
+ (Göring) he had to follow my directives in the field of economy
+ and the Reichsbank. The responsibility for the directives and
+ policy of the Minister for Economics and President of the
+ Reichsbank Funk is entirely mine.”
+
+In the session of 20 June the Defendant Speer also testified that in his
+capacity as Armament Minister he reserved to himself from the very
+beginning any authority of decision in the most important economic
+spheres such as coal, iron and steel, metal, aluminum, and the
+production of machinery. Prior to Speer’s commission at the beginning of
+1942, electric power and building were entirely under the jurisdiction
+of Armament Minister Todt.
+
+For the greater part, the evidence submitted by the Prosecution in the
+case of the Defendant Funk does not relate to acts personally committed
+by Funk or instructions issued by him, but rather to the various and
+widely differing positions which he occupied. On Page 29 of the trial
+brief the Prosecutor himself declares that the argument offered against
+Funk may be described as inferential. The Prosecution starts from the
+assumption that judging by the positions which he had held Funk must
+have had knowledge of the various events which form the subject of the
+accusation. Generally speaking, the Prosecution refers to instructions
+and directives issued by Funk personally only in the case of the
+application instructions which he issued in November 1938 in connection
+with the Four Year Plan decrees for the elimination of Jews from
+economic life. I shall deal with this chapter separately at a later
+stage.
+
+Finally, Funk was not invited to attend political and military
+conferences. His position was that of a technical minister with very
+limited power of decision.
+
+As Reich Minister for Economics Funk was subordinated to the Four Year
+Plan, that is, to Göring. Later on, the Armament Minister became Funk’s
+superior. And finally, as was shown by the testimony of Göring, Lammers,
+and Hayler, the Ministry of Economics became a regular trade ministry,
+which dealt mainly with the distribution of consumers’ goods and with
+the technicalities of foreign trade. Similarly in the case of the
+Reichsbank the Four Year Plan determined the use of gold and foreign
+currency. The Reichsbank was deprived of its right to decide on the
+credits to be granted to the Reich for the internal financing of the war
+when Funk took over office as its President. Funk is thereby exonerated
+of any responsibility for the financing of the war. The responsible
+agency so far had always been the Reich Minister of Finance: In other
+words, not Funk. Finally, as Plenipotentiary for Economics, Funk’s sole
+task in August 1938 was to co-ordinate the civil economic resources for
+such measures as would guarantee a smooth conversion from peace to
+wartime economy. These consultations resulted in the proposals presented
+by Funk to Hitler on 25 August 1939 in the letter which has been several
+times quoted under Document Number 699-PS. At his examination Funk
+stated that this letter did not portray matters with complete accuracy,
+since it was a purely private letter, a letter of thanks for birthday
+congratulations received from Hitler. This point will have to be taken
+up again later, as the Prosecution particularly emphasized Funk’s
+position as Plenipotentiary for Economics. The evidence shows that his
+position as Plenipotentiary General was Funk’s most disputed position,
+but also his weakest.
+
+With regard to the occupied territories Funk had no decisive authority
+whatsoever. All the witnesses interrogated on the point testified to
+this. But all witnesses also confirmed that Funk always opposed the
+spoliation of the occupied territories. He fought against German
+purchases in the black markets; he opposed the abolition of the foreign
+exchange relations with Holland, a measure intended to facilitate German
+purchases in Holland; and, as we have heard from the witness Neubacher,
+he organized exports to Greece from Germany and the eastern European
+states, and even sent gold there. He also repeatedly opposed the
+financial overburdening of the occupied territories especially in 1942
+and 1944, and the raising of the occupation costs in France. He defended
+the currency of the occupied countries against reported attempts at
+devaluation. In the case of Denmark he even succeeded in raising the
+value of the currency, in spite of all opposition. Furthermore, Funk
+fought against the arbitrary stabilization of exchange when currency
+arrangements were made with occupied countries. Germany’s clearing debt
+was always recognized by Funk as a true commercial debt even with regard
+to the occupied countries. This is shown especially by his proposal,
+mentioned here, to commercialize this clearing debt by a loan to be
+issued by Germany for subscription in all European countries. Funk was
+also opposed to the overworking and especially to the compulsory
+employment of foreign labor in Germany.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel has already testified to this at his interrogation
+here. The witnesses Hayler, Landfried, Puhl, and Neubacher, and the
+Codefendant Seyss-Inquart, have all confirmed that these measures taken
+by Funk had favorable results for the occupied countries. According to
+these statements Funk always strove to keep order in the economic and
+social life of the occupied territories and to preserve it as far as
+possible from disintegration. He always disapproved and opposed radical
+and arbitrary measures and favored agreements and compromises. Even
+during the war Funk was always thinking of peace. This statement was
+made by the witnesses Landfried and Hayler, who added that Funk was
+repeatedly reproached for his attitude by the leading State and Party
+offices. The Defendant Speer also testified at his interrogation that
+during the war Funk had employed too many workers in the manufacture of
+consumers’ goods and that it was for this reason that Funk had to hand
+over the management of the consumers’ goods production in 1943.
+
+That Funk revolted against the horrible “scorched earth” policy just as
+Speer did has been proved to the Court by Speer himself, as well as by
+the witness Hayler on 7 May 1946. This witness declared that he had
+seldom seen Funk so much upset as he was when informed of this order for
+destruction. Hayler testified that Funk, in his capacity of Reich
+Minister of Economics and President of the Reichsbank, gave orders that
+existing stocks should be protected from destruction as decreed, in
+order to insure a supply of consumers’ goods necessary for the
+population and to safeguard currency transactions in the German
+territory which had been abandoned.
+
+The aim of Funk’s economic policy—one might call it the mainspring of
+his life work—was the formation of a European economic community based
+on a just and natural balance of interest of the sovereign states. Even
+during the war he relentlessly pursued this goal, although the
+exigencies of war and the restraints imposed on development by the war
+naturally impeded these efforts at every turn. Funk has given a graphic
+description of the economic Europe which he envisaged and strove to
+attain in some major speeches on economic policy. Extracts from some of
+these speeches, many of which received a hearing even in neutral and
+enemy countries, are included in the document book.
+
+In judging the acts of the Defendant Funk, his whole personality must
+naturally be taken into consideration to some extent in investigating
+the motives from which he acted. Funk was never looked upon by the
+German people—as far as he was known at all—as a Party man capable of
+participating in brutal outrages, using methods of violence and terror
+or amassing fortunes at the expense of others. He inclined rather toward
+art and literature, which preference he shared with—for instance—his
+friend Baldur von Schirach. Originally, as you have been told, he wanted
+to study music, and in later years he preferred to have poets and
+artists in his house rather than, men of the Party and the State. In
+professional circles he was known and respected as an economist and a
+man with a wide theoretical and historical knowledge, who had risen from
+journalism and had been a brilliant stylist. His position as chief
+editor of the distinguished _Berliner Börsenzeitung_ was on a sound
+economic basis; by accepting the office of Press Chief in the Reich
+Cabinet at the beginning of 1933, after Hitler’s assumption of power, he
+even incurred a financial loss. Therefore, he was not one of those
+desperados who were glad to get into a well-paid position through
+Hitler. On the contrary, he made a financial sacrifice when he took over
+the State office offered him, and it therefore seems perfectly credible
+that he did this out of patriotism, out of a sense of duty toward his
+people, and in order to put himself at the service of his country during
+the hard times of distress.
+
+In judging the personality and character of the Defendant Funk, it is
+also significant that he never held or tried to obtain any rank in the
+Party. Other people who took over high State offices in the Third Reich
+were given the title of an SS Gruppenführer, or were given, for
+instance, the rank of SA Obergruppenführer. Funk, on the contrary, was
+only a plain Party member, from 1931 until the end of the Third Reich,
+who carried out his State functions conscientiously, but made no effort
+to obtain any honors within the Party.
+
+The only incident with which the Defendant Funk was reproached in this
+connection was the fact that he accepted an endowment in 1940, on his
+fiftieth birthday. In itself, of course, that is not a punishable act;
+but the Tribunal evidently evaluated it as a moral charge against the
+defendant. Therefore, we shall briefly define our position with regard
+to this. We remember how this endowment came about: The President and
+Board of the Reich Chamber of Economics (Reichswirtschaftskammer), as
+the highest representatives of German economic life, presented him on
+his fiftieth birthday with a farmhouse in Upper Bavaria and about 110
+acres of ground. This farmhouse, of course, existed for the time being
+only on the paper of the presentation document and had still to be
+built. This presentation was expressly approved by the head of the
+State, Adolf Hitler; therefore it was not made secretly to the Reich
+Minister of Economics, but quite officially, without any suppression or
+secrecy in the matter.
+
+The gift subsequently turned out to be an unfortunate one for Funk, as
+the building proved much more expensive than had been expected and Funk
+was required to pay a very high donation tax. Funk, who, up to that
+time, had never incurred debts and whose finances had always been well
+regulated, now found himself plunged into debt through this “gift” of a
+farmhouse. Göring heard of it and came to Funk’s assistance with a
+generous sum. When Hitler heard of Funk’s financial difficulties through
+Minister Lammers, he had the cash necessary to settle Funk’s financial
+troubles transferred to him in the form of a gift. With this Funk was
+able to pay his taxes and his debts. He used the remainder to create two
+public endowments, one for dependents of officials of the Reichsbank
+killed in action, the other to the same end for the staff of the
+Ministry of Economics. The farm was also to become an endowment at some
+later date. Funk’s treatment of the matter shows his delicacy in this
+respect too. Even though such an endowment could not be legally
+disputed, he felt that it was better to avoid such endowments and to
+make them over to the public, since he could not refuse to accept a gift
+from the head of the State.
+
+Mr. President, I now turn to a new subject. I would propose to have a
+recess now.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Court will adjourn now.
+
+ [_A recess was taken until 1400 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ _Afternoon Session_
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal proposes to go until 4 o’clock without a
+break, if that is convenient.
+
+DR. SAUTER: Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I have so far defined the
+position of the Defendant Funk in general statements; I am now going to
+deal with the criminal responsibility of the Defendant Funk on the
+separate charges made against him.
+
+The first point of the Indictment deals with the support of the seizure
+of power by the Party, that is, the Defendant Funk’s Party activities
+from 1931 up to the end of 1932. The Defendant Funk is alleged to have
+helped the conspirators to seize power. This charge deals with the
+activities of the Defendant Funk from the date of his joining the Party
+in June 1931 up to the seizure of power on 30 January 1933. The
+Prosecution maintains that Funk’s activities on behalf of the Party
+during that period furthered the seizure of power by the National
+Socialists. That is correct. The Defendant Funk himself, when
+interrogated on 4 May, gave a detailed explanation of his reasons for
+considering the National Socialist seizure of power the only possible
+way of delivering the German people from the grave intellectual,
+economic, and social distress of that time. The economic program of the
+Party was, in his opinion, vague and mainly intended for propaganda. He
+himself wanted to gain recognition for his own economic principles in
+the Party, in order to work through the Party for the benefit of the
+German people. Funk gave a detailed description of these principles
+during his examination. They are based on the idea of private property,
+which is inseparable from the conception of the varying capability of a
+human being.
+
+Funk demanded the recognition of private initiative and of the
+independence of the creative businessman, added to free competition and
+the leveling of social extremes. He aimed at the elimination of Party
+and class warfare, at a strong Government with full authority and
+responsibility, and at the creation of a uniform political will among
+the people. His conversations with Adolf Hitler and other Party leaders
+convinced him that the Party entirely accepted his principles and ideas.
+In Funk’s opinion he cannot be blamed for his support of the Party in
+its struggle for power. Funk believes that the discussions in this Trial
+furnish absolute proof that the Party came to power quite legally. But
+even the methods used by Funk to assist the Party cannot, in his
+opinion, be condemned. In any case the role attributed to him by the
+Prosecution does not fit the facts. The importance of Funk’s activities
+is at times greatly overestimated by them; in many other instances their
+judgment of these activities is completely false.
+
+The evidence offered by the Prosecution consists mainly of references
+and extracts from reference books, and especially from a book by Dr.
+Oestreich, _Walter Funk—A Life for Economy_, which was submitted to the
+Tribunal as Document Number 3505-PS, USA-653. The core of this evidence
+is a “Program for Economic Reconstruction” by the Defendant Funk, which
+is printed on Page 81 of this book and which the Prosecution calls “the
+official Party declaration in the economic field” and “the economic
+bible for the Party organization.” This so-called “Program for Economic
+Reconstruction” forms the basis for the incorrect accusation made by the
+Prosecution on Page 3 of the trial brief, to the effect that the
+Defendant Funk assisted “in the formulation of the program which was
+publicly proclaimed by the Nazi Party and by Hitler.”
+
+This “Program for Economic Reconstruction,” which was read word for word
+during the hearing of the Defendant Funk, actually did not contain
+anything unusual, let alone revolutionary, or anything which was in any
+way characteristic of the National Socialist ideology. The program
+indicates the need for providing work, creating productive credits
+without inflationary consequences, balancing public finances, as well as
+the need for protective measures for agriculture and urban real estate,
+and a redirection of economic relations with foreign countries. It is a
+program which, as Funk said in his testimony, might be advocated by any
+liberal or democratic party and government. The Defendant Funk only
+regrets that the Party did not fully subscribe to these principles.
+Later on his economic viewpoint involved him in constant difficulties
+and disputes with various Party offices, especially with the German
+Labor Front and the Party Chancellery, and with Himmler and most of the
+Gauleiter. This is also confirmed by the witness Landfried, who
+described these differences between Funk and the Party in detail in his
+interrogatory. Funk had the reputation in the Party of being mainly a
+liberal and an outsider. During that time, that is mainly in 1932, he
+established relations between Hitler and some of the leading
+personalities of German economic life. He also worked to promote
+understanding for National Socialist ideas and to gain support for the
+Party by trade and industry. By virtue of these activities he was
+frequently described as Hitler’s economic adviser. But that was not a
+Party office or a Party title.
+
+In Document EC-440, USA-874, Funk states that Keppler, who was later
+appointed State Secretary, was considered the Führer’s economic adviser
+for many years before himself. By this reference Funk intended to show
+that the designation “Economic Adviser to the Führer” was given by the
+public to other persons also.
+
+The period during which Funk was given Party assignments was a very
+short one. That these activities were never of decisive importance may
+be deduced from the fact that after the assumption of power Funk’s Party
+activities ceased completely. In other fields, such as food and
+agriculture, finance, and so forth, the Party incumbents who entered the
+civil service as ministers or state secretaries, _et cetera_, retained
+their Party office, which usually acquired greater importance. The
+elimination of the sole Defendant Funk from every Party office as soon
+as the assumption of power was complete shows clearly that the Party
+leaders did not attach much value to Funk’s work in the Party.
+
+In cross-examining the Defendant Funk the Soviet Russian Prosecution
+showed him an article which had appeared on 18 August 1940 in the
+magazine _Das Reich_ on the occasion of his fiftieth birthday
+(USSR-450). In this article the author, an economist by the name of Dr.
+Herle, emphasizes that Funk “as intermediary between the Party and
+economic circles had become a pioneer working toward a new spiritual
+attitude in German economic life.”
+
+In this connection we may say that Funk never denied that he regarded it
+as his task to construct an economic system with an obligation toward
+state and community on the one hand, yet based on private ownership and
+private initiative and responsibility on the other. Funk always
+acknowledged and adopted the political aims and ideals of National
+Socialism. The majority of the German people embraced these goals and
+ideologies, as was proved by several plebiscites. Funk himself did not
+suspect that all the good intentions and idealistic aims, so often
+emphasized by Hitler when he came into power, would later crumble in the
+blood and smoke of war and sink to such an inconceivable inhuman level.
+Funk testified explicitly that he considered the authoritative form of
+government—by which he meant the strong state, a responsible cabinet,
+the social community, and an economic system with social obligations—a
+prerequisite in order to overcome the grave intellectual and economic
+crisis through which the German people were then passing. He always
+expressly acknowledged that politics must have precedence over
+economics.
+
+On 30 January 1933, as Press Chief of the Reich Government, Funk took up
+the State office of a Ministerial Director in the Reich Chancellery. Six
+weeks later, however, the direction of press policy passed into the
+hands of Dr. Goebbels, when the latter became Reich Minister for Public
+Enlightenment and Propaganda; and the press department of the Reich
+Government, which Funk was to have directed, was merged in the newly
+established Ministry for Propaganda. For the time being he retained only
+the right to make his press report personally to Reich President Von
+Hindenburg and Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler—until Hindenburg’s death.
+Then this activity also came to a complete standstill, so that the
+Office of Press Chief of the Reich Government existed only on paper.
+This was also expressly confirmed by the Defendant Fritzsche during his
+examination as a witness on 28 June.
+
+The guilt of the defendant is inferred mainly from the fact that he was
+a State Secretary in the Ministry of Propaganda. The hearing of evidence
+has shown, however, that as State Secretary, Funk had nothing whatsoever
+to do with actual propaganda work. He made no radio speeches, nor did he
+speak at public meetings. Press policy, on the other hand, was dictated
+by Dr. Goebbels in person even at that time.
+
+Even at that time, however, Funk gave particular attention to the wishes
+and complaints of the journalists. He protected the press against misuse
+by official departments and made every effort to safeguard the
+individuality of the press and to enable it to work in a responsible
+manner.
+
+All this has been established by a number of witnesses to whom I refer
+on Pages 17 to 24; in particular by the witnesses Amann, Kallus,
+Fritzsche, Oeser, and Roesen. The two latter witnesses have indeed
+confirmed the fact that Funk as State Secretary in the Ministry of
+Propaganda also worked energetically on behalf of Jews and such persons
+as were oppressed and hindered in their spiritual and artistic work by
+the legislation and cultural policy of the National Socialists. Funk did
+so much on behalf of such people that he jeopardized his own official
+position to such an extent that the Ministry actually considered him
+politically unreliable.
+
+[sm type begins]As to defendant’s activity in the Reich Ministry of
+Propaganda, the Prosecution charges him as follows:[sm type ends]
+
+ [sm type begins]“By means of such an activity in the Ministry of
+ Propaganda the Defendant Funk participated in establishing the
+ power of the conspirators over Germany, and is particularly
+ responsible for the persecution of ‘political dissenters’ and
+ Jews, for the psychological preparation of the people for war,
+ and for the weakening of the strength of and will for resistance
+ of the victims selected by the conspirators.”[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Also in this point of the accusation, the guilt of the
+Defendant Funk has been derived almost exclusively from the fact that he
+occupied the position of a state secretary in the Ministry of
+Propaganda. The hearing of evidence, however, has shown that Funk had
+nothing to do with actual propaganda activity in his position as State
+Secretary. Funk did not deliver any speeches, either through the radio
+or in public meetings. The press policy was directed by Dr. Goebbels in
+person ever since the Ministry had been established. However, Funk took
+care, to a large extent, of the wishes and complaints of the
+journalists. He protected the press against trespassing by Government
+offices and tried to secure for the press an individual look and an
+activity conscious of its responsibilities. This is expressed by the
+digest from the book written by Dr. Paul Oestreich: _Walter Funk—A Life
+for Economy_, Document 3505-PS, Exhibit USA-653, Document Book Funk
+Number 4b.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Some of Funk’s wordings from that period of his activity
+in the Ministry of Propaganda, as for example, the sentence “the press
+is no barrel organ” and the saying “the press should not be the
+scapegoat of the government” later have become all but household
+words.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]As State Secretary Funk had, on the whole, only
+organizational and economic tasks, he managed the financial side of the
+activity of the numerous organizations and institutes which were
+controlled by the Ministry of Propaganda, such as, particularly, the
+Reich Broadcasting Company, further the German Trade Publicity Council
+(Werberat der deutschen Wirtschaft), the State-owned film combines, the
+State-owned theaters and orchestras and the State-owned press agencies
+and newspapers. As to art, and according to his artistic tastes, he
+occupied himself with music and theater. In the direction of the
+Ministry of Propaganda, a complete separation between political tasks on
+the one hand and organizational and economic tasks on the other hand
+took place. This has been stated in unison by all witnesses examined on
+this point. Minister Dr. Goebbels in person directed the propaganda
+policy, exercising complete, absolute and exclusive control. His
+assistants herein were, not his State Secretary Funk, but his old
+collaborators from the propaganda organization of the Party, who, for
+the most part, were taken over by him in a personal union into the newly
+created Ministry of Propaganda. Funk, however, did not belong to the
+propaganda department of the Party, neither before nor after the
+Ministry was established. The assertion of Mr. Messersmith in his
+affidavit, submitted under Document 1760-PS, according to which Goebbels
+had incorporated Funk into the Party organization, is erroneous, and can
+obviously be attributed to the fact that Messersmith had, as an
+outsider, no insight into the division of work within the Ministry of
+Propaganda, and moreover, apparently identified readily the propaganda
+activity of the Party with the propaganda of the State Ministry. This
+has been confirmed by the questionnaire submitted by Messersmith, as
+asked for by the Defendant Funk, on May 7th, 1946, (Document Book Funk,
+Supplement Number 5). This questionnaire shows that Messersmith cannot
+even state whether he had a conversation with the Defendant Funk a few
+times or only once; furthermore, that he does not remember any more what
+topic was discussed at that time, nor in what capacity Funk was present
+at this meeting. With such vague and unreliable statements of a witness
+nothing, of course, can be proven.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]As a proof of the fact that Funk had nothing to do with
+the actual propaganda activity and—as the Defendant Göring has asserted
+here as a witness—did not play any important part at all in comparison
+to Goebbels, I refer to the affidavit of the former Reichsleiter for the
+press, Max Amann, of April 17th, 1946 (Document Book Funk, Exhibit 14).
+At first, the Prosecution has submitted an affidavit sworn by this
+witness, of December 19th, 1945 (Document 3501-PS); the statements
+contained therein have been, in the new affidavit of April 17th, 1946,
+supplemented and corrected in essential points. In this new statement,
+submitted to the Prosecution and to the Defense, the witness Amann gives
+evidence that also, according to his knowledge, Funk, as State Secretary
+in the Ministry of Propaganda, had nothing to do with the actual
+propaganda activity. For the rest, the witness confirms the statements
+of the Defendant Funk, namely, that he (Amann) did not know in person
+the distribution of activities and the interior management of the
+Ministry, and that his statements are exclusively based op information
+by other persons. The witness Heinz Kallus, on the other hand, worked
+for some years as an official of the Ministry of Propaganda. Kallus,
+too, confirms under oath in the answers, in the questionary addressed to
+him (Exhibit Number Funk-18), that on the whole Funk was engaged in
+administration and financial questions, and the same was testified by
+the Defendant Hans Fritzsche during his examination as a witness before
+this Tribunal on June 27th and 28th.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In the trial brief of the Defendant Funk, Page
+9—Document 3566-PS—the Prosecution submitted the notes of an
+SS-Scharführer Sigismund as evidence for the importance of the position
+which Funk is supposed to have held in the Ministry of Propaganda. An
+official of this Ministry, by the name of Weinbrenner, is supposed to
+have declared to that SS-Scharführer that it was impossible to know whom
+Minister Goebbels would entrust with the office of radio superintendent,
+as Goebbels took most of the important decisions only in agreement with
+Under Secretary Funk. Now, Dr. Goebbels did not as a matter of course
+undertake the appointment to the leading post in broadcasting without
+getting in touch with Funk, the chairman of the administrative board of
+the Reich Broadcasting Corporation (Reichsrundfunkgesellschaft); this,
+however, does not prove anything concerning the nature and the
+significance of the activity of the Defendant Funk nor of the aims he
+pursued thereby. After all, the Prosecution has been able to submit but
+one single document bearing the signature of Funk as Under Secretary,
+namely, the fixing of a date for the coming into force of a decree for
+the execution of a law concerning the Reichskulturkammer, of November
+9th, 1933 (Document 3505-PS); hereof the Prosecution deduces a
+responsibility or, at any rate, a co-responsibility of the Defendant
+Funk for the entire legislation for the control and co-ordination of the
+cultural professions (Kulturberufe).[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]This conclusion appears to be wrong; quite apart from
+the fact that the point in question is the fixing of a date for a decree
+concerning execution, therefore a purely formal act, it must be
+emphasized that this law was decided by the Reich Cabinet of which the
+Defendant Funk at that time was not a member.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Funk stated in his examination that, during the entire
+duration of his activity in the Ministry of Propaganda, he hardly gave
+his signature more than three times representing Dr. Goebbels. For the
+rest, the Defendant Fritzsche testified here as a witness, on June 28th,
+1946, that the position of Dr. Goebbels’ long-time collaborator and
+personal advisor Hanke, who later on became Under Secretary and
+Gauleiter, corresponded far more to the usual position of an under
+secretary in the Ministry, than the one of the Defendant Funk. It was
+Hanke, too, who maintained the liaison of Minister Goebbels with the
+section heads and advisers of the Ministry, a task adhering otherwise to
+the under secretary in a ministry, but which was never entrusted to the
+Defendant Funk, although he was an under secretary.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]It is proven by the affidavit of the former
+editor-in-chief of the _Frankfurter Zeitung_, Albert Oeser (Exhibit
+Number Funk-1), and of the attorney-at-law Dr. Karl Roesen (Exhibit
+Number Funk-2), as well as by the affidavits of the witness Heinz Kallus
+(Document Funk-18), that the Defendant Funk, in his position as an under
+secretary of the Ministry of Propaganda, energetically undertook to help
+Jews and other persons who were oppressed and thwarted in their
+intellectual or artistic activities by the National Socialist
+legislation and cultural policy, and that he did this under heavy risks
+to his own position.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Among the persons for whom Funk interceded were not only
+Jewish editors, but also many prominent German artists, and the witness
+Kallus (cf. his questionnaire in the Document Funk-18) mentions in this
+connection the Jewish proprietors of a big Berlin directory publishing
+firm, whom Funk had given permission to carry on with their business,
+against considerable resistance of the competent section of the Ministry
+and of the German trade publicity council (Werberat der deutschen
+Wirtschaft). The witness Kallus stated further, that, owing to this
+attitude toward the Jewish cultural workers, Funk was “suspect” to Dr.
+Goebbels and to the chief of the press section, Berndt, who was known to
+be particularly radical. Editor-in-chief Oeser explicitly states, as a
+witness, in his affidavit (Document Book Funk Number 1) that he has made
+his statements voluntarily to prove the “human attitude” of the
+Defendant Funk, and gives the names of eight Jewish editors of the
+_Frankfurter Zeitung_, whom Funk had given permission to carry on with
+their profession. In this connection, Oeser further remarks: “He (Funk)
+herewith proved his human understanding. Indeed, I have never heard from
+him (Funk), in the course of our conversations, any inhuman utterances.
+Owing to his (Funk’s) concessions, the endangered people obtained, in
+part repeatedly, the possibility to hope and to work anew with us and to
+prepare, without loss of income, their change of profession and their
+emigration.” Oeser, a well-known economic journalist, who always kept
+completely aloof from the Party, explicitly states that Funk, without
+any doubt, exposed himself by his attitude toward the Jews.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]In the cross-examination of the Defendant Funk the
+Prosecution referred to an affidavit, produced by the Prosecution, of an
+editor called Franz Wolf; this witness expressed—Document 3954-PS,
+Exhibit USA-377—the opinion that Funk may well have given those
+exceptional permissions not out of human sentiments, but rather in order
+to maintain the high standard of the _Frankfurter Zeitung_. By the way,
+the author of the affidavit was actually one of the Jewish editors who
+were given permission to further exercise their profession by Funk. The
+assumption of the witness Wolf is in direct contradiction to the
+positive statements of the witness Oeser. The Defendant Funk, too,
+opposed this interpretation and has pointed out that at that time such
+considerations were of no importance to him. In later years, when the
+_Frankfurter Zeitung_ was to disappear, he had, so he said, used his
+influence in order to insure the further publishing, out of material
+considerations too, as this newspaper was, as an economic paper, highly
+esteemed abroad and was the best commercial newspaper of the country.
+However, this does not alter the fact that Funk had, at that time, used
+his influence repeatedly and with success in favor of Oeser and his
+collaborators, for purely humanitarian reasons.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]The witness Kallus finally declared in his questionnaire
+(Page 3 of Document Funk-18) that he remembers several occasions where
+Funk made possible the emigration of Jewish people under tolerable
+conditions. Kallus confirms hereby the statements of the witness Luise
+Funk (Document Book Funk, Exhibit Number 3), according to which the
+Defendant Funk often received, in the years when he was Under Secretary
+of State in the Ministry of Propaganda, letters of thanks from Jews who
+had emigrated at that time from Germany and who thanked Funk for having
+given them facilities for liquidating their businesses and for having
+procured them permission to take along abroad considerable parts of
+their fortunes.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Evidence concerning this second part of the Indictment
+has accordingly shown that Funk is guilty in the sense of this part of
+the Indictment neither in his official capacity nor by his actions. He
+has helped, as far as it was within his power, many Jews and many
+individuals who were endangered and hindered in their cultural work, out
+of their material and spiritual distress, although by doing so he
+jeopardized his own position.[sm type ends]
+
+Now, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I turn to another subject—the charge
+appearing under Point 4 of my brief, Page 24 onward, namely, that he
+participated in the preparation of wars of aggression; a point which is
+dealt with by Figure 4 of the Indictment. The accusation against the
+Defendant Funk is: “that with full knowledge of the aggressive plans of
+the conspirators he participated in the planning and preparation for
+such wars.”
+
+As evidence of this, the Indictment first of all points out that
+Göring’s Ministry of Economics was brought under the Four Year Plan as
+the “high command of the German war economy,” and was placed under
+Funk’s command. The Indictment also states that according to the Law for
+the Defense of the Reich of 4 September 1938 Funk, in his capacity as
+Plenipotentiary for Economics, was explicitly charged with the
+mobilization of German economy in case of war.
+
+The Prosecution’s assertion that the Reich Ministry of Economics was
+brought under the Four Year Plan before it was handed over by Göring to
+Funk is quite correct, but the so-called “high command of the German
+economy” was not in the hands of the Reich Minister of Economics, Funk,
+but entirely in those of the Delegate for the Four Year Plan—that is,
+the Codefendant Göring. Göring has confirmed the fact that Funk was
+obliged to follow his instructions. In addition, the most important
+branches of production were managed—as we have already shown—by
+special plenipotentiaries of the Four Year Plan, who were under the
+control of Göring and received their instructions from Göring—not from
+Funk. The Reich Ministry of Economics itself was merely the office which
+carried out the directives of the Four Year Plan. The Defendant Funk has
+testified that some offices were only formally under his supervision and
+functioned in reality as autonomous institutions of the Four Year Plan.
+
+Funk’s position as Plenipotentiary for Economics was vigorously disputed
+from the beginning. When the Defendant Funk was cross-examined, Document
+EC-255 was submitted, a letter from the Reich War Minister, Von
+Blomberg, to the Delegate for the Four Year Plan, Göring, dated 29
+November 1937, wherein Blomberg proposes that the Defendant Funk, who
+had just then, on 27 November 1937, been appointed Reich Minister of
+Economics, should also be appointed Plenipotentiary for War Economy.
+This was not, however, done.
+
+Göring himself took over the Reich Ministry of Economics to begin with,
+and only handed it over to the Defendant Funk in February 1938, 3 months
+afterward. Then the High Command of the Armed Forces—more especially
+the Army Economic Staff under General Thomas, whose name has been
+mentioned repeatedly—requested that the Plenipotentiary for War Economy
+should be bound in the future to follow the directives of the High
+Command in all questions concerning supplies for the Armed Forces. In
+this Document, EC-270, USA-840, the Economic Staff of the High Command
+of the Armed Forces claims a right to direct the Plenipotentiary for War
+Economy in nearly all his fields of activity.
+
+The Defendant Funk tried by means of a conversation with Reich Marshal
+Göring and a letter to Reich Minister Dr. Lammers to clarify his
+position as Plenipotentiary for War Economy, and as such claimed to be
+placed under the direct command of Hitler and not bound to abide by the
+directives of the High Command of the Armed Forces. Göring and Lammers
+concurred with Funk’s opinion. It must, however, be emphasized most
+strongly that this did not affect Funk’s subordination to Göring, for
+all the other supreme Reich offices and ministers directly subordinate
+to Hitler’s command were also bound by the directives of the Delegate
+for the Four Year Plan, that is, by Göring’s directives.
+
+It is a remarkable fact that according to the Reich Defense Law of 4
+September 1938—the Second Reich Defense Law—the Defendant Funk did not
+become Plenipotentiary for War Economy, but Plenipotentiary for
+Economics, without the word “War,” and that this act explicitly stated
+that Funk was bound to comply with the demands of the OKW. The OKW,
+therefore, won its battle against Funk in the end.
+
+But the individual economic departments, which according to the Reich
+Defense Law were under the direction of the Plenipotentiary for
+Economics for his special assignments, were equally unwilling to
+recognize him. In an interrogatory by the former State Secretary Dr.
+Hans Posse, Funk’s deputy as Plenipotentiary for Economics (Document
+3819-PS, USA-843) which was produced during the cross-examination of the
+Defendant Funk, Posse states that the Plenipotentiary for Economics
+“never really exercised any function.” The ministers and state
+secretaries of the individual economic departments of finance,
+agriculture, transport, _et cetera_, did not, according to Posse, wish
+to be placed under Funk’s control, and even protested against it. Posse
+also mentions the disputes which Funk had with the Four Year Plan. He
+calls these conflicts “the struggle for power,” which in this connection
+simply means the authority to make decisions concerning the other
+economic departments. This was not a dispute between Göring and Funk;
+that is untrue because obviously Funk as Plenipotentiary for the
+Economics was still subordinate to Göring. Actually, this was a quarrel
+among state secretaries. The individual economic departments declared
+that they were subordinate to the Delegate for the Four Year Plan and
+refused to recognize the right of the Plenipotentiary for Economics to
+give them directives, since Funk himself was under the direction of the
+Four Year Plan. The state secretaries of the Four Year Plan supported
+the departments in their interpretation, and this lack of clarity and
+the overlapping of competencies caused the authority to issue directives
+to pass formally from the hands of the Delegate of the Four Year Plan a
+few months after the outbreak of the war.
+
+Questioned by the Prosecution as to whether he had been in the habit of
+discussing important matters with Funk, the above-mentioned State
+Secretary Posse replied: “Yes; but these discussions did not produce
+results.” Posse confirms that the authority given to Göring was much
+more extensive and that Göring finally dissolved the office of the
+Plenipotentiary for Economics. According to Funk this happened as early
+as December 1939, a few months after the outbreak of the war. Funk
+retained only the formal right to issue decrees. This has also been
+confirmed by Lammers. Therefore, the Codefendant Göring’s statement that
+he was also of the opinion that Funk’s position as Plenipotentiary for
+Economics could be described as having existed only on paper is quite
+correct.
+
+[sm type begins]Naturally the office of the Plenipotentiary for
+Economics worked in continuous business relations with the other
+economic departments, with the Four Year Plan, with the staff of the
+department for defense economics of the German Supreme Command, and with
+the Plenipotentiary for Administration, that is to say, the Reich
+Minister of the Interior. As proof the Prosecution presented various
+documents showing that at the meetings of the Deputy Plenipotentiary for
+Economics and his staff, questions of finance, war production, labor,
+and others were discussed. In this connection the office of the
+Plenipotentiary once also treated the question of employing prisoners of
+war in the industry, but this was an entirely theoretical discussion
+(Document Number EC-488, USA Exhibit Number 842).[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Why this General Staff economy work, which had to be
+done in times of peace for the eventuality of war, should be
+incriminating for the Defendant Funk is not clear. Besides, until August
+1939 he personally did not take any interest in the details of these
+questions. All this work of the Plenipotentiary for Economics consisted
+of general preparations in case of war and did not apply to any special
+war. However, when Funk’s proposition for changing over from peacetime
+to wartime economy was worked out in co-operation with the other
+economic departments in August 1939, the danger of war with Poland was
+already pressing.[sm type ends]
+
+Nowhere in the material presented by the Prosecution is there a single
+indication of the fact that the Defendant Funk knew anything about
+military and political conversations and preparations which had as their
+object the planning of war—in particular, a war of aggression to be
+waged by Germany. Funk was never invited to take part in any
+conversations of this kind. He was, in particular, not present at the
+well-known discussion with Göring on 14 October 1938, which was treated
+exhaustively by the Prosecution on Page 24 of the trial brief. According
+to the Prosecution, Göring during that meeting referred to an order
+issued by Hitler for an unusual increase in armaments, especially
+weapons of attack. The Prosecutor declared during the session of 11
+January 1946 that at that meeting Göring addressed words to Funk which
+were described as “the words of a man already at war.” Several documents
+included in the Funk document book and submitted to the Tribunal prove,
+however, beyond doubt that the Defendant Funk did not attend that
+meeting at all, as he was in Sofia at the time in order to conduct
+economic negotiations with Bulgaria. This exhibit, which the Prosecution
+obviously intended to use as a main exhibit, is thereby invalidated. On
+25 August 1939, the date of Funk’s letter to Hitler to which I referred
+this morning, the German and Polish armies were already completely
+mobilized and stood face to face with each other. He was, therefore,
+compelled to act in that particular manner, and by that time he was no
+longer able to cancel any of the preparations. All this is corroborated
+by the diary kept by the witness Kallus and submitted in the Funk
+document book under Number 18. The Defendant Funk stated here on the
+witness stand:
+
+ “It was naturally my duty as Plenipotentiary for Economics to do
+ all I could to prevent the civilian section of the economy from
+ being shattered in the event of war, and it was also my duty as
+ president of the Reichsbank to increase as much as possible the
+ Reichsbank’s reserves of gold and foreign currency.”
+
+He goes on to say:
+
+ “That was necessary on account of the general political tension
+ at the time, and it was also necessary in case no war would come
+ about but only economic sanctions which, in view of the
+ political situation at the time, one could and must expect.”
+
+Funk likewise says:
+
+ “It was also my duty as Reich Minister of Economics to increase
+ production.”
+
+That is an exact quotation from the Defendant Funk’s testimony. On this
+subject the witness Puhl, who was vice president of the Reichsbank,
+states in his interrogatory of 1 May, which is in the hands of the
+Tribunal, that the position of the Reichsbank in the last 7 months of
+Funk’s presidency before the outbreak of the war had not been materially
+strengthened, and that very little business had been done in the
+exchange of foreign assets for gold since January 1939. The Reichsbank’s
+cautious policy in regard to gold and foreign currency, according to
+this witness, was in line with its customary practice.
+
+Puhl’s statement is important for the correct understanding of the
+reference made by Funk, in his letter to Hitler of 25 August 1939, to
+the conversion of foreign assets into gold. During the period of Funk’s
+presidency of the Reichsbank the transactions to which he alludes were
+no longer of any importance. The exaggerated phrases used by Funk in his
+letter to Hitler make the contents appear much more important than they
+actually were.
+
+Funk explained this fact during his examination by saying that this
+letter was a private letter of thanks, that in those days every German
+was under a very great strain owing to the tense political events
+throughout Europe, and that he wanted to inform his Chancellor at this
+moment when the country was in danger of war, that he, Funk, had also
+done his duty. This was the first and only occasion on which Funk
+actively exercised his functions as Plenipotentiary for Economics.
+
+Here I must insert something which is based upon some minutes which the
+Prosecution did not submit until the hearing of evidence had been
+concluded; Document 3787-PS. These are the minutes of the second meeting
+of the Reich Defense Council held on 23 June 1939. Funk, as
+Plenipotentiary for Economics, attended that meeting of the Reich
+Defense Council, which took place about 2 months before the beginning of
+the war. The text of the minutes, however, leaves no doubt whatever that
+they concern general, and therefore mainly theoretical, preparations for
+any war. Furthermore, to appreciate this document it must be remembered
+that during the war which broke out 3 months later the whole of the
+Defendant Funk’s assignments in connection with the distribution of
+labor was transferred to the Four Year Plan, since the main functions of
+the Plenipotentiary for Economics were formally and completely
+abolished, as I have previously shown, shortly after the outbreak of
+war.
+
+To continue with my brief—the Defendant Funk has explained in detail
+during his examination that up to the very end he did not believe that
+war would come, but that on the contrary he thought that the Polish
+conflict would be settled by diplomatic means. The accuracy of this
+statement is also confirmed by the witnesses Landfried, Posse, and Puhl,
+the defendant’s three closest co-workers, in interrogatories submitted
+to the Court (Exhibit Numbers Funk-16 and 17 and Document 3849-PS). The
+danger of war with Russia came to Funk’s knowledge for the first time
+when he heard of Rosenberg’s appointment as plenipotentiary for the
+unified treatment of eastern European problems in April 1941. We
+remember that at that time Lammers and Rosenberg gave the Defendant Funk
+the same explanations, generally speaking, as those stated to the
+Tribunal here by all the witnesses heard on this question. He was told
+that the reason for the preparations for war against Soviet Russia was
+that the Soviet Russians were massing considerable forces along the
+entire border, that they had invaded Bessarabia, and that Molotov, in
+his discussions on the subject of the Baltic Sea and the Balkans, had
+made demands which Germany could not fulfill. As Rosenberg stated that
+the assignment given him by Hitler also included economic measures, Funk
+placed a ministerial director, Dr. Schlotterer, at Rosenberg’s disposal
+as liaison official. Schlotterer later took over the direction of the
+economic section of the Rosenberg Ministry and joined the Economic
+Operations Staff East of the Four Year Plan. The Ministry for Economics
+itself and Funk had practically nothing to do with economic questions in
+the occupied East and concerned themselves merely with questions bearing
+on German internal economy. The Ministry for Economics had no authority
+whatever to make decisions in the Occupied Eastern Territories. During
+his cross-examination the Defendant Funk was shown an extract from an
+interrogation of 19 October 1945, dealing with the subject “Preparations
+for War against Russia” (Document Number 3952-PS, USA-875). In this
+interrogation Funk stated that the Defendant Hess asked him at the end
+of April 1941 whether he, Funk, had heard anything about an impending
+war against Russia. Funk replied: “I have not heard anything definite,
+but there seems to be some discussion along that line.”
+
+The explanation of this conversation at the end of April 1941 between
+two men who were not informed of the facts may well be that at that time
+Funk did not yet definitely know the reason for Rosenberg’s assignment,
+but knew only of suspicions and rumors.
+
+On 28 May 1941 Rosenberg had a meeting with Funk (Document 1031-PS). In
+this meeting, as you may recall, they discussed the question of how the
+monetary problem in the East might be regulated in the event of war
+against Russia and the occupation of those territories by German forces.
+Gentlemen, in my opinion it is quite natural that in view of an
+impending war, even a war of defense, the authorities responsible for
+money matters should discuss the question of the handling of these
+matters in case enemy territory should be occupied. Funk was opposed to
+any solution likely to give rise to speculation; and he described the
+suggested rate of exchange for marks and rubles as entirely arbitrary.
+He agreed with Rosenberg that the Russian territory should have its own
+national currency as soon as conditions permitted. For the rest he
+demanded further investigation of these problems, especially since the
+matter could not be decided in advance.
+
+Here too, therefore, Funk approached matters with his characteristic
+caution and endeavored to find a solution which would create stable
+conditions from the very start. If the necessity for printing ruble
+bills to meet the most urgent demands for currency was mentioned in the
+discussion with Rosenberg—though not by Funk—Funk did not see anything
+either unusual or criminal therein. If the currency of a country has
+been depleted, it is absolutely necessary for fresh money to be provided
+by the power responsible for maintaining a stable monetary system. Who
+made the banknotes was of no importance to Funk; the essential point for
+him was by whom the banknotes were issued and in what quantity.
+Moreover, the production of a new banknote requires months of
+preparation, so that the execution of such a plan—which, as I said, was
+in any case not Funk’s—could not have taken place until much later.
+
+A few weeks after this discussion the war actually broke out. Funk knew
+that there was danger of war with Russia. That Germany had long been
+preparing for such a war was however as little known to him as the fact
+that Germany would attack and thus wage a preventive war. Funk was
+informed neither of the march into Austria nor of the negotiations in
+regard to the Sudetenland—in September and October 1938 he was not even
+in Germany—nor was he informed of the seizure of the remainder of
+Czechoslovakia. In the case of Poland, he knew that the conflict was
+acute, but nothing more; of Russia the same thing was true. But in both
+cases he was informed even of this only a short time before the actual
+outbreak of war. As far as wars with other countries were concerned,
+Funk received no information whatsoever before the opening of
+hostilities; he was only informed afterward.
+
+All the facts I have mentioned form a clear indication that Funk knew
+nothing of Hitler’s intentions with regard to foreign policy, and that
+he had no knowledge whatsoever of the fact that Hitler was planning wars
+of aggression. In the summer of 1939 Funk certainly devoted particular
+attention to the conversion of German economy from a peacetime to a
+wartime basis. But as an official of the Reich, Funk considered it to be
+not only his right but also his duty to prepare the German people for a
+defensive war and to take the necessary economic measures.
+
+However, the Prosecution believes that it can eliminate all these doubts
+by describing the Reichsregierung or the National Socialist Party as a
+criminal organization which conspired against other nations, and whose
+sole task was to plan and wage wars of aggression, to subjugate and
+enslave foreign nations, and to plunder and Germanize other countries.
+This deduction is erroneous, since those plans were devised and executed
+only by Hitler himself and a few of the men closest to him, of the type
+of Goebbels, Himmler, and Bormann. According to the evidence we have
+heard, there can be no doubt that even the highest officials of the
+State and the Armed Forces—and in particular Funk—were not informed of
+these plans, but that these plans were concealed from them by a cunning
+system of secrecy.
+
+Any comparison with the secret societies mentioned by the Prosecution,
+which in other countries banded together in criminal organizations, as
+for example the Ku Klux Klan in America, is impossible for a further
+reason. The Ku Klux Klan was organized from the start as a secret
+society for the purpose of terrorizing and committing crimes. In 1871,
+after scarcely 6 years of existence, it was expressly forbidden by the
+North American Government through a special law, known as the Ku Klux
+Klan Act. At that time the Government even imposed martial law on it and
+fought it with every possible means. It was an organization with which
+the Government and Congress of the United States never had any dealings.
+A man like Funk would, of course, never have joined a secret society, a
+criminal organization against which the Government was fighting.
+However, the National Socialist Party in Germany was never a secret
+organization, but was a party recognized by the Government and
+considered lawful. The unity between this Party and the State was even
+declared in a special Reich law. Since 1934 the leader of this Party was
+at the same time the elected head of the Reich, and this head of the
+State and his Government have been constantly and officially recognized
+as a government by the entire world from 1933 on. It was due precisely
+to this international recognition of Hitler by every foreign country—a
+recognition which continued to be extended in part even during the
+second World War—that Funk and millions of other Germans never doubted
+the legality of the Government and that such doubts, if they ever
+entered their minds, were immediately dispelled. Millions of German
+officials and German soldiers assumed, just as Funk did, that they were
+only doing their duty in not withholding from the head of the State the
+recognition accorded to him by every country in the world.
+
+[sm type begins]The foreign countries, their statesmen as well as their
+general staffs, the press as well as the intelligence service of other
+countries, were certainly better informed about the German situation and
+also about the true aims of German politics than the German citizen who
+had no access to foreign newspapers, who was not permitted to listen to
+foreign radio stations if he did not want to land in jail or on the
+scaffold, who for years lived as isolated as in jail and could not even
+trust his neighbors and friends—not even his relatives—and dared not
+talk things over with anybody. Even ministers knew no more about
+Hitler’s true plans than any other fellow citizen and even of major
+State affairs they mostly learned only afterward through the newspapers
+or the radio. Who could have ever conceived the thought that foreign
+states would maintain diplomatic relations with a criminal organization
+and that official persons of foreign countries should recognize and call
+upon a man in whom they saw the head of a band of conspirators?[sm type
+ends]
+
+As already mentioned, Funk has never denied that in his plans and
+directives he naturally took into account the possibility of wars which
+might some day have to be waged by Germany, just as it is part of the
+duty of every general staff in the world to take such possibilities into
+consideration. At that time Funk had every reason to do so in his
+capacity as Minister of Economics and Reichsbank president; for the
+world situation since the first World War had been so tense, and the
+conflicting interests of individual nations had frequently appeared
+insurmountable to such a degree that, unless he wanted to be accused of
+neglecting or betraying the interests of his own people, every statesman
+had to make the preparations necessary for waging war. A preliminary
+activity of this kind is, therefore, not in itself of criminal
+significance; and Funk has no doubt that during those years the
+ministers of economics and bank presidents of other countries also
+made—and had to make—similar preparations for the event of war. In the
+case of Funk it is of no importance whether or not he for his part
+ordered such preparations, but only whether or not he knew that Hitler
+was planning aggressive wars and intended to wage such aggressive wars
+in violation of existing treaties and in disregard of international law.
+
+But Funk, as he declared under oath, did not know this, nor did he act
+on this premise. Hitler’s constant affirmations of peace prevented such
+a possibility from entering his mind. Today, of course, we know on the
+basis of the actual events that followed and on the basis of the facts
+established by these proceedings, that those peace assertions of
+Hitler’s, which were still on his lips when he committed suicide, were
+in reality only lies and deception. But at that time Funk regarded
+Hitler’s protestations in favor of peace as perfectly genuine. It never
+occurred to him at that time that he himself and the whole German nation
+could be deceived by Hitler; he believed Hitler’s words just as did the
+entire world, and thus he was the victim of that deception just as was
+the entire world. If no blame attaches to foreign statesmen and generals
+who believed Hitler’s protestations, although they certainly were better
+informed on Germany’s rearmament than was Funk, the faith which he
+himself had in the head of the State cannot be called a crime.
+
+Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I have now examined the Prosecution’s
+accusation that Funk had planned wars of aggression; and I turn to
+another point of the Indictment, which concerns Funk’s activities in the
+occupied territories and the charge of forced labor.
+
+The Prosecution offered very little evidence against Funk on the subject
+of forced labor or the slave-labor program. In the main he is held
+responsible for the compulsory employment of foreign workers on the
+grounds that he was a member of the Central Planning Board from autumn
+1943 on. The first session of the Central Planning Board at which he was
+present took place on 22 November 1943, that is to say, at an advanced
+stage of the war, and after that he very rarely attended meetings. The
+Defendant Speer testified to this, and it is also evident from the
+minutes of the Board, which were very carefully kept. And I should like
+to emphasize the fact that Funk never had anything to do with the
+employment of labor either in his capacity as Minister of Economics or
+as president of the Reichsbank. He was on principle opposed to taking in
+too many workers from the occupied territories, especially by force,
+because this interfered with the economic and the social life of these
+territories. The Codefendant Sauckel and the witnesses Landfried and
+Hayler have confirmed this, and it is also shown by the remarks made by
+Funk himself at the meeting held in Lammers’ office on 11 July 1944
+(Document 3819-PS), which was frequently quoted in Court. Here, for
+instance, Funk expressed disapproval of ruthless raids to recruit
+foreign workers.
+
+If Funk sent representatives to the Central Planning Board, he did so
+only to insure that the necessary raw materials were allocated to the
+industries engaged in manufacturing consumer’s goods and goods for
+export, but never to deal with questions of foreign labor, in which he
+was not at all interested. Although the Prosecution, in cross-examining
+the witness Hayler, on 7 May 1946, confronted him with a statement by
+Funk during the preliminary interrogation of 22 October 1945, Document
+Number 3544-PS, to the effect that he had “not racked his brain” over
+these labor problems, it must also be stated on the part of the Defense
+that in the next sentence of these minutes—in the same breath, so to
+speak—Funk declared that he had always done his utmost to prevent
+workers being taken away from their homeland, in this case France. This
+second sentence, although not quoted by the Prosecution, seems to be of
+special importance because it clearly reveals Funk’s disapproval of the
+compulsory measures used in connection with the utilization of foreign
+labor. The Defendant Speer, however, testified before the Tribunal on 20
+June that the Central Planning Board made no plans at all for the
+utilization of labor. Only occasional discussions on questions
+concerning the utilization of labor took place here. The records
+containing the actual results of the negotiations and decisions of the
+Central Planning Board have not been introduced by the Prosecution. It
+has been shown that Funk, who attended only a few of the meetings of the
+Central Planning Board, never received the full notes but only the
+minutes, which revealed nothing. Before Speer was responsible for
+decisions on war production, and before Sauckel became Plenipotentiary
+General for the Allocation of Labor—that is, before 1942—the question
+of recruiting labor for production was dealt with by the Four Year Plan,
+that is, by Göring and not by Funk. Later on applications for workers
+required, as Speer has testified, were usually made by the industries
+directly to the offices controlling the allocation of labor. While Funk
+was still in charge of production in the Reich Ministry for Economics
+and working in accordance with the directives of the Four Year Plan,
+questions concerning the allocation of labor were not dealt with by the
+Reich Ministry for Economics at all, but by the Plenipotentiary General
+appointed under the Four Year Plan for the various branches of
+industry—that is, by Göring—by means of direct negotiation with the
+Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor. Speer clarified
+this in connection with Document Sauckel Number 12. He also clarified
+the fact that several branches of industry, such as overground and
+underground construction not falling within the competency of the Reich
+Minister of Economics, were cited in this document as belonging to it.
+
+[sm type begins]Some other items had been rectified previously already
+by Sauckel’s defense counsel. The various economic offices
+(Wirtschaftsämter) likewise did not request manpower from the Reich
+Ministry of Economics. They were, however, not offices of the Reich
+Ministry of Economics, but were incorporated in the so-called
+intermediate instance, that is, in the provincial authorities, or in the
+Gauleitungen.[sm type ends]
+
+[sm type begins]An important point in this connection is the
+establishment of the fact that up to 1943, that is, up to the time in
+which Funk was at all competent in questions of production, foreign
+workers came to Germany through recruitment solely upon the basis of a
+voluntary decision. With respect to this, I refer to the decree of the
+Reich Minister for Labor promulgated on 30 July 1940, presented in
+Funk’s book of documents under Number 12, in which the conformity with
+obligations internationally agreed upon is specifically pointed out.[sm
+type ends]
+
+Finally it must be stated that Funk, at the time when he joined the
+Central Planning Board, no longer had any production assignments and
+could therefore no longer claim workers, so that in consequence he had
+no further interest in this aspect of the Central Planning Board’s
+activities.
+
+[sm type begins]Regarding Funk’s attitude toward the economy of occupied
+territory, and measures taken by him to insure the maintenance of
+orderly economic conditions and especially of stable conditions of
+currency, I refer to the questionnaires Landfried (Exhibit Number
+Funk-16) and Puhl (Exhibit Number Funk-17), as well as to testimony of
+the witnesses Hayler, Neubacher, and Seyss-Inquart. I will refer only to
+Document 2263-PS, introduced by the Prosecution during cross-examination
+of the Defendant Funk, a letter from the Under Secretary of the Ministry
+of Economics to the Armed Forces High Command of 6 June 1942, in which
+the transfer of 100 million Reichsmark from occupation money is
+requested for purchases by Roges Raw Material Incorporated
+(Rohstoffhandelsgesellschaft) on the black market in France.[sm type
+ends]
+
+[sm type begins]Here we deal with the purchases in occupied territories
+mentioned before, resulting from instructions by the Four Year Plan.
+These, however, represent exactly those purchases against which Funk
+protested. His protests finally culminated in the decision of the
+Delegate for the Four Year Plan (Göring) to prohibit any such further
+purchases. As is known, Funk personally had no authority to issue
+instructions for the occupied territories. Moreover such controlled
+purchases by authorities must be looked upon in a different light from
+the uncontrolled purchases of the various State, Party, and Armed Forces
+agencies, against which Funk fought time and again (Questionnaire
+Landfried, Document Book Number Funk-16).[sm type ends]
+
+Summarily it must be said that the evidence submitted has proved beyond
+doubt that the Defendant Funk took a great many measures to prevent the
+exploitation of occupied territories and that the fact that he succeeded
+in preventing the devaluation of currency in occupied countries was in
+itself enough to protect them from suffering damage to an extent which
+cannot be evaluated in detail.
+
+With that, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I leave this point of the
+Indictment against Funk and turn to a further charge against him,
+namely, his participation in the elimination of Jews from economic life
+in November and December 1938, which forms Point 3 of the Indictment
+against him.
+
+Gentlemen, the charges which the Prosecution has made against Funk
+contain many details with which, in view of the time at my disposal, I
+am unable to deal fully. With regard to such details I shall refer to
+statements made by Funk himself in this connection. First of all,
+however, I must deal more fully with what seems to me the most important
+of all the charges made against Funk, namely, that of playing a part in
+the persecution of the Jews. The Defendant Funk considers this to be the
+most important factor in his trial.
+
+Gentlemen, no one in Germany has ever asserted that Funk was one of
+those fanatical anti-Semites who took part in the pogroms against the
+Jews or who approved of these proceedings and profited by them; Funk
+always condemned such actions. This can be explained not only by his
+natural disposition and the environment in which he grew up, but also by
+his years of work as a journalist, mainly in connection with that
+section of the press which dealt with economic policy and consequently
+kept him in continuous touch with the Jewish circles of importance to
+economic life. Experts in that field know, and still have respect for,
+Funk who even at that time showed an attitude that was free of all
+anti-Semitism, and friendly toward the Jews rather than hostile.
+
+It is tragic to a certain extent that in spite of this the name Funk, of
+all names, has been repeatedly connected in this Trial with the decree
+of November 1933, as a result of which the Jews were eliminated from
+economic life. Whether he liked it or not, all questions concerning the
+treatment of Jews in the economic life of Germany were under the
+jurisdiction of his department as Minister for Economics. As an official
+it was his duty to issue the necessary executive instructions.
+
+This was certainly particularly difficult for Funk, in view of his
+tolerant attitude. At that time he had already been a civil servant of
+the Reich Propaganda Ministry and the Ministry for Economics for 8
+years, and yet, during all that time, the Prosecution could not cite a
+single instance of any display of anti-Semitism on Funk’s part or any
+evidence of his having urged or approved of the use of force, terrorism,
+or injustice against the Jews. On the contrary, we know from the
+statements of various witnesses that Funk repeatedly interceded for his
+Jewish fellow citizens in the course of these years; that he looked
+after them and tried in their interests to alleviate hardships, to
+prevent encroachments on their rights, and to spare the lives and
+careers of human beings, even if they were Jews or political opponents
+of his own.
+
+It is, therefore, not surprising that this man, with his wide experience
+in the economic field, this man of far-reaching knowledge, with his
+frankly tolerant views, was most painfully affected when on 10 November
+1938 he had to witness the destruction of Jewish homes and shops in
+Berlin, and when he received one report after another confirming the
+fact that Goebbels and his clique, exploiting the indignation of the
+populace over the assassination of a German by a Jew, were organizing
+such pogroms throughout Germany, and that these outrages were leading
+not only to the destruction of Jewish property, but also to the murder
+of many Jews and to the persecution of many thousands of innocent
+citizens.
+
+The affidavit of this assistant, Ministerialrat Kallus (Document Book
+Number Funk-15) of 9 December 1945, and that of Frau Luise Funk of 5
+November 1945 (Funk Document Book Number 3), prove clearly that Funk
+condemned such excesses most severely, that he was incensed to the
+extent of calling them filthy outrages even when addressing Dr. Goebbels
+himself, and that he threatened to resign in the event of a repetition.
+Even at that time he told the mighty Goebbels to his face that one
+should be ashamed of being a German.
+
+All this, Gentlemen, expressed the justified indignation of a man who
+for years had made every effort to insure moderation toward Jews and
+political opponents and had received many a letter of gratitude for so
+doing—a man who had fought for years to prevent terrorism, to secure
+for all his fellow citizens the rights to which they were entitled, and
+to raise the standard of German economic life—and who now saw all his
+efforts frustrated in a single night by the brutal fanaticism of a Dr.
+Goebbels.
+
+Funk himself, during his interrogation, gave us a vivid description of
+how, ever since he entered office as Minister of Economics in February
+1938, he had been subjected to continuous pressure by Goebbels and Dr.
+Ley to eliminate the Jews from the economic life of the country in the
+same way as they had been eliminated in 1933 from its cultural life.
+
+The witness Dr. Hayler stated here that Himmler also found fault with
+Funk for this. Funk himself testified to the difficulties which again
+and again occurred during those years with workers stirred up by
+propaganda, who were sometimes no longer willing to work under Jewish
+managers, or did not dare to do so; and how, in these oppressive
+conditions, numerous Jewish owners sold their businesses—frequently at
+cut prices—to people who seemed to Funk as the Minister of Economics
+entirely unfit to acquire or manage such businesses. Funk tried again
+and again to stem this overwhelming development. He made continual
+efforts to put a brake on this process of Aryanization; to provide for a
+reasonable and just settlement for Jewish owners of businesses; and to
+allow them to emigrate from Germany with their property. But Funk
+realized more and more clearly every day that he was too weak to stop
+this movement and that the radical elements around Dr. Goebbels and Dr.
+Ley were gaining the upper hand, in which they were unfortunately able
+to rely on Hitler’s authority. Hitler had allowed himself in the course
+of time to be won over more and more to the policy of radical treatment
+of the Jewish question by a few irresponsible advisers who are not
+sitting in the dock today.
+
+The events of 9 November 1938 burst like a bombshell into this fight
+between Funk and other considerate people on the one side, and Goebbels
+and Ley on the other. As Dr. Goebbels himself admitted later to
+Fritzsche, they were aimed directly at the person of the Defendant Funk,
+who was thus to be confronted with a _fait accompli_. As the witness
+Landfried testified, Dr. Goebbels did in fact attain his ends through
+this operation of November 1938. Goebbels was able to refer later to
+Hitler’s own order for the Jews to be completely excluded from the
+economic life of Germany, although Funk, as the minister concerned,
+repeatedly made allusion to the relations with foreign countries upon
+which the German Reich and its economy depended.
+
+The orders necessary to carry out this program were given by Göring in
+his capacity of Delegate for the Four Year Plan, on the direct orders of
+Hitler. Funk never had any doubt that in this particular affair Göring
+also was to a certain degree only a puppet, because he had always known
+Göring to be a man who condemned extreme radicalism in this particular
+question of the Jews. Funk’s views on this point were shared by wide
+circles of the German people, and the fateful Göring meeting of 12
+November 1938 (Document 1816-PS) proved this to be correct. This
+document has been mentioned here repeatedly. At a meeting which preceded
+that of 12 November 1938, Göring sharply condemned the acts of terrorism
+which had occurred and declared to the Gauleiter present that he would
+make every Gauleiter personally responsible for acts of violence
+committed in his district. But what was the good of that?
+
+In the course of the second meeting, the minutes of which were submitted
+to the Tribunal under Number 1816-PS, Goebbels ultimately succeeded in
+imposing his radical demands; and the course taken by this meeting
+forced Funk to admit that the complete elimination of the Jews from
+German economic life could no longer be delayed for the simple reason
+that the circles in power had become far too fanatical. It became
+evident to Funk that legislative measures were necessary if the Jews
+were to be protected from further acts of terrorism, looting, and
+violence and if they were to get any reasonable compensation. During the
+Göring meeting of 12 November 1938, Funk repeatedly expressed his views
+again, as is shown by the records. It was due to the efforts made by the
+Defendant Funk, with the support of Göring, that Jewish businesses were
+reopened for the time being, that the whole procedure was taken out of
+the hands of the arbitrary local agencies and put on a legal basis
+throughout Germany, and finally that in order to gain time in which to
+carry out this action a definite date was set for its completion. Anyone
+who reads carefully the minutes of the Göring meeting of 12 November
+1938 will, in spite of their incorrect and incomplete formulation, be
+able to find definite and repeated indications of Funk’s moderating
+influence; namely, his insistence—repeatedly mentioned in the
+minutes—on the reopening of Jewish stores, his proposal that the Jews
+be allowed to retain at least their securities, and finally his attitude
+to Heydrich’s demand that the Jews be placed in ghettos. The minutes of
+12 November 1938 prove beyond doubt that it was Funk who opposed
+Heydrich’s proposal by saying: “We don’t need ghettos. Surely the Jews
+could move closer together among themselves. The existence of 3 million
+Jewish people among no less than 70 million Germans can be regulated
+without ghettos.” This is a literal quotation.
+
+Funk therefore wanted to save the Jews at least from being interned in
+ghettos. It must be admitted that at that time Funk did not entirely
+succeed in securing recognition for his point of view, so that the
+proposal that the Jews should be allowed to retain their securities, for
+instance, was turned down, although Funk pointed out, as the minutes
+show, that to realize the Jewish securities would suddenly flood the
+German stock market with securities to the value of 500 million
+Reichsmark and would, therefore, have serious consequences for the
+German stock market. The decisive question in judging the Defendant Funk
+is not so much his success as the fact that he made an obvious effort to
+save for the Jews all that could be saved in the circumstances; and we
+must not lose sight of the fact that in all those measures Funk acted
+only in his capacity as Minister of Economics, that is, as an official
+who merely gave the order to execute a command which Göring as Delegate
+of the Four Year Plan had issued on the orders of Hitler. Funk found
+himself in exactly the same position of constraint, as, for example, the
+Reich Minister of Finance, Graf Schwerin von Krosigk, who at that time
+had to order the punitive levy of 1,000 million Reichsmark to be paid by
+the Jews, or the Reich Minister of Justice and the Reich Minister of the
+Interior, both of whom issued similar executive instructions in their
+respective spheres. The Tribunal must decide the difficult legal
+question of whether a state official whose government has been legally
+recognized by all the governments of the world is liable to legal
+punishment for putting into effect a law—and I emphasize the word
+“law”—passed in accordance with the legislative system of this state.
+This legal problem is entirely different from the other question, dealt
+with in the Charter and by the Prosecution, as to whether or not the
+fact that an official order was given by a superior can serve as an
+excuse. I might add here that I shall not discuss this legal question
+because I shall leave it to the other members of the Defense. I shall
+discuss only whether an official who puts into effect a law passed by
+the internationally recognized government of his country thereby becomes
+liable to punishment. That is an entirely different problem from the one
+dealt with by the Charter.
+
+Gentlemen, since this has not been dealt with before, I have to state
+the following; I read at the bottom of Page 50: Our natural sense of
+justice fully approves that a citizen, an official, or even a soldier,
+cannot defend himself by reference to the official order given him by
+his superior if this order obviously implies an illegal act, and
+especially a crime; and if in the existing circumstances and in due
+consideration of all the accompanying facts, the subordinate realizes,
+or should realize, that the official order is contrary to the law.
+
+If the latter condition exists, in other words, if the official order
+obviously constitutes a breach of the law, it may in general be fully
+approved that the subordinate is not accorded the right to refer to his
+superior’s official order as an excuse and to maintain that he was only
+carrying out that order. In that respect this stipulation of the Charter
+contains nothing essentially new, but only the confirmation and further
+development of legal principles which are recognized to a varying extent
+in the penal codes of most civilized nations today. A certain amount of
+precaution, however, seems to be indicated in this matter, for it should
+not be forgotten, on the other hand, that obedience to the orders of a
+superior—not obedience to the law, but to a superior—is, and must in
+future remain the foundation of every government in all nations if the
+orderly functioning of the state administrative apparatus is to be
+secured; and that it would be dangerous for the civil servant to decide
+for himself whether to keep his oath of allegiance.
+
+But, Gentlemen, in our case something different is involved: We are
+dealing here with the obedience of the citizen and especially of the
+civil servant, such as Funk was at that time, to a national law, which
+was legally promulgated in accordance with the constitutional rules of
+this State. If we wish to find a just and correct answer to this
+complicated juridical question, which so far has not been treated in
+literature, it will be pertinent to disregard entirely conditions in
+Germany and the present Trial, and to ask ourselves what decision would
+be given in a case where a civil servant of a different country—not
+Germany—carried out a law. Let us assume for instance, that some
+foreign country embracing a minority promulgated, in accordance with its
+constitution, a law exiling from its territory all members of this
+minority, or confiscating for the benefit of the state the property of
+such inhabitants, or turning over to the state or partitioning among
+other citizens the large agricultural estates of such inhabitants. Let
+us assume that such a case exists and let us ask ourselves: Does the
+civil servant in this nation really commit a crime if he carries out
+this lawful order? Is it really the duty of the official charged with
+the execution of this law to refuse to obey the law and to declare that
+in his personal opinion the law concerned is a crime against humanity,
+or has he even the right to do so? In such a case, Gentlemen, would any
+state today grant its civil servants permission to examine whether the
+law proclaimed is contrary to the principles of humanity or to the
+fluctuating norms of international law? What state would tolerate the
+refusal of its civil servants for such a reason to execute a law already
+proclaimed?
+
+[sm type begins]Or another example: Let us assume that the laws of a
+nation decree that certain new weapons are to be introduced into the
+armed forces, or that more warships are to be built, or that some
+preparations have to be made for war. Should an individual civil servant
+really have the right to refuse the execution of the law, even perhaps
+to sabotage its execution, and then to say, by way of explanation, that
+in his personal opinion concerning international law it involved the
+preparation of an aggressive war, consequently an international
+crime?[sm type ends]
+
+The Tribunal will have to decide these legal problems. But Funk may
+point out in his own defense the fact that by reason of his entire
+ideology and background it was especially painful to him to issue these
+executive instructions, although he believed he was only doing his duty
+as a civil servant.
+
+In this connection I wish to remind you of Funk’s circular of 6 February
+1939 (Document 3498-PS, Trial Brief Funk, Page, 19), where he emphasizes
+to his officials that it was their duty to “insure that it was carried
+out in a correct manner in every respect” and where he already feels
+impelled to disclaim personal responsibility for these measures by
+expressly emphasizing: “How far and how rapidly the powers conferred by
+the Four Year Plan are to be exercised will depend on the instructions
+to be given by me in accordance with the directives of the Delegate for
+the Four Year Plan.” This special reference made by the Defendant Funk
+to the legal decrees of the Four Year Plan, which was authorized to
+promulgate laws, originated in the defendant’s desire to express
+formally and solemnly, and to establish for the future, the fact that in
+issuing the executive instructions in 1938 he was a victim of his
+obedience to the State, a victim of his loyalty to the laws of the State
+to which he had sworn allegiance.
+
+Funk’s circular of 6 February 1939, already mentioned on Page 19 of the
+trial brief, clearly expresses the qualms of conscience which had
+gripped Funk in those days, although he had not incriminated
+himself—qualms which, during his interrogation by an American officer
+on 22 October 1945, led to his complete nervous collapse, so that Funk
+was unable to restrain his tears and told the interrogating officer:
+“Yes, I am guilty; I should have resigned at that time.”
+
+These same qualms of conscience gripped the defendant throughout the
+entire Trial and are still haunting him; and we remember that in the
+session of 6 May 1946, when this point was discussed, Funk was so deeply
+shaken that he could hardly continue talking and finally declared here
+before you, Gentlemen, that at that moment he fully realized that this,
+meaning the atrocities of November 1938, was the starting point of the
+chain of events leading to those horrible and frightful things of which
+we have learned here, some of which he too had already heard of during
+his imprisonment, and which culminated in Auschwitz. He felt, as he said
+during his interrogation on 22 October 1945, “deep shame and heavy
+guilt,” and he still feels it today; but he had put the will of the
+State and the laws of the State above his own feelings and above the
+voice of conscience since he, as a civil servant, was tied by duty to
+the State. He felt these ties all the more strongly as these legal
+measures were particularly necessary for the protection of the Jews in
+order to save them from losing their rights completely, and from
+suffering further despotism and violence. These are the very words of
+the Defendant Funk; and they represent his actual feelings. Today Funk
+still feels that it was a terrible tragedy that he of all people was
+charged with these things—he who never during his entire life said a
+spiteful word against a Jew, but had wherever he could always worked for
+tolerance and equality for the Jews.
+
+If during his interrogation on 22 October 1945 Funk said: “I am guilty,”
+it need not be investigated here whether the defendant intended these
+words to apply to his criminal guilt, or only to a moral guilt which he
+saw in the fact that he had remained in an office which compelled him to
+carry out laws incompatible with his own philosophy of life. Funk was
+not in a position to decide for himself the complicated legal question
+of whether an official of an internationally acknowledged state can be
+punished at all if he only carries out laws passed in accordance with
+the legal constitution of this state. For the Defendant Funk his “guilt”
+did not lie in the fact that he had signed the executive instructions in
+November 1938, since this had been his duty as an official, rather did
+he consider himself guilty because he had remained a member of the
+Government although he found the acts of terror which had occurred
+intolerable, and abhorred them; he was not involved in the “conflict of
+conscience,” of which he spoke when he was interrogated, because he
+acted according to the laws which he considered necessary under the
+conditions prevailing at the time. This conflict was a result of the
+fact that he had not, in this difficult situation, listened to the voice
+of his conscience and had not resigned his ministerial office. But the
+decisive reasons for his attitude and his final decision to remain in
+office in spite of his feelings about the matter were certainly not
+material considerations. His reputation as a journalist and his
+abilities as such would easily have enabled him to find another suitable
+position. Much is to be said for the opinion that the Defendant was held
+in office above all by the thought that his resignation would in no way
+improve matters, but that on the contrary the administration would
+become still more radical under an unsuitable and fanatical successor,
+while by staying in office he might hope to alleviate much distress.
+
+These considerations, which may have guided the Defendant Funk in the
+first place, were certainly correct up to a point. His State Secretary,
+Dr. Landfried, at least has testified that later on too Funk often
+expressed serious misgivings concerning the action taken against the
+Jews in November 1938 and showed very strong disapproval of all excesses
+and infringements of the law committed by various Government agencies in
+carrying out the action. Funk could talk openly to his confidant
+Landfried, and he often complained to him that he had no power to
+prevent such excesses. But, as he said to Landfried: “We of the Ministry
+of Economics should take particular care to see that no one makes
+illicit profits out of the Aryanization—that is, the transfer to
+non-Jewish ownership—of business firms.” And Ministerialrat Kallus
+described in his deposition of 19 April 1946 the various measures taken
+at that time by Funk to protect the interests of Jewish owners. Kallus
+also told us that Funk even made personal efforts to insure that his
+orders were carried out by his subordinates in a proper manner.
+
+Gentlemen, thus a sense of duty on the one hand, and humane feeling on
+the other, were the motives which kept the defendant in office and thus
+brought him into a situation where he is today charged with criminal
+action.
+
+Mr. President, I am now coming to a new subject and I have altogether
+about 15 more pages. Does the Court wish to adjourn now? It is 6 minutes
+to 4.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Can you finish it by that time, Dr. Sauter?
+
+DR. SAUTER: There are 15 more pages; I should say about 8 or 9 minutes.
+On further thought, Mr. President, it will take about half an hour.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn at this time.
+
+ [_The Tribunal adjourned until 15 July 1946 at 1000 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED
+ AND SEVENTY-EIGHTH DAY
+ Monday, 15 July 1946
+
+
+ _Morning Session_
+
+MARSHAL: May it please the Tribunal, the Defendant Ribbentrop is absent
+today.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Would it be convenient to Counsel for the Prosecution and
+the Defense if at 2 o’clock today we were to deal with those
+interrogatories and affidavits which have come in since the last
+applications were made?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE (Deputy Chief Prosecutor for the United Kingdom):
+My Lord, it would be perfectly convenient for the Prosecution.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Sauter, do you think it would be convenient for the
+Defense Counsel to deal with those matters at 2 o’clock?
+
+DR. SAUTER: Certainly, Mr. President; I will inform the other defense
+counsel that these applications will be discussed at 2 o’clock.
+
+DR. RUDOLF DIX (Counsel for Defendant Schacht): I agree with my
+colleague, Dr. Sauter, that this should be done. But if this is done at
+2 o’clock it will interrupt my final speech. I should be very grateful
+if it could be done immediately after Dr. Sauter finishes his speech, so
+that I could present my plea coherently. It would be very awkward if I
+were interrupted.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Certainly, Dr. Dix. Very well; we will do it immediately
+after Dr. Sauter’s plea.
+
+DR. SAUTER: May I speak now, Mr. President?
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Dr. Sauter.
+
+DR. SAUTER: May it please the Tribunal; before the adjournment on
+Friday, I explained in conclusion the position and the attitude of the
+Defendant Funk with respect to the Jewish question. On this occasion I
+pointed out that in connection with the executive instructions issued
+late in 1938 on the legal exclusion of the Jews from economic life, the
+Defendant Funk acted only in his capacity as a Reich official and in the
+performance of the duties of that office.
+
+On Friday, I finished my statements in that respect with the words:
+
+It was a sense of duty on the one hand, and humane feeling on the other,
+which kept the Defendant Funk in office and thus brought him into a
+situation where he is today charged with criminal action.
+
+Now, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I turn to the last chapter of my
+appraisal of the Defendant Funk, of his motives and actions, and will
+now deal with the gold deliveries by the SS to the Reichsbank, and with
+the relation of the Defendant Funk to the concentration camp question.
+That is to say, I am going to refer to Page 58 of the written speech
+which has been submitted to you.
+
+It is a peculiar tragedy in the life of the Defendant Funk that he was
+not only forced by fate in the year 1938 to issue executive instructions
+for laws which he always inwardly condemned and repudiated more than
+anybody else, but that once again, in the year 1942, he became involved
+in a particularly horrible manner with Jewish persecutions. I am
+thinking now of the deposits made by the SS in the Reichsbank, that is
+to say, the matter on which a film was shown here of the steel vault of
+the Frankfurt Branch of the Reichsbank and about which two witnesses
+have testified, namely, Vice President Emil Puhl and Reichsbank
+Councillor Albert Thoms.
+
+The Defendant Funk was already examined about this matter of the gold
+deposits at the preliminary proceedings on 4 June 1945, (see 2828-PS);
+at that time, however, no details were disclosed to him, and Funk made
+the same statement then as he did before this Tribunal, namely, that he
+was only briefly told about the matter in question on a few occasions,
+and that he had not attached any importance to it at all. That is also
+the reason why the Defendant Funk could not at first recall those
+happenings very well during the proceedings here. He did not know
+anything more about them than he had already said.
+
+Nevertheless, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, Funk had to expect that this
+matter would be brought up in the Trial, at any rate in the
+cross-examination. And this was actually done by the American
+Prosecution on 7 May 1946, who submitted an affidavit by the witness
+Emil Puhl, Vice President of the Reichsbank, in which at first sight
+Puhl appeared to make serious accusations against the Defendant Funk.
+Now it is remarkable that since the beginning of this Trial the
+Defendant Funk has repeatedly referred to this very witness Puhl for
+various points, and that since December 1945 he has repeatedly requested
+that the latter be interrogated. Measured by ordinary human standards,
+Funk would certainly not have done this if he had had a bad conscience
+and had reason to expect to be compromised in the most damaging way by
+his own witness regarding the concentration camp matter. But the oral
+examination of the witness Emil Puhl here before this Tribunal showed
+beyond a doubt that Puhl could no longer in any way maintain the
+incriminating statements in his affidavit, as far as the character of
+the Defendant Funk and his knowledge of the particulars of the SS
+deposits were concerned.
+
+It is true that Funk, as he recalled after Puhl’s testimony (and
+concerning this I submitted on 17 June 1946 a corrected copy of his
+sworn testimony), was once asked by Reichsführer SS Himmler whether
+articles of value which had been seized by the SS in the Eastern
+Territories could be deposited in the vaults of the Reichsbank. Funk
+answered this question in the affirmative and told Himmler that he
+should delegate somebody to discuss the matter with Vice President Puhl,
+and settle the details. Himmler at that time told Funk that his
+Gruppenführer Pohl could do this and that the latter would get in touch
+with Vice President Puhl. That was all that Funk at that time, I believe
+in 1942, had discussed with Reichsführer SS Himmler and which he on that
+occasion also repeated to his Vice President Puhl who was actually
+directing the business of the Reichsbank and therefore responsible for
+this affair.
+
+There was nothing extraordinary in this question of Reichsführer SS
+Himmler, at least nothing which Funk could recognize. For, as far as
+Funk knew, the SS was at that time in charge of the entire police
+service in the Occupied Eastern Territories. For that reason it often
+had to confiscate valuables just as the ordinary police did in the
+interior, that is, within Germany. Moreover, all gold coins, foreign
+currency, _et cetera_, in the Occupied Eastern Territories had to be
+turned in according to law, and these deliveries in the Eastern
+Territories were naturally made to the SS, because there were no other
+state offices equipped for that purpose. Funk also knew that the
+concentration camps were under the direction of the SS and thought that
+the valuables which were to be given to the Reichsbank by the SS for
+safekeeping belonged very probably to that category of valuables which
+the entire population was obliged to deliver.
+
+Finally, as has been ascertained in the course of this Trial, the SS was
+constantly just as much engaged in the fighting in the East as the Armed
+Forces, and like the latter the SS had also collected so-called booty in
+the abandoned and destroyed towns of the East and delivered it to the
+Reich. Therefore, there was nothing at all extraordinary for Funk in the
+fact that the SS possessed gold and foreign currency and brought it in
+for delivery in the regular way.
+
+Now, the essential point in this whole business is the question whether
+the Defendant Funk knew or saw that among the objects delivered by the
+SS there were unusual quantities of gold spectacle frames, gold teeth,
+and similar objects which had come into the hands of the SS not through
+legal but criminal confiscations. If—and I emphasize, Gentlemen, if—it
+could be proven that the Defendant Funk had seen such objects in the
+deposits of the SS, this would naturally have caused him some surprise.
+But we heard the witness Puhl say in the most positive way that the
+Defendant Funk had no knowledge of this and, indeed, that Vice President
+Puhl himself knew no further details about it. In any case Funk never
+saw what particular gold objects and what quantities the SS delivered.
+
+Now, it has been said against Funk that he himself entered the vaults of
+the Berlin Reichsbank several times, and from this one felt entitled to
+draw the conclusion that he must have seen what objects had been
+delivered to the Reichsbank by the SS. This conclusion is obviously
+wrong because the evidence shows that during the entire period of the
+war Funk went to the vaults of the Reichsbank only a very few times for
+the purpose of showing these vaults and the bullion of the Reichsbank
+stored there to special visitors, especially foreign guests. But on
+those few visits to the vaults he never saw the deposits of the SS. He
+never observed what in particular the SS had deposited in his bank. This
+is established beyond doubt, not only by the sworn statement of the
+Defendant Funk himself, but also by the oral testimony of Vice President
+Puhl and Reichsbank Councillor Thoms here in this courtroom. This
+Prosecution witness, who is certainly free from suspicion and who by his
+own admission volunteered to testify, has declared here under oath that
+the valuables were delivered by the SS in locked trunks, boxes, and bags
+and were also stored away in these containers, and that Funk was never
+present in the vaults when the bank employees made an inventory of the
+contents of an individual box or trunk. The witness Thoms, who was in
+charge of these vaults, never saw the Defendant Funk there at all.
+Therefore, Funk neither knew of the proportions which the deliveries of
+the SS gradually assumed in the course of time, nor did he know that the
+deposits contained jewelry, pearls, and precious stones, and also
+spectacle frames and gold teeth. He never saw any of those things and
+none of his officials ever reported to him about them either.
+
+Now it is the opinion of the Prosecution that Funk, as President of the
+Reichsbank, surely must have known what was kept in the vaults of his
+bank; but this conclusion is also evidently mistaken and does not take
+into consideration actual conditions in a large central issuing bank.
+Funk, who was also Reich Minister of Economics, had in his capacity as
+President of the Reichsbank no occasion whatever to bother about the
+deposit of an individual customer, even if this happened to belong to
+the SS. As President of the Reichsbank he did not bother about any
+deposits of other clients of his bank either, since this was not his
+job. On only one occasion, following a suggestion of his Vice President
+Puhl, he asked Reichsführer SS Himmler—this was during his second
+conversation with him—whether the valuables deposited by the SS in the
+Reichsbank could be converted into cash in the legal course of business
+at the Reichsbank. Himmler gave his permission and Funk passed this
+information on to his Vice President Puhl. But in this matter he was
+only thinking of gold coins and foreign currency, that is to say, of
+those particular valuables which had to be turned in to the Reichsbank
+as a matter of course in the German Reich and which could be and had to
+be converted into cash by the Reichsbank. The idea never occurred to
+Funk that the deposits might contain gold teeth or other such remarkable
+objects which had their origin in criminal acts in concentration camps.
+He heard about these things to his horror for the first time here in the
+courtroom during the Trial.
+
+The only remaining point in the statement of the witness Puhl which
+might excite a certain amount of suspicion, Your Honors, was the
+question of preserving secrecy, which in fact played a very important
+part indeed in the examination of the witness. Vice President Puhl
+stated here at the beginning of his testimony that the Defendant Funk
+had told him that the matter of the SS deposits must be kept especially
+secret. Funk, on the other hand, has always denied this in the most
+insistent manner and declared under oath that he never talked to Puhl at
+all about any such secrecy. Thus at the very beginning, here in the
+courtroom, we had one statement pitted against another, oath against
+oath. Vice President Puhl’s statements regarding this point, however,
+seemed somewhat contradictory from the beginning. For on one occasion
+Vice President Puhl said that this secrecy had not struck him as
+anything extraordinary, since after all secrecy is preserved about
+everything that occurs in a bank. In answer to a special question, Puhl
+then stated repeatedly that he did not notice at all that the Defendant
+Funk had supposedly spoken about preserving secrecy.
+
+When, however, the affidavit of the witness Thoms of 8 May 1945 was read
+and pointed out to the witness Puhl, the latter finally stated here
+under oath on 15 May 1946 that it was plainly visible from this
+affidavit that the desire for secrecy emanated from the SS. The SS
+considered it important that this business should be transacted
+secretly. The SS, as Puhl said, had been the ones originally responsible
+for the imposition of secrecy. This was the literal conclusion of the
+witness Puhl’s sworn statement and at the end of it he again confirmed
+that the obligation for secrecy was desired and imposed by the SS.
+
+The initial contradiction regarding this point between the statements of
+the Defendant Funk and those of the witness Puhl was hereby completely
+eliminated, Your Honors, in favor of the defendant. Puhl himself could
+no longer maintain his original assertion that it was Funk who had
+ordered the SS deposits to be kept secret. Therefore, in arriving at
+your verdict, you must proceed from the premise that the statement of
+the Defendant Funk is correct in this point also and deserves
+preference, for he has declared under oath from the very beginning and
+with the utmost certainty that he himself knew nothing about keeping
+anything secret and that he had never spoken of any such secrecy to
+Puhl, either. Moreover, there was absolutely no reason for Funk to say
+anything to Puhl about any special secrecy, since Funk was obviously of
+the opinion that the valuables involved were only of the kind which had
+to be turned in and confiscated, and which came within the regular
+lawful business of the Reichsbank and need not be kept secret,
+regardless of whether these things which had to be turned in were the
+property of a prisoner in a concentration camp or the property of a free
+individual.
+
+It was never made clear by the evidence submitted why the SS on their
+part stressed the importance of preserving secrecy to Vice President
+Puhl and why, furthermore, the SS opened the deposit in the name of
+Melmer instead of in the name of the SS, and the Prosecution for their
+part did not attach any importance to clearing up this point. However,
+in any case, the demand of the SS for secrecy evidently did not strike
+Vice President Puhl as unusual any more than it did the witness Thoms
+who had nothing at all to do with the matter but who confirmed the fact
+that this secrecy was nothing unusual. But nevertheless, Your Honors,
+one thing is still a fact, namely, that nothing was kept secret from the
+numerous employees of the Reichsbank about exactly what kinds of objects
+were involved. On the contrary, the Reichsbank personnel was even
+entrusted by Vice President Puhl with the task of sorting the valuables
+delivered and converting them into cash at the pawn shop. Dozens of
+Reichsbank officials who regularly entered the vaults could see the
+various articles every day, and the Reichshauptkasse, an institution
+entirely separate from the Reichsbank, from time to time settled
+accounts for the conversion of valuables into cash with the Reich
+Ministry of Finance in a quite open and thoroughly routine way.
+Naturally, the Defendant Funk did not know, and still does not know
+today, whether and to what extent agreements had been reached between
+the Finance Minister and Reichsführer SS Himmler for accounting for the
+gold articles to the Reich. He was never interested in it, and indeed it
+did not concern him.
+
+From all these facts, as shown by the evidence, one can readily conclude
+that Funk himself knew nothing about the things which were turned over
+to the Reichsbank at the time, and that even Vice President Puhl and
+Reichsbank Councillor Thoms did not think there was anything bad
+connected with the things, although Thoms, at least, had seen of what
+the deposits actually consisted.
+
+For this reason there is no longer any need to examine the obvious
+question as to whether the initial statements of Puhl with regard to the
+deposits of the SS should not have been received with a certain
+skepticism from the very beginning. Puhl apparently had the
+understandable desire at least by his written affidavit to shift
+responsibility from himself to the shoulders of his President Funk in
+order to free himself of his own responsibility for the unpleasant facts
+of the case when he was told during his imprisonment that the gold
+articles of the SS consisted mostly of spectacle frames and gold teeth
+and had been taken from victims of concentration camps. At the
+beginning, even Puhl apparently did not see anything wrong in the whole
+business. For him the matter was an ordinary business transaction of the
+Reichsbank for the account of the Reich, which he dealt with in the same
+manner as he dealt with gold articles and foreign currency that had been
+confiscated by the Customs Investigation Office or the Office of Control
+for Foreign Currency or any other State authority. Gentlemen, whatever
+one may judge the responsibility of Vice President Puhl to be, at all
+events these things lie outside the responsibility of the Defendant Funk
+who is the only one with whom you are concerned in connection with this
+point here. In the period after this time Funk had only two or three
+very brief and unimportant conversations with Puhl regarding these gold
+deposits with a view to converting into cash gold coins and foreign
+currency delivered in the regular way. Outside of this, Funk did not
+concern himself at all with this whole matter any more. He knew even
+less about the matter than Puhl, and it is not without significance that
+Puhl declared here under oath that he would never have permitted these
+gold objects to be deposited in the Reichsbank at all if he had had the
+slightest notion that the things had been taken from concentration camp
+victims under criminal circumstances by the SS. If Vice President Puhl
+did not know that and could not have guessed it, then Funk could have
+known even less about it, and Puhl’s initial statement which was to the
+effect that—as he said at the time—“the gold articles had been
+accepted by the Reichsbank with Funk’s knowledge and agreement and had
+been converted into cash with the assistance of the Reichsbank
+personnel,” was a grossly misleading statement to the Prosecution.
+Subsequently during his imprisonment when Puhl first learned of the true
+circumstances, he surely must have felt the same compunctions as Funk,
+however innocent the latter was in the case. In conclusion, Puhl
+declared here under oath that he would not have tolerated such
+transactions either, and that he would have brought the matter to the
+attention of the Directorate of the Reichsbank as well as to that of
+President Funk if he had known that the valuables were taken from
+victims of concentration camps and had been informed about the nature of
+these valuables.
+
+In connection with this topic, therefore, I come to the following
+conclusion: The Reichsbank certainly transacted business for the account
+of the Reich, the subject matter of which was derived from criminal acts
+of the SS; but the Defendant Funk knew nothing of this. He would not
+have tolerated such transactions had he known the true circumstances.
+Therefore, he cannot be made criminally responsible for this.
+
+The same is true, Your Honors, with regard to Reichsbank credits for the
+business agencies of the SS, concerning which I shall limit myself to a
+few sentences. In his written affidavit of 3 May 1946 the witness Puhl
+has given a completely misleading account of this matter also. For he
+stated originally that credits of 10 to 12 million Reichsmark furnished
+by the Gold Discount Bank upon the instruction of the Defendant Funk
+were used—and I am now quoting literally: “for financing production in
+SS factories by workers from concentration camps.”
+
+In his oral examination as a witness, Puhl then was asked whether Funk
+had any knowledge that persons from concentration camps were employed in
+these factories at all. In reply to this, Puhl declared literally: “I am
+inclined to assume this, but I am not in a position to know it.”
+Therefore, he was not able to give any definite evidence concerning
+Funk’s knowledge, but only to express a conjecture. In contrast to this,
+Funk’s own statement in regard to this matter is quite clear and
+convincing. It was to the effect that he knew, indeed, about the request
+for credit by the SS, and that he even granted it, but that he knew
+nothing about the nature of the SS enterprises concerned and about the
+people who were employed in them. Funk stated this under oath.
+Accordingly, this credit transaction, which moreover occurred about 2
+years before the affair of the SS gold deposits, that is, prior to 1940,
+incriminates neither the Defendant Funk nor the witness Vice President
+Puhl. At that time, in 1940, neither of them was acquainted with the
+conditions in the concentration camps. They only learned about them much
+later, that is, in the course of this Trial. Nor did the Defendant Funk
+know that persons from the concentration camps were working in the
+afore-mentioned SS factories for which the credit was intended.
+
+Gentlemen, in this connection it appears necessary to devote a few more
+sentences to a discussion of the question whether Funk ever visited a
+concentration camp. The witness Dr. Blaha, who was examined here, stated
+that Dr. Funk was once in Dachau in the first half of 1944. This visit
+was supposed to have occurred as a sequel to a conference of the Finance
+Ministers at Berchtesgaden, or in some other place in this region, in
+which Funk is said to have participated. Yet, Gentlemen, when he was
+examined here, the witness Dr. Blaha was unable to say that he had
+personally seen the Defendant Funk in Dachau, but had only heard from
+camp inmates at Dachau—that is, from other persons—that the Reich
+Minister of Economics, Funk, was with many other visitors allegedly
+present. He did not see him; nor would he have known him if he had. From
+the very beginning Funk himself has flatly denied this visit to Dachau.
+He also stated this under oath, and the affidavit made by his constant
+companion Dr. Schwedler (contained in the Funk document book under
+Number 13 submitted to you) proves beyond a doubt that Funk never was in
+a concentration camp. Dr. Schwedler is in a position to know this, as at
+that time he was the constant companion of the defendant and knew where
+Funk was from day to day. Moreover, Funk was never a Finance Minister,
+as the witness Dr. Blaha assumed, and never took part in a conference of
+Finance Ministers. Therefore, it appears beyond any doubt that what the
+witness Dr. Blaha stated here purely from hearsay is based on false
+information, or he has confused Funk with another visitor, which was
+very easily possible since the Defendant Funk was comparatively unknown
+to the public. The conclusion, therefore, is that Funk never visited a
+concentration camp and never personally became aware of the conditions
+prevailing in such camps.
+
+Now, by this assertion Funk by no means wishes to allege that he knew
+nothing at all about the existence of concentration camps. Funk was
+naturally cognizant of the fact, just as almost any other German, that
+there were concentration camps in Germany after 1933; just as he knew
+that there were and still are penitentiaries, prisons, and other penal
+institutions in Germany.
+
+But what he did not know, and what I want to stress here, was the very
+large number of such concentration camps and the hundreds of thousands,
+even millions, of their inmates. Equally unknown to him were the
+countless atrocities committed in these camps, which first became known
+only in this Trial. In particular it was only during this Trial that
+Funk learned that there were extermination camps which murdered millions
+of Jews. Funk had no knowledge of this; he has stated this under oath
+and it also appears absolutely credible, for one of the most important
+results of this Trial, in the opinion of the Defense, consists in
+providing proof of the fact that the German people in general knew
+nothing about the large number of concentration camps or the conditions
+within them, but that on the contrary those conditions were kept secret
+in such a cunning and cruel way that even the highest officials of the
+Reich including the very ministers knew nothing about them.
+
+Your Honors, the Defense have now presented their views on that part of
+the Indictment which, had it been true, would have tragically
+incriminated the man Funk. One may think as one pleases about acts of
+violence during a political and economic struggle, especially in stormy
+revolutionary periods, but in the opinion of the Defendant Funk himself
+there can be no disagreement on one point, namely, with regard to the
+concentration camp atrocities committed for years, especially against
+the Jewish population. Anyone who participated in such unheard-of
+atrocities should be made to atone for them in the severest way,
+according to the opinion of the entire German people.
+
+That is also the point of view of the Defendant Funk, which he expressed
+here on 6 May 1946 when he replied to the American prosecutor from the
+witness stand that as a man and as a German he felt deeply guilty and
+shamed for the crimes which Germans committed against millions of poor
+people.
+
+Gentlemen, I have now reached the end of my consideration of the Funk
+case as far as criminal law is concerned, and that is the duty of the
+Defense in this Trial.
+
+The examination of the evidence with regard to the Funk case has, in the
+opinion of the defendant, produced proof that a legal guilt, a criminal
+guilt, on his part does not exist, and that he can ask you for his
+acquittal with a clear conscience because he has never committed any
+criminal acts in his life.
+
+Your task as judges will now be to find a just verdict for the Defendant
+Funk, a verdict which will not make him atone for the crimes of others,
+crimes he could not prevent and which he may not even have known about,
+but a verdict which only establishes the degree of his own guilt and not
+the degree of his political guilt, but of his criminal guilt which is
+the sole object of these proceedings. This verdict should be valid not
+only for today but also recognized as just in the future when we shall
+view these terrible events in the proper perspective and dispassionately
+as we would ancient history; a verdict, Your Honors, which will not only
+satisfy the nations which you represent, but which will also be
+recognized as just and wise by the German people as a whole; a verdict,
+finally, which is not only destructive, retaliatory, and which will sow
+hatred for the future, but one which will make it possible for the
+German people to move forward toward a happier future of human dignity
+and charity, of equality and peace.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, will you or Sir David deal with this. Sir
+David, I have got a document drawn up by the General Secretary which
+shows in the first place, in the case of the Defendant Göring, that
+there are four interrogatories which have been submitted, and to which
+the Prosecution has not objected. Is that right?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is so, My Lord, so there is no further
+comment with regard to that first application.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Then, with reference to the Defendant Ribbentrop,
+there are two affidavits to which there is no objection, and there are
+three further affidavits which have not been received, I understand.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is so, My Lord.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: And one document to which the defendants’ counsel wants
+to refer in its entirety, namely, TC-75, is that right?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord, that is so. There is no objection
+to that.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps I had better go on to the end of the documents
+and then call upon Dr. Horn for what he has got to say about those
+three, because as far as I can see, there are only these three documents
+and an affidavit for Seyss-Inquart from a man called Erwin Schotter, and
+another from a man called Adalbert Joppich, which have not yet been
+received.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is so, My Lord.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: And three letters from Seyss-Inquart to Himmler which
+have not yet been produced.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is so, My Lord.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Also, in the case of Fritzsche there are two
+interrogatories of Delmar and Feldscher which have not yet been
+received.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, with regard to the three letters of the
+Defendant Seyss-Inquart, they have been received, but they have not yet
+been translated into French, and I think, My Lord, the simplest way
+would be if the Tribunal took it that provisionally there is no
+objection but that the French Delegation reserve their right to make any
+objection if, upon receiving the translation, they find there is any
+objection to make.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, the French Delegation will let the
+Tribunal know if they find there is any objection.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Now, with reference to the rest, so far as the
+Prosecution are concerned, what are the objections, if any?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I think the only objection there is
+concerns the application of Dr. Servatius for the Defendant Sauckel.
+Your Lordship sees that after the interrogatories granted by the
+Tribunal there are certain documents which were introduced on 3 July by
+the Defendant Sauckel to be considered by the Tribunal, and then there
+is a number which is lettered “A” to “I.” The Prosecution suggests that
+these documents are cumulative of the large number of documents already
+introduced on behalf of this defendant, and, My Lord ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT [_Interposing_]: Just one minute, Sir David. These
+documents “A” to “I,” were they applied for after the case had been
+closed?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: They were submitted on 3 July, Sir. That would
+be after the case had been closed.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: But that was at the time, was it not, when we were asking
+for supplementaries?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, at the very end.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: That very day?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes. My Lord, I am sorry, but the case was not
+technically closed, for that day was open for any defendant to put in.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Are these documents which you have just been referring
+to—“A” to “I”—are they already all in the document book?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Dr. Servatius tells me they are.
+
+My Lord, I have just been having a word with Dr. Servatius and he says
+that the one to which he attaches the greatest importance is “A,” the
+decree by the Defendant Sauckel as to return transportation of sick
+foreign workers. My Lord, I am quite prepared on that assurance by Dr.
+Servatius not to make any objection to number “A,” and Dr. Servatius, on
+the other hand, says that he does not press for the others.
+
+My Lord, there is another application which has just come in on behalf
+of the Defendant Sauckel for a document. It is an affidavit by the
+defendant himself, dated 29 June 1946. The Prosecution have no objection
+to the application.
+
+My Lord, I think the only other matter with regard to the Defendant
+Sauckel is with regard to an affidavit from a witness called
+Falkenhorst. My Lord, that again, the Prosecution submits, is
+cumulative.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: You say Falkenhorst?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Falkenhorst, Sir. My Lord, it is the very last
+application on my list.
+
+DR. ROBERT SERVATIUS (Counsel for Defendant Sauckel): Mr. President, may
+I make a statement concerning the witness Falkenhorst? This witness was
+called for Bormann; I waived his examination and submitted this
+affidavit with the approval of the Tribunal, and since, in my opinion,
+it was approved, I waived the witness. I assume that this is quite clear
+and is confirmed by the Prosecution also.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Do you mean, Dr. Servatius, that the affidavit from
+Falkenhorst had already been granted before?
+
+DR. SERVATIUS: I assume it was granted at that time. The witness was
+waiting outside and I was asked whether I would like to question him,
+and I said in reply that I had an affidavit which was limited to one
+particular incident and it would be sufficient if I could submit the
+affidavit. He was the last witness who was supposed to be examined here,
+after the end of the actual hearing of evidence.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I do not insist in the opposition in
+these circumstances. My Lord, that is all the comment the Prosecution
+have to make.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: What about these two affidavits asked for by Dr.
+Steinbauer from Erwin Schotter and Adalbert Joppich?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, we have not got these yet. As I
+understand it, they have been admitted by the Tribunal subject to any
+objection, and I am afraid we cannot tell until we have seen them.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I see; well, then for the rest you have no other
+objections?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: No other objections.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Sir David, we have just had another document placed
+before us which contains an application on behalf of the Defendant
+Sauckel to call as a witness his son Friedrich Sauckel. The Prosecution
+has objected to that on the ground of irrelevance and cumulativeness.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord, that is the position.
+
+It did not seem, on consideration of the outline of the evidence, that
+the evidence of the defendant’s son would contribute anything fresh.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: And that application was made after the 3 July? No, I see
+that is wrong. It was submitted before, but it was not mentioned on 3
+July.
+
+DR. SERVATIUS: Mr. President, it was an application to bring the witness
+here from England, since presumably he can give information regarding a
+number of things. I have not yet made a formal application. It was just
+a request to have him brought from England to Nuremberg for the purpose
+of finding out whether he knows anything of importance, as he claims.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I would not make objection to the
+defendant’s son being brought here for the purpose of Dr. Servatius’
+having a talk with him and seeing whether he can contribute anything.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The difficulty that these sorts of applications put the
+Tribunal in is that the case never closes.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord, I quite agree.
+
+DR. SERVATIUS: I did not know that the witness was in England. He was a
+prisoner and there had been no news about him previously.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Then, Sir David, do we have an affidavit from the
+Defendant Sauckel himself which you have already dealt with?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Then there is an affidavit by the Defendant Jodl on
+behalf of Kaltenbrunner; the application has been received at the
+General Secretary’s office on 5 July.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: That was after the last date when the defendants’ counsel
+were asked for their applications.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Well, My Lord, I am afraid I have not been able
+to collect the views of the Prosecution on that point.
+
+My Lord, the substance of that affidavit was contained in Dr.
+Kauffmann’s speech. I do not think it really has any materiality, I mean
+that there is any real—that there can be any objection to the
+affidavit, because I am almost positive I remember this passage
+occurring, or an equivalent passage, giving the Defendant Jodl’s views
+on Kaltenbrunner in Dr. Kauffmann’s speech. My Lord, therefore, I do not
+think we should occupy time discussing it and therefore I think we
+should let the affidavit go in.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Very well. Then there is an application from the
+Defendant Rosenberg for a document entitled “Tradition in Present
+Times.” That has been objected to as cumulative.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, are you wanting to say anything in support of
+that application or is it sufficiently covered by your speech?
+
+DR. THOMA: I am of the opinion that it has been sufficiently dealt with
+in my speech.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Then, Dr. Horn, there are two affidavits, one from
+Ribbentrop and one from Schulze, not yet put in. Do you want them?
+
+DR. MARTIN HORN (Counsel for Defendant Von Ribbentrop): Mr. President,
+there must be some mistake about the Schulze affidavit. I have not
+submitted any Schulze affidavit or made any application for it.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: It was a mistake. Then, as to Ribbentrop’s affidavit, are
+you asking as to that or have we already dealt with that?
+
+DR. HORN: No, I am asking that official cognizance be taken of the
+affidavit of Ribbentrop, and of Document TC-75. The other two affidavits
+of Thadden and Best have already been approved.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Why do you desire the Defendant Ribbentrop to make
+an affidavit? He has given his evidence in full. Is it something that
+has arisen since?
+
+DR. HORN: The Defendant Ribbentrop only commented on a few documents
+which were submitted to him during his cross-examination when he had an
+opportunity to speak only very briefly about them. I did not want to
+make my final speech any longer with a detailed discussion of the other
+documents and, therefore, I have submitted this affidavit and beg the
+Tribunal to approve it.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Then, with regard to TC-75 ...
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, that is one of our original British
+documents. I have no objection to Dr. Horn using it.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: How about the translation, though? I suppose it is a
+German document, is it not?
+
+DR. HORN: Yes, it is a German document which was only translated in part
+and I have referred to the entire contents in my final plea.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Is it a very long document or not?
+
+DR. HORN: No, it has only nine pages, Mr. President. The Prosecution
+submitted one page of the document to the Court in evidence. Then later
+I ascertained that there were two copies of the document. I then took
+the second copy, which represents the complete document, and submitted
+it to the Tribunal, and have had it translated.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: It has been translated?
+
+DR. HORN: Yes.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Very well then, that is all right then.
+
+Now, Dr. Steinbauer, what about these two affidavits that you are asking
+for, one from Erwin Schotter and another from Adalbert Joppich?
+
+DR. GUSTAV STEINBAUER (Counsel for Defendant Seyss-Inquart): I have
+submitted the two documents for translation and since the Translation
+Division is very busy I have not received the translation yet. But I
+should like to submit the two originals to the Tribunal under the
+numbers already given, Seyss-Inquart-112 and 113.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Has the Prosecution seen the substance of the affidavits
+or not?
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: No, My Lord, we have not. My Lord, they are very
+short affidavits. I will ask someone to read them in German through the
+day and let the Tribunal know before the Tribunal rises tonight.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Was the application made before 3 July, or when was it
+made?
+
+DR. STEINBAUER: Yes, on 3 July exactly. I received both of these two
+documents on 3 July through the General Secretary and presented them on
+the same day.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will consider the matter then and they will
+be glad to hear from the Prosecution if they have any objection.
+
+DR. STEINBAUER: Mr. President, may I present one more document on this
+occasion? The Tribunal had approved the interrogation of Dr. Reuter and
+the day before yesterday I received the answer with the questions of the
+Prosecution ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: What was it you were saying, Dr. Steinbauer?
+
+DR. STEINBAUER: That I received the approved document containing the
+interrogation of the witness, Dr. Reuter, on Saturday in a German and
+English translation. I should like to submit the original to the
+Tribunal under Number 114.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: What is the name of the person who was interrogated?
+
+DR. STEINBAUER: The physician, Dr. Gero Reuter. He was questioned about
+health conditions in the Netherlands. The Tribunal expressly granted me
+that interrogatory.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Well, that will be considered, then.
+
+DR. STEINBAUER: Then I shall submit it to the Court under Number 114.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Sir David, perhaps you can look at that later.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Certainly, My Lord. I understood that the
+Tribunal had already approved and that this was just putting in the
+answer.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes, that is all.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Then, My Lord, there can be no objection.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I ought to say that in order to save time, all these
+documents which we are now dealing with must be taken to be offered in
+evidence now because some of these defendants’ cases have been finally
+dealt with.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: And they must, therefore, be given the appropriate
+numbers as exhibits, and defendants’ counsel must see to that. They must
+give numbers to them and give them in with those numbers to the General
+Secretary so that the documents will be identified as exhibits on the
+record.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I appreciate that. I gather that Dr.
+Steinbauer has just given that the Number 114.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes, and the same applies to all the other defendants’
+counsel, the counsel for Göring and Ribbentrop and the counsel for
+Raeder and the other defendants, because these are dealing with a
+considerable number of interrogatories and affidavits, all of which
+ought to have exhibit numbers.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If Your Lordship pleases.
+
+My Lord, Dr. Siemers just wanted to know that his applications were
+covered. I think he is quite safe.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Well, then, the only thing that remains is Dr.
+Fritz’s on behalf of the Defendant Fritzsche. There are two
+interrogatories which have not been received, as I understand, from
+Delmar and Feldscher. Those have been granted, and the interrogatories
+and the answers will be put in when you get them.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is the way I understand it, My Lord.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Well, then, the Tribunal will consider all these matters
+and make the appropriate order upon it.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If Your Lordship pleases.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now. Wait a minute, wait a minute!
+
+DR. EGON KUBUSCHOK (Counsel for Defendant Von Papen): In the case of the
+Defendant Von Papen there are still a number of interrogatories which
+have not been received. In the meantime, I have received four
+interrogatories with answers, but they are still with the Translation
+Division. Three interrogatories have not yet come back. I request an
+opportunity to present them later on.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: They have been granted before, I suppose? Have they been
+granted?
+
+DR. KUBUSCHOK: Yes, they had already been granted, with the exception of
+one affidavit which I have also dealt with here but which has not yet
+been translated and has been in the Translation Division for some time.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes, but the application for that interrogatory had been
+allowed, I suppose?
+
+DR. KUBUSCHOK: I presented this application recently. I was told to have
+this affidavit translated, but I have not yet received the translation.
+I shall submit this document together with the others as soon as I
+receive them from the Translation Division.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Very well. We will adjourn now.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Go on, Dr. Dix.
+
+DR. DIX: Mr. President, Gentlemen of the Tribunal. A mere glance at the
+dock reveals the singularity of Schacht’s case and the story of his
+imprisonment and defense. There in the dock sit Kaltenbrunner and
+Schacht. Whatever the powers of the Defendant Kaltenbrunner may have
+been, he was in any case Chief of the Reich Security Main Office. Until
+those May days of 1945, Schacht was a prisoner of the Reich Security
+Main Office in various concentration camps. It is surely a rare and
+grotesque picture to see jailor and prisoner sharing a bench in the
+dock. At the very start of the Trial this remarkable picture alone must
+have given cause for reflection to all those participating in the Trial:
+judges, prosecutors, and defense counsel alike.
+
+Schacht was banished to a concentration camp on the order of Hitler, as
+has been established here. The charge against him was high treason
+against the Hitler regime. The judicial authority, the Peoples’ Court,
+headed by that bloodthirsty judge, Freisler, would have convicted him,
+had not his imprisonment turned into detention by the victorious Allied
+Powers. Since the summer of 1944 I was assigned to defend Schacht before
+Adolf Hitler’s Peoples’ Court; in the summer of 1945 I was asked to
+conduct his defense before the International Military Tribunal. This,
+too, is in itself a self-contradictory state of affairs. This, too,
+compels all those participating in the Trial to reflect on the
+personality of Schacht. One involuntarily recalls the fate of Seneca;
+Nero, as a counterpart to Hitler, put Seneca on trial for revolutionary
+activities. After the death of Nero, Seneca was charged with complicity
+in Nero’s misgovernment and cruelties, in short, with conspiring with
+Nero. A certain wry humor is not lacking in the fact that Seneca was
+then declared a pagan saint by early Christianity as early as the fourth
+century. Although Schacht does not indulge in such expectations, this
+historical precedent nevertheless forces us to remain always conscious
+of the fact that the sentence to be pronounced by this High Court will
+also have to be justified before the judgment seat of history.
+
+The picture of the Third Reich has been revealed to the Tribunal in a
+thorough and careful presentation of evidence. It is a picture with a
+great deal of background. An opportunity was given to depict this
+background also, as far as it was possible within the limits of such a
+thorough-going investigation entailing a judicial presentation of
+evidence which, to be sure, though thorough enough, was nevertheless
+concluded as soon as possible according to the requirements of the
+Charter.
+
+In order to learn what it was like under Hitler in German countries,
+there is still enough which has been left to the intuition of the Court.
+It is not possible, and never will be possible, to understand Hitler
+Germany from a constitutional point of view, according to the scholarly
+conceptions and views of people with a legal mind. As a scholarly topic,
+“The Constitution under Adolf Hitler” is a _lucus a non lucendo_. Mark
+my words, “The Constitution”—that is, the reduction of the Hitler State
+to a legal system, and not the attempt as made in the final plea by
+Jahrreiss, to explain the tyranny of a despot under the aspect of legal
+research. A scientific sociology of the Third Reich would, although
+feasible, be very difficult and therefore has not yet appeared.
+
+Only very few Germans living in Germany knew the conditions and the
+distribution of power within those circles of people who were seemingly
+or actually called upon to contribute their share toward the formation
+of a political will. Most Germans will be surprised when this picture is
+unveiled. How much less possible was it for a foreigner to form a
+correct judgment of the constitutional, sociological, and inner
+political conditions of Hitler Germany at the time when the Indictment
+was presented. But a correct judgment of these things was the
+prerequisite for an Indictment correctly founded in both fact and law.
+
+I am of the opinion that the members of the Prosecution were thereby
+confronted with a task which defied solution. I am furthermore of the
+opinion that the Prosecution would never have presented their criminal
+charges against the defendants under the count of a conspiracy if they
+had been able to see the distribution of political power in Hitler
+Germany in the same way as this may perhaps be today possible, although
+with great difficulty, for an intelligent, politically gifted observer
+and listener at this Trial.
+
+A conspiracy within the meaning of the Indictment was, as a practical
+matter, not possible in Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich, as my colleagues
+have already pointed out. The only thing possible in the Third Reich was
+a conspiracy by the opposition against Adolf Hitler and the regime.
+Several such conspiracies were formed, as was here proven. The
+relationship between conspirators is somewhat different than that
+between an accomplice and the chief perpetrator. The part to be played
+by the individual conspirator in the execution of the common plan may
+vary. Some, or a single one, of the conspirators may hold a leading
+position within the conspiracy. At all times, however, co-operation is
+necessary. Common usage of the term in itself precludes speaking of a
+conspiracy when only one commands and all the others are merely
+executive agents.
+
+I am, therefore, of the opinion that that which was defined as a crime
+here in this hall can never constitute the elements of a conspiracy
+according to criminal law. Other legal factors which might enter into
+the question are of no interest to me as defense counsel for the
+Defendant Schacht, because no criminal charge whatsoever can be brought
+against Schacht personally, as an individual, and without connecting him
+with deeds of others—in other words merely on the basis of his own
+actions. Schacht himself desired only the permissible and the
+beneficial, and his actions served these intentions. To the extent that
+he erred politically, he is in all candor prepared for the verdict of
+history. Yet even the greatest dynamics of international law cannot
+penalize political error. If it did this the profession of the statesman
+and politician would become impossible. World history is more affected
+by mistakes and errors than by correct perceptions. According to
+Lessing’s wise words, the perception of absolute truth is God’s
+privilege. There remains for man as his greatest blessing only the quest
+for truth. _Nescis, mi fili, quanta stultitia mundus regitur_, as old
+Axel Oxenstierna once said, and he was probably right.
+
+Schacht declared here that he felt that he had been most grossly
+deceived by Adolf Hitler. He thereby admitted that certain of his
+decisions and actions had been wrong. The Prosecution disputes Schacht’s
+good faith and imputes to him the _dolus_ of having deliberately worked
+for a war of aggression as Adolf Hitler’s financial agent, thereby
+becoming by implication criminally responsible, from the point of view
+of the conspiracy, for all the cruelties and atrocities which were
+committed by others during this war. The Prosecution itself was not able
+to produce any direct proof of these allegations. They attempted to do
+so first by means of alleged documentary evidence in the form of
+misinterpreted statements by Schacht, torn from their context. For this
+the Prosecution referred to witnesses who could not be made available
+for examination before this Court because some of them were absent and
+some had died. I recall, for example, the affidavits of Messersmith and
+Fuller, and Dodd’s diary notes. Their lack of value as evidence was
+clearly set forth to the Tribunal by Schacht during his examination. In
+the interest of saving time I do not wish to repeat things which have
+already been said, and which surely must still be within the
+recollection of the Court.
+
+The Prosecution further attempted to base its charges on actions of
+Schacht which had been established beyond reasonable doubt. All these
+arguments of the Prosecution are mistaken conclusions from allegedly
+incriminating circumstances. I shall confine myself to an enumeration of
+the most essential wrong conclusions. The others either result from
+these directly or by analogy.
+
+Schacht was opposed to the Treaty of Versailles, says the Prosecution.
+That he was indeed. The Prosecution does not hold this opposition in
+itself against him. However, it concludes from this that Schacht wanted
+to do away with the treaty by force. Schacht favored colonial activity,
+says the Prosecution. He did so indeed. They do not reproach him for
+this, either, but conclude from this fact that he wanted to conquer the
+colonies by force, and so it goes on.
+
+Schacht as President of the Reichsbank and Minister of Economics
+co-operated with Hitler, consequently he endorsed Nazi ideology. Schacht
+was a member of the Reich Defense Council, consequently he was in favor
+of a war of aggression. Schacht helped to finance rearmament during its
+first phase until early in 1938, consequently he wanted war. Schacht
+welcomed the union with Austria, consequently he approved of a policy of
+violence against that country. Schacht devised the “New Plan” in
+commercial policy, consequently he wanted to procure raw materials for
+armament. Schacht was concerned about the possibilities of livelihood
+for the excess population in central Europe, consequently he wanted to
+attack and conquer foreign countries and to annihilate foreign peoples.
+Over and over again Schacht warned the world against an anti-German
+policy of oppression and the moral defamation of Germany, consequently
+Schacht threatened war. Because no written evidence has been found that
+Schacht resigned from his official positions as a result of his
+antagonism to war, the conclusion is that he resigned from these
+official positions merely because of his rivalry with Göring.
+
+The list of these false conclusions could be continued _ad infinitum_.
+It finds its culmination in the fallacy that Hitler would never have
+come to power if it had not been for Schacht, that Hitler would never
+have been able to rearm if Schacht had not helped. But, Gentlemen, this
+kind of evaluation of evidence would convict an automobile manufacturer
+because a taxi driver, while drunk, ran over a pedestrian. In his
+speeches or writings Schacht never advocated violence or even war. It is
+true that after Versailles he pointed out again and again the dangers
+which would result from the moral outlawing and economic exclusion of
+Germany. In this opinion he is in the best international company. It is
+not necessary for me to cite before this Tribunal the numerous voices,
+not of Germans, but of members of the victor states, heard soon after
+the Versailles Treaty and all in the same tone as the warnings of
+Schacht. Moreover, the correctness of these objections to that treaty
+will be absolutely valid for all time. At no time did Schacht however
+recommend, or even declare possible, other ways than those of a peaceful
+understanding and collaboration. As an avowed economic politician, it
+was clearer to him than to anybody else that war can never solve
+anything, not even if it is won. In all of Schacht’s utterances his
+pacifist attitude was expressed again and again; perhaps the shortest
+and most striking of them was that statement at the Berlin Congress of
+the International Chamber of Commerce, when Schacht in the presence of
+Hitler, Göring, and other exponents of the Government called out to the
+assembly: “Believe me, my friends, all nations desire to live, not to
+die!” This pronounced pacifist attitude of Schacht is indeed confirmed
+by all witnesses and affidavits.
+
+For the few in the world—and I purposely say in the world, not only in
+Germany—who from the very beginning recognized Hitler and his
+Government for what they were, it certainly was a cause for anxiety and
+sorrow, or at the very least puzzling, to see a man like Schacht placing
+his services and his great professional ability at the disposal of Adolf
+Hitler after he had come to power. The witness Gisevius also shared this
+anxiety, as he has testified here. Later on he convinced himself of
+Schacht’s honorable intentions through the latter’s upright and
+courageous behavior in 1938 and 1939. In his interrogation Schacht
+outlined for us the reasons which caused him to act in this manner. I
+need not and do not wish to repeat them in the interest of saving time.
+The evidence has not shown anything which would refute the veracity of
+this presentation by Schacht. On the contrary, I only refer for example
+to the affidavit of State Secretary Schmid, Exhibit Number 41 of my
+document book, containing detailed statements on this subject on Page 2,
+which are in complete agreement with Schacht’s description. A
+consideration of the remaining testimony and affidavits as a whole leads
+to the same result. In order to understand the manner in which Schacht
+acted at that time both directly after the seizure of power as well as
+after he had recognized Hitler and his disastrous activity, it is
+absolutely necessary to form a clear picture of Adolf Hitler’s
+pernicious spell and his system of government. For both are the soil in
+which Schacht’s actions grew, and by which alone they can be explained.
+I realize that one could speak about this for days and write volumes
+about it if one wished to treat the subject exhaustively. However, I
+also realize that before this Tribunal short references and spotlights
+will be sufficient in order to gain the Tribunal’s understanding.
+
+The disintegrating collapse of imperial Germany in 1918 presented the
+German people, who were heterogeneously composed and had never become an
+organic unit, with a parliamentary democratic form of constitution. I
+venture to assert that all political thinking which is not directed by
+selfish motives must strive for democracy, if this is also understood to
+include the protection of justice, tolerance toward those of different
+convictions, freedom of thought, and the political development of
+humanity. These are the highest timeless ideals which, however, in their
+very constitutional forms actually harbor dangers in themselves. When
+democracy appeared for the first time on the European continent,
+reactionary political thinkers like Prince Metternich and the like
+opposed every democratic impulse, because they saw only the dangers of
+democracy and not its educative qualities and historical necessity. In
+pointing to these dangers they were unfortunately right. Perhaps the
+cleverest nation which ever lived, the Greeks of antiquity, had already
+pointed out the danger of democracy developing through demagogy to
+tyranny; and probably all philosophizing political thinkers from
+Aristotle to Thomas Aquinas, and down to the present time, have pointed
+out the danger of this development. This danger becomes all the greater
+if democratic freedom in the theoretical constitutional sense does not
+arise and grow organically, but becomes more or less a chance gift to a
+nation.
+
+_En fait d’histoire il vaut mieux continuer que recommencer_, a great
+French thinker once said. Unfortunately, this has made Germany the
+latest and, it is to be hoped, the last example of a tyranny of a single
+despot established by means of a diabolical demagogy. For there is no
+doubt that the Hitler regime was the despotism of an individual, whose
+parallel is to be found only in ancient Asia. In order to understand the
+attitude of any individual toward this Government—not only that of
+Schacht and of the Germans, but that of any person and any government in
+the world which has collaborated with Hitler, and on the part of the
+foreign countries such collaboration based on confidence was much
+greater toward Hitler than toward any government of the intermediate
+Reich or of the State of the Weimar Constitution—it is necessary to
+analyze the personality of this despot, this political Pied Piper, this
+brilliant demagogue who, as Schacht testified here in his interrogation
+with understandable agitation, not only deceived him, but also the
+German people and the whole world. In order to accomplish this deceit,
+Hitler was forced to bring under the spell of his personality
+innumerable clever and politically trained individuals besides Schacht,
+even those outside the German frontiers. He succeeded in doing this even
+with prominent foreigners, including those in leading political
+positions. I shall refrain from citing names and quotations to prove
+this point. The fact is generally known to the Tribunal.
+
+I shall now skip the next lines and continue on Line 10 of the same
+page. How was this influence of Hitler possible, both in Germany and
+abroad? Of course, Faust also succumbed to Mephistopheles. In Germany,
+all the circumstances of the conditions prevailing at that time, which
+have been described here in the evidence given by Schacht and others,
+favored this influence. The complete collapse of the parliamentary party
+system and the resulting necessity, felt already at the time by the
+existing Government, of having to rule by emergency decrees enacted
+without parliamentary participation, thus establishing a dictatorship of
+ministerial bureaucracy as a forerunner of the Hitler dictatorship,
+produced in nearly every quarter a cry for stronger leadership. The
+economic crisis and unemployment opened the ears of the masses, as
+misery always does, to demagogic insinuations. The complete lethargy and
+inactivity of the center and leftist parties of the time also created
+among critical and intelligent observers, of whom Schacht assuredly was
+one, the inward readiness and longing to welcome spirited political
+“dynamics” and activity. If someone, like the sharp-witted and
+perspicacious Schacht, already at that time discovered faults and dark
+sides, he could hope, as Schacht did, by his very active penetration
+into the Movement or by co-operation with leading State departments
+quickly and easily to combat these shady aspects, which in any case
+beset every revolutionary movement. “When the eagle soars, vermin settle
+on his wings,” replied the late Minister of Justice Gürtner, quoting
+from Conrad Ferdinand Meyer’s novel Pescara, when I pointed out these
+shady sides to him after the seizure of power. These considerations are
+in themselves reasonable and plausible. The fact that they contained a
+political error even in Schacht’s case does not deprive them of their
+good faith and honest convictions. However, we ought not to forget that
+here, during the proceedings, we heard of a message from the American
+Consul General Messersmith, dating from 1933, in which he joyfully hails
+the report that decent and sensible people are now joining the Party
+too, as this gave reason to hope that radicalism would thereby cease. I
+refer to the relevant document submitted here by the Prosecution,
+Document Number L-198, report Number 1184 by the American Consul General
+Messersmith to the Secretary of State in Washington.
+
+ “Since the election on March 5th, some of the more important
+ thinking people in various parts of Germany have allied
+ themselves with the National Socialist movement, in the hope of
+ tempering its radicalism by their action within rather than from
+ without the Party.”
+
+But what Messersmith very reasonably says of ordinary Party members of
+that time, naturally applies also, _mutatis mutandis_, to the man who
+offered his co-operation in a leading Government post. The reasons
+Schacht gave for his decision at the time to accept the post of
+President of the Reichsbank and later of Reich Minister of Economics
+are, therefore, thoroughly credible in themselves and have no immoral or
+criminal implication. Schacht, indeed, has acknowledged his activity. He
+only lacked the intuition to recognize at the outset the personalities
+of Hitler and some of his henchmen for what they were. But that is no
+punishable act; neither does it indicate any criminal intention. This
+intuition was lacking in most people both within and without the German
+frontiers. The possession of intuition is a matter of good fortune and a
+divine gift unfathomable by reason. Every man has his limitations, even
+the most intelligent. Schacht is certainly very intelligent, but in this
+case reason prevailed at the cost of intuition. In the last analysis
+this process can only be fully appreciated when those mysterious forces
+are taken into account which affect world events, and of which
+Wallenstein says: “The earth belongs to the evil spirit, not to the
+good” where he speaks of “the sinister powers of evil which lurk in the
+bowels of the earth.” Adolf Hitler was a prominent example of these
+powers of darkness and his influence was all the more nefarious since he
+lacked the grandeur which accompanies Satan. He remained a
+half-educated, completely earth-bound bourgeois who also lacked any
+sense of the law. The Defendant Frank said truly of him that he hated
+jurists, because the jurist appeared to him as a man of law, as a
+disturbing factor in the face of his power. Thus he could promise
+everything to everybody and not keep his promise, for a promise to him
+meant only a technical instrument of power, and signified no legal or
+moral obligation.
+
+Neither was the pernicious influence of Himmler and Bormann detected by
+Schacht at this time, or probably by anybody else. Yet all those crimes
+that are now covered by the Indictment matured within this very trio,
+for to Himmler politics were identical with murder, and in his purely
+biological view he regarded human society as a breeding farm and never
+as a social and ethical community. A personality like Adolf Hitler, and
+his effect upon men, even including such intelligent men as Schacht, can
+only be correctly judged by following the prophetic vision of the poet,
+as I have already just tried to do, thereby achieving insight otherwise
+inaccessible to the mind of man. The demon undoubtedly became incarnate
+in Adolf Hitler to the detriment of Germany and the world, and perhaps I
+can summarize by quoting—and this is absolutely necessary for an
+understanding of Schacht’s conduct, as well as that of all those others
+who deliberately and in all purity of heart offered their services to
+Hitler—a passage from Goethe, which in a few words sums up and
+discloses the mystery. Here lies the key to the understanding of all
+those who flocked to follow Hitler. May I quote from “Poetry and Truth,”
+Part 4, Book 20, as follows:
+
+ “Although the demoniac can manifest itself in everything
+ material and immaterial, and indeed be singularly apparent in
+ beasts, it assumes its most extraordinary form when associated
+ with man, and constitutes a power which if not contrary to is
+ yet a disturbing element in the moral world order. There are
+ innumerable names for the phenomena which are brought to light
+ in this way. For all philosophies and religions have tried both
+ in prose and in poetry to solve this riddle and to dispose of
+ the matter once and for all, which they may well continue to do
+ in the future. But the demoniac assumes its most dreadful form
+ when it manifests itself preponderantly in any one human being.
+ During my lifetime I have had occasion to observe several such
+ persons, either closely or from afar. They are not always the
+ most distinguished persons, either in intellect or in talent,
+ and they rarely excel by their goodness of heart; yet a
+ tremendous force emanates from them, and they exercise an
+ incredible power over every creature and even over the elements,
+ and none can tell how far such influence will extend. No
+ coalition of moral forces can prevail against them; it is in
+ vain that the better part of humanity attempts to put them in
+ disrepute as victims of deception, or as impostors. The masses
+ are attracted to them. They seldom or never find contemporary
+ equals, and nothing short of the universe itself, against which
+ they begin the fight, can overcome them; and these observations
+ may perhaps have inspired that curious but monstrous saying:
+ _Nemo contra Deum, nisi Deus ipse_.”
+
+I think I have demonstrated that the fact that he served Hitler does not
+incriminate Schacht and that it can by no means be concluded from this
+act that at that time he embodied the criminal deeds of Hitler and his
+regime into his own intentions. He did not even think them possible.
+Therefore he followed no dolus eventualis either; on the contrary:
+Insofar as the violent character of the regime disturbed him he believed
+he would be able, through his appointment to an important post, to
+contribute to the abolition and prevention of those attendant phenomena
+of which he also disapproved, and to aid Germany’s recovery within his
+sphere of activity in a decent and peaceful manner.
+
+That being the case, not the slightest reproach could be made against
+him for not only serving Hitler after the seizure of power, but also for
+helping him to gain control. This latter charge is, therefore,
+completely immaterial as evidence of criminal behavior or of criminal
+intent. However, there is no need for this argument at all, since as a
+matter of fact Schacht did not help Hitler to gain power. Hitler was in
+power when Schacht began to work for him. Hitler’s victory was already
+assured when the July elections of the Reichstag in 1932 brought him no
+less than 230 seats. These represented about 40 percent of the total
+votes. There had been no such election result for any party for decades.
+But the immediate political future was thereby established under a
+Government headed by Hitler, thanks to the very rules of the German
+democratic Constitution and every other democratic constitution. Any
+other path was beset with the danger of civil war.
+
+It was only natural that Schacht, who at that time honestly believed in
+Hitler’s political mission, did not wish to take this path. It was
+likewise natural that he should take an active part whenever he believed
+that thereby he might be able to prevent harmful radicalism in the
+economic political domain. A wise French statesman says:
+
+ “Every epoch confronts us in some way with the task of creating
+ benefits or preventing abuses. For this reason, in my opinion, a
+ patriotic man can and must serve any government which his
+ country appoints for itself.”
+
+By serving Hitler, Schacht, in his opinion, was serving his country and
+not Hitler. This opinion may have been the greatest of mistakes, and it
+has subsequently revealed itself as completely erroneous as far as
+Hitler was concerned, yet Schacht can never be criminally charged for
+acting as he did at that time, neither directly nor circumstantially.
+And indeed we must not forget that the Hitler of 1933 not only seemed to
+be a different man from the Hitler of 1938 or even of 1941, but actually
+was different. Schacht has already referred during his interrogation to
+this transformation, which was caused by the poison of mass worship.
+Moreover, the transformation of such personalities is a psychological
+law. History proves this in Nero, Constantine the Great, and many
+others. In the case of Hitler there exist many irreproachable witnesses
+for the truth of this fact, irreproachable in the sense that a purpose
+or an intention to violate the law, to raise terrorism to a principle,
+and to attack mankind with a war of aggression, can never be imputed to
+them. I merely wish to quote a few of them. I could multiply the
+quotations a hundredfold. In 1934 Lord Rothermere wrote an article in
+the _Daily Mail_, entitled: “Adolf Hitler from Close By.” I quote only a
+few sentences:
+
+ “The most prominent figure in the world today is Adolf Hitler
+ ... Hitler stands in direct line with those great leaders of
+ mankind who seldom appear more than once in two or three
+ centuries ... it is delightful to see that Hitler’s speech has
+ considerably brightened his popularity in England.”
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Dix, I thought the Tribunal had refused to allow the
+writings of Lord Rothermere to be put in evidence or used.
+
+DR. DIX: I interpreted the decision of the High Tribunal barring
+quotations from Lord Rothermere from the document book to mean—and this
+is also the reason given in the Indictment—that this was a matter for
+argument which should not be submitted in evidence as a fact, and that
+it would be irrelevant in the hearing of the evidence that Rothermere
+and others were of this opinion; and from this I drew the
+conclusion—and I am still of the opinion today that this conclusion is
+correct—that in the course of my argument, that is, in the course of my
+appraisal of the evidence, I could cite passages from the literature of
+the entire world, insofar as it is known, in order to support a line of
+thought. That Rothermere said that is not a fact which I want to submit
+to the Tribunal as evidence, but only in support of the assertion
+forming part of my argument that not only Schacht but also other
+intelligent and prominent people, even outside of Germany, at first had
+the same opinion of Hitler’s personality ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Dix, the Tribunal has already indicated its refusal
+to allow this to be used as evidence, because it does not pay any
+attention to the opinions expressed by this author. Therefore, we think
+it would be better if you went on to some other part of your argument.
+
+DR. DIX: Then I ask—the Tribunal surely has a translation of my final
+speech before it—that I be allowed to quote a short passage from Sumner
+Welles, and then a passage, which seems very important to me, from the
+book written by the last British Ambassador. I should be very grateful
+if I could quote both of these two passages for, if one wants to prove
+that even an intelligent man can hold a certain opinion and is entitled
+to hold it, then I do not know but what the most obvious and convincing
+proof for that lies in the fact that other intelligent and completely
+objective people also held the same view. I shall lose an important
+point of my argument if I am not permitted to quote the two short
+passages, and I should like to ask that they be heard briefly; it is
+only the quotation from Sumner Welles and Henderson.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I have not said anything about Sumner Welles. It was only
+because we had expressly excluded the writings on this subject of Lord
+Rothermere that we thought it was inappropriate that you should quote
+him. I do not think we excluded these other books to which you here
+refer in your speech and therefore we thought you might go on to that.
+
+DR. DIX: I quote from Sumner Welles’ book _Time for Decision_, published
+in New York in 1944:
+
+ “Economic circles in each of the western European democracies
+ and the New World welcomed Hitlerism.”
+
+And it is only right, when Great Britain’s last Ambassador in Berlin,
+even during the war, states on Page 25 of his book:
+
+ “It would be highly unjust not to recognize that a great number
+ of those who joined Hitler and worked for him and his Nazi
+ regime were honest idealists.”
+
+Further on he makes this interesting remark:
+
+ “It is possible that Hitler was an idealist himself in the
+ beginning.”
+
+And the Government of the United Kingdom would surely never have
+concluded a naval treaty with Hitler Germany in April 1935, and
+therewith have contributed in the interests of justice to a modification
+of the Versailles Treaty, if they had not had entire confidence in
+Hitler and his Government. Finally, the same holds true for all the
+international treaties concluded by Hitler, including the treaty
+concluded with Russia in August 1939. And it is a striking fact, even
+today, that so intelligent a man of such high ethical standing as the
+late British Prime Minister Chamberlain declared in a speech as late as
+January 1939—at a time when Schacht had already long been treading the
+dark paths of conspiracy against Hitler, in the face of the events of
+1938—that he had gained the definite impression from Hitler’s recent
+speech that these were not the words of a man who was making
+preparations to plunge Europe into another war. I do not doubt that
+these words were not spoken as a matter of tactics, but reflected the
+speaker’s true opinion. Such examples could be quoted in great number.
+Is it desired to deny to a German, in 1933 and the following years, the
+right to come to the same opinion about Hitler in good faith?
+
+The fact that Schacht did not enter office as Minister of Economies
+until after 30 June 1934 is not inconsistent with this either. Only in
+retrospect does the full enormity of these events become clear. In June
+1934 we were still in the midst of revolutionary turmoil, and history
+will be able to show similar occurrences in any revolution of this kind.
+I do not have to give detailed proof of this, nor do I wish to do so.
+The events of 30 June provided just as little, if not less, motive for
+Schacht to turn away from Hitler with disgust, as they did for the
+governments in the world who not only continued diplomatic relations
+with Hitler in full confidence, but also rendered him great honors and
+allowed him to score important successes in foreign policy, especially
+after 1934.
+
+If Schacht, however, cannot be criminally charged with the fact that he
+placed himself at the disposal of Hitler’s Government, it is surely
+completely superfluous, indeed it would be beside the point, to attempt
+to make long statements in excuse of individual acts, such as his
+petition addressed to the Reich President in 1932, or his letter to
+Hitler in the same year. Anybody who knows life can find a thoroughly
+natural explanation for them in the fundamental attitude of Schacht. If
+this attitude is proved to be unobjectionable from the point of view of
+criminal law and the rules of evidence, then no such documents can be
+used in argument against Schacht. It is the principle that matters. The
+same holds true for Schacht’s participation in the so-called meeting of
+industrialists. On this subject I should only like to remark by way of
+correction that Schacht neither presided at this meeting nor
+administered these funds exclusively for the National Socialist Party.
+
+Now one witness here has passed judgment on Schacht’s attitude toward
+the seizure and consolidation of power during this period:
+
+ “Schacht was an untrustworthy person,” he said. “Schacht
+ betrayed the cause of democracy at that time. I therefore
+ refused in 1943 to join a Government proposing to overthrow
+ Hitler with Schacht’s participation.”
+
+This was the former Minister Severing who, according to his own
+statement, relinquished his ministerial chair and premises on 20 July
+1932, when the Berlin Chief of Police and two police officers called on
+him, demanding his withdrawal with the assertion that they had been
+authorized to do so by the Reich President. Severing withdrew, as he
+said himself, to avoid bloodshed. In spite of the great respect which I
+feel toward Severing’s clean political character, I am forced to my
+regret to deny him any right to pass competent judgment on statesmen
+who, unlike him and his Government coalition, did not remain
+lethargically passive. Severing and his political friends indeed bear a
+disproportionately greater responsibility than Hjalmar Schacht for Adolf
+Hitler’s seizure of power because of their indecision and, finally,
+their lack of political ideas; but they do not have to answer for this
+to any judge except history. And this responsibility will be all the
+greater since the witness indeed makes the claim that at that time he
+had already recognized that Hitler’s accession to power meant war. If
+one may really believe that he possessed this correct political
+intuition, then his responsibility, and that of his political friends,
+will be all the greater in view of their passivity on that and later
+occasions, and again this responsibility will be disproportionately
+greater than that of Hjalmar Schacht. Our German workers are certainly
+no greater cowards than the Dutch. Our hearts rejoiced to hear a witness
+here describe the manly courage of Dutch workers who dared to strike
+under the very bayonets of the invading army. The following which
+Severing and his political friends deservedly had in the German working
+class might perhaps have induced them not to watch the dissolution of
+the trade unions with such dull passivity as was the case in 1933, had
+only their natural leaders such as Severing and his colleagues been a
+little more daring and willing to expose themselves. In the last resort,
+the Kapp revolt in 1923 was also overcome by the general strike of the
+workmen. The Hitler regime was not so strong in 1933 that it did not
+have to fear the truth of the poet’s words addressed to the workers:
+“All wheels stand still at your strong arm’s will.” The National
+Socialist Government at that time was quite well informed about this and
+was consequently apprehensive. This is also apparent from Göring’s
+interrogation on 13 October 1945, the transcript of which was quoted and
+submitted by Professor Kempner on 16 January 1946. Göring said: “You
+must consider that at that time the activity of the Communists was
+extraordinarily strong and that our new Government as such was not very
+secure.” But even this strong arm which I have just mentioned required a
+guidance which was denied to the working class and for which men like
+Severing would have been indicated. In all justice they will have to
+account for their passivity, not before the judge in a criminal court,
+but before history. I do not presume to pass a final judgment. I confine
+myself to revealing this problem and to attributing a full and
+embarrassing measure of self-righteousness to the witness Severing,
+although I respect him as a man, if he feels himself called upon to
+accuse others, when studying the question as to who from the view point
+of history is guilty of the seizure and consolidation of power by
+Nazism—especially if, in contrast to Schacht, he intuitively foresaw
+the later evolution of Hitler—instead of submitting himself with
+humility to the judgment of history, relying on his undoubtedly
+unimpeachable views and his undoubtedly pure intentions.
+
+Let us always bear in mind, in the interest of historical truth, that
+especially at the beginning of the Nazi rule there were only two power
+groups, with the exception of foreign intervention, which could perhaps
+have liberated Germany, namely, the Army and the working class,
+provided, of course, that both were under the proper leadership.
+
+I had to go into more detail on this point because such a detrimental
+remark by such a blameless and distinguished man as Severing brings with
+it the danger of unjust deductions regarding my client. It would have
+been agreeable to me if I could have been spared this discussion of
+Severing’s incriminating testimony. Severing has further brought the
+charge of political opportunism against Schacht. In politics, to be
+sure, the boundary between opportunism and statesmanlike conduct
+dictated by expediency is very fluid. Before appraising Schacht’s
+conduct in 1932 and 1933 as opportunistic, his past should also have
+been considered. After 1923 this past lived in the public eye. It has
+partly been a subject of these proceedings, partly it is already known
+to the Court. This past speaks rather for the fact that Schacht does
+what he judges to be right, not only with a great disregard of
+consequences, but also with great courage. Indeed, he has also proved
+this courage as a conspirator against Hitler, as is bound to appear from
+an examination of this activity as conspirator, and as Gisevius
+expressly described here.
+
+But let us go back with Schacht to the year 1923. At that time he
+stabilized the mark against all parties interested in inflation; in 1924
+he blocked credits against all hoarders of foreign currency; in 1927 he
+deprived the exchange speculators of the credit basis for their exchange
+manipulations. From 1925 to 1929 he fought against the debt and
+expenditure policy of the municipalities and thereby incurred the enmity
+of all the mayors. In 1929 he signed the Young Plan and thus defied the
+opposition of the heavy industry circles and continuing this policy, he
+fought openly since 1934 against the perversions and abuses of the Nazi
+ideology and never personally carried out a plan or an order which was
+contrary to his conscience or his sense of justice.
+
+Every statesman must make certain concessions during a time of
+fanaticism. Certain sticklers for morality—of whom there are many
+today—who demand a steely hardness for the protection of principles,
+should not forget that steel has two qualities, not only solidity but
+also flexibility.
+
+My Lord, I have now finished one particular section; the next one would
+take longer. I certainly will not finish it until after 1 o’clock. I
+should be grateful if Your Lordship would call the noon recess now. I am
+now coming to Appendix Number 1 ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Dix, I think you had better go on until 1 o’clock.
+
+DR. DIX: Your Honors, in the translated copy which you have before you,
+there are two appendices at the end. I had to employ this device because
+the matters dealt with in this annex occurred after I had given my
+speech to be translated. Therefore, I had to work in my comments on this
+subject somehow, and could only do it by way of an appendix.
+
+And so I now come to the reading of Appendix 1, which is at the back,
+and to the opinion of the testimony of Gisevius as expressed by my
+colleague, Dr. Nelte, since I am here concerned with evaluating the
+testimony of witnesses.
+
+Insofar as my colleague Dr. Nelte criticized the objective reliability
+of the testimony of Gisevius regarding his statements incriminating the
+Defendants Keitel, Göring, and so on, I refrain from any statements. The
+Prosecution may take any standpoint it desires. This is not my task.
+
+But now Dr. Nelte has also attacked the subjective credibility of
+Gisevius in the personal character of this witness and thus also
+indirectly the reliability of his testimony concerning Dr. Schacht. This
+demands a statement of my opinion, and a statement of a very fundamental
+nature.
+
+Your Honors, it is here that minds part company. A gap that cannot be
+bridged opens up between Schacht’s standpoint and the standpoint of all
+those who adopt the train of thought with which Dr. Nelte attempts to
+discredit the character of Gisevius, the deceased Canaris, Oster, Nebe,
+and others. I most certainly owe it to my client, Dr. Schacht, to state
+the following fundamental point very clearly and unequivocally:
+
+Patriotism means loyalty to one’s fatherland and people and fight
+without quarter against anyone who criminally leads one’s fatherland and
+people into misery and destruction. Such a leader is an enemy of the
+fatherland; his actions are infinitely more dangerous than those of any
+enemy in war. Every method is justified against such a criminal State
+leadership, and the motto must be: _à corsaire, corsaire et demi_.
+
+High treason against such a State leadership is true and genuine
+patriotism and as such highly moral, even during war. Who could still
+entertain the slightest doubt after the findings of this Trial, and
+finally after the testimony of Speer about Hitler’s cynical remarks
+regarding the destruction of the German people, that Adolf Hitler was
+the greatest enemy of his people, in short, a criminal toward this
+people, and that to remove him any means were justified and any,
+literally any, deed was patriotic. All those on the defendant’s bench
+who do not recognize this are worlds apart from Schacht.
+
+I had to make this point in order to clear the atmosphere. After this
+fundamental clarification I can refrain from refuting details in Dr.
+Nelte’s attacks against Dr. Gisevius. Insofar as Dr. Nelte fails to see
+any willingness for active service among these resistance groups to
+which Dr. Schacht belonged, I need only point to the many hundreds who
+were hanged on 20 July alone; Schacht numbers among the very few
+survivors, and he too was to be liquidated in Flossenbürg. I point to
+the dead victims of the political judiciary of the Hitlerian State whose
+numbers run into thousands. Truly, the waging of a war of conspiracy
+against Hitler and the necessity for cunning and dissimulation in
+connection therewith were no less dangerous to life and limb than
+exposing one’s self at the front.
+
+During the very fair cross-examination conducted by my colleague, Dr.
+Kubuschok, Gisevius immediately admitted his mistake resulting from the
+ban on publication, in the affair of Papen’s resignation. I have nothing
+more to say about this.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn.
+
+ [_The Tribunal recessed until 1400 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ _Afternoon Session_
+
+DR. DIX: May it please the Tribunal, I had concluded with the
+consideration of the probative value of the statements made here by the
+witnesses Severing and Gisevius.
+
+Now, on concluding the evaluation of Schacht’s conduct up to about 1935
+and entering the period from 1935 to 1937, I would emphasize once more
+that in order to save time I will not repeat the arguments which were
+presented to the Tribunal in detail during the cross-examination, as for
+instance the nonparticipation of Schacht in the legislation which led to
+the total disregard for international law, because this took place
+before his entry into the Cabinet. The decisive event for the
+stabilization of Hitler’s power, the merging of the offices of the Reich
+President and of the Chancellor of the Reich in the person of Hitler,
+also lay outside his co-operation and responsibility. By this decree the
+Army took its oath to Hitler. The Chancellor of the Reich not only had
+police authority as heretofore but also authority over the Army. It is
+not my task to investigate who bears the political responsibility and
+thus the historic guilt for this law; in any case, it is not Schacht.
+
+All the basic anti-Jewish laws were also enacted before he entered into
+office as a minister. He was completely surprised by the subsequent
+Nuremberg Laws. The decree dealing with the exclusion of the Jews from
+German economic life dated 12 November 1938 and the ordinance concerning
+the use of Jewish property and possessions of 3 December 1938 were
+issued after he had left his post as Minister of Economics and thus
+without his active collaboration. The same applies to the decree
+excluding Jews from the Reich Labor Service, which moreover probably
+hardly inconvenienced them. The law providing for the death penalty for
+secret reserves of foreign exchange, the so-called Law of Betrayal of
+the People, was not directed specifically against the Jews but solely
+against big industry and high finance; also it was not evolved by
+Schacht but by the Minister of Finance. Schacht did not want to effect a
+breach of relations on account of such laws because he believed it was
+his duty to perform a more important task. In any case, this can hardly
+be regarded as important, for in the Jewish question Schacht, by his
+public speeches and his reports to Hitler, showed such a favorable
+attitude toward the Jews that it would be unjust to disqualify him
+politically and morally for such a reason, much less from the angle of
+criminal law. As examples I would remind you of the Reichsbank speech
+after the anti-Jewish pogrom in November 1938, the speech at Königsberg,
+the memoranda of the year 1935, and so forth. In the Third Reich Schacht
+was considered the most courageous and active protector of the Jews. I
+only remind you of the letter of the Frankfurt businessman, Merton,
+which was submitted to the Court, and of the illuminating statement of
+the witness Hayler. According to the latter, when Hayler reproached
+Himmler for the events of November 1938, he replied that after all it
+had been the fault of the economic administration that matters had
+reached such a point. Of a man like Herr Schacht one could not expect
+anything better than that he should exercise a constant restraining
+influence in the Jewish question and be opposed to the will of the
+Party.
+
+In response to my further inquiry Justice Jackson defined this specific
+charge of the Prosecution as follows: Schacht is not being charged with
+anti-Semitism, but for activities which have a causal connection with
+the atrocities committed against the Jews within the framework of the
+planned war of aggression. Thus it follows that a denial of guilt as to
+a war of aggression leads with compelling logic to the denial of any
+guilt as to the atrocities which were committed against the Jews during
+the war. Justice Jackson made some phases of the legislation in respect
+to the Jews during Schacht’s term as Minister the subject of his
+cross-examination. I shall refrain from this part of the
+cross-examination; going into the questions put to Schacht and answered
+by him is irrelevant according to the Charter and the previously
+mentioned authentic interpretation of this part of the Indictment by
+Justice Jackson. The anti-Semitic legislation of the Third Reich and the
+personal attitude of an individual defendant toward it are, according to
+the Charter, relevant in these proceedings only insofar as they are
+connected with other crimes which are subject to punishment according to
+the Charter, as for example the conspiracy to wage war, mass
+extermination, and so forth. According to the Charter they cannot
+constitute an offense in themselves, not even one against humanity. Only
+those defendants are punishable for their deeds who can be proved to
+have participated in the planning of a war of aggression with its
+resulting inhuman consequences for the Jews. A prerequisite for their
+conviction on this account, however, is that they recognized and desired
+this goal and its result. There exists no purely objective liability for
+the outcome in criminal law. According to the Charter, he who desired
+the war and thus also the inhuman actions connected with it is
+punishable; but the incriminating activity must always have occurred in
+the course of the execution of such a plan. This purely legal
+consideration in itself excludes the conviction of Schacht on the
+grounds of atrocities against the Jews.
+
+Another discrepancy between the Prosecution, especially with regard to
+the statements of Justice Jackson, and myself must likewise be clarified
+at this point, otherwise we will be talking at cross purposes. During
+the cross-examination Justice Jackson repeatedly pointed out that the
+defendant is not being charged with anti-Semitism as such, that he is
+not being charged with his opposition to the Treaty of Versailles, that
+he is not being charged with his ideas and statements on the so-called
+Lebensraum problem as representing the food problem of the central
+European nations, that he is not being charged with his colonial
+aspirations; but that he is being charged with all this only to the
+extent that it served, with his knowledge and desire, for the
+preparation of a war of aggression. By this objection Justice Jackson
+meant to preclude certain questions and discussions. This would have
+been justified and I too could now forego such arguments, were not the
+Prosecution taking away with one hand what it is giving with the other,
+because in the course of argumentation all this, namely, Schacht’s
+alleged anti-Semitism, _et cetera_, is used as indirect proof, that is,
+as circumstantial evidence that Schacht had prepared and desired this
+war of aggression. The Prosecution of course does not count all that as
+a criminal fact in itself, but as indirect proof, as circumstantial
+evidence. Therefore in evaluating the evidence, I must also treat these
+problems. I think I have finished dealing with the Jewish question. With
+regard to the problem of Lebensraum, in order to save time, I can
+probably refer to what Schacht has stated here during his interrogation
+in justification of his statements and activities in this respect. The
+colonial problem was the subject of cross-examination by Justice Jackson
+insofar as he tried to prove that colonial activity by Germany was
+impossible without world domination, or at least the military domination
+of the seas. Further development of this train of thought would result
+in the Defendant Schacht being charged with the fact that his striving
+for colonies logically depended on the planning of a war of aggression.
+That is a false conclusion. I think that Justice Jackson’s conception of
+colonial policy is too imperialistic. Anyone desiring colonies for his
+country without attendant domination of the world or the sea bases his
+colonial activity on a lasting state of peace with the stronger maritime
+powers. He must necessarily believe in peace with these powers. Germany
+also possessed colonies from 1884 until the first World War; her
+merchant marine carried on the necessary traffic with these colonies.
+Her merchant marine before this war would also have been sufficient.
+Aviation, in reply to Justice Jackson’s question, would not have been
+essential. Nothing supports the presumption that in his desire for
+colonies Schacht would have striven to eliminate foreign naval supremacy
+by means of war. In view of his general conduct one can hardly credit
+him with being as foolish as all that. France and Holland likewise
+possess colonies, the sea routes of which they certainly do not control.
+
+This charge of the Prosecution is therefore inconclusive. Moreover, the
+Tribunal knows that during the years before the war nearly all the
+statesmen of the victorious powers were sympathetic to these colonial
+aspirations of Germany, as is shown in many of their public speeches.
+
+I now come to the subject of rearmament, that is, to the activity of
+Schacht in his capacity as President of the Reichsbank and Reich
+Minister of Economics until 1937, in other words, up to the time when he
+changed from a loyal servant of Adolf Hitler to a traitor against him
+and took to the dark ways of artifice and dissimulation while making
+preparations for an attempt on his life.
+
+The Prosecution considers the violation of the Versailles Treaty, the
+Locarno Pact, and other treaties as indirect proof, that is, as
+circumstantial evidence, of his criminal intention to wage a war of
+aggression. This involves first the question of whether any treaty
+violations took place and, if so, whether these treaty violations must
+be judged as indications of an intent to wage a war of aggression on the
+part of members of the Reich Government, Schacht included. It is
+impossible, and also unnecessary, to discuss exhaustively in this plea
+the problem of whether actual treaty violations were committed and to
+what extent. My colleague Dr. Horn has already touched upon this
+question. A short remark can serve to show at least the problematical
+nature of this question. This again is important for a proper
+evaluation. There are no lasting treaties, neither in the domain of
+civil jurisdiction nor, still less, in the domain of international law.
+The _clausula rebus sic stantibus_ often plays a much more important
+role in the domain of international law affecting the political
+intercourse between nations than in private dealings between
+individuals. One must be very careful not to apply, offhand, the
+relatively narrow principles of civil law to the breadth and depth of
+international law. International law has its own dynamics. The highly
+political intercourse between nations is subject to other juridical
+aspects than the commercial and personal relations between individuals.
+The most striking proof of the correctness of this thesis is the
+juridical basis of the Indictment, particularly insofar as it deals with
+the sentence _nulla poena sine lege poenale_ and demands, instead of
+sanctions, the individual punishment of the leading statesmen of an
+aggressor nation. Whoever upholds the conception of the Prosecution in
+this respect, acknowledges the dynamics of international law and the
+fact that international law develops according to a process of its own.
+
+History has taught us that treaties based on international law do not
+usually come to an end by a formal repeal but succumb to the development
+of events. They inevitably sink into oblivion. In specific instances
+opinions may differ as to whether this is the case or not; but that does
+not affect the basic truth of this statement. The militarization of the
+Rhineland and the introduction of general conscription, the extent of
+rearmament which Schacht approved of and strived for, the voluntary
+“Anschluss” of Austria to Germany, which was also basically desired by
+Schacht, all of these certainly are offenses against the meaning and
+text of the above-mentioned pacts, particularly the Versailles Treaty.
+If, however, such violations are only answered by formal protestations,
+and otherwise very friendly relations continue to exist and honors are
+even conferred upon the offending nation, and if agreements are
+concluded which alter the basic stipulations of such a treaty, as for
+instance the Naval Pact with Great Britain, the view is fully justified
+that because of all this such a treaty is gradually reaching a state of
+obsolescence and extinction, or at least there is cause for such a
+subjective point of view.
+
+I beg you to consider that the prerequisite for the conclusion of an
+armament pact, as for instance the Naval Pact with Great Britain, is the
+military sovereignty of both nations. The denial of such sovereignty to
+Germany was, however, one of the main aspects of the Versailles Treaty.
+I do not wish to speak here about the justice or injustice of this
+treaty. I know the Court’s wish, or rather prohibition, in regard to
+this matter, and of course I shall observe it. But I must speak about
+the legal possibility and therefore the innocence, criminally speaking,
+of Schacht’s personal opinions on the question of treaty violation. Even
+if, therefore, one still wished to defend the point of view that the
+said treaties have not become obsolete, one cannot, at least as far as
+its inherent honesty is concerned, doubt the justification of an opinion
+to the contrary. But if this is recognized, these treaty violations no
+longer provide any proof of the criminal intention of a war of
+aggression. And that is all that matters. For the violation of treaties
+in itself is not considered a punishable act by the Charter. Here, too,
+Schacht can justify his good faith by referring to the same or similar
+views on the part of leading foreign statesmen, in whom it is therefore
+logically impossible to assume the existence of a suspicion as to a
+desire for aggression on the part of Germany. Here again I must limit
+myself to a few instances, since a complete enumeration would exceed the
+time limit of this plea.
+
+The first of the violations of the Versailles Treaty is supposedly the
+reintroduction of general conscription. With regard to this measure, the
+British Foreign Secretary, Sir John Simon, with a statesman’s
+far-sighted objectivity, gave the following reply, which was universally
+made known in reports by the press and radio and which therefore is
+valid as legal evidence:
+
+ “There is no doubt that an agreed reduction of the armaments of
+ other big nations was to follow upon the forced disarmament of
+ Germany.”
+
+This remark contains a confirmation of the juridical point of view I
+developed a while ago, in spite of the criticism of Hitler’s action that
+follows. The same applies to the fact that the visit of Sir John Simon
+and Mr. Anthony Eden to Berlin took place 8 days after this so-called
+treaty violation, namely, on 24 March 1935. It would not have taken
+place if this measure of Hitler’s had been considered abroad as
+militarily aggressive. I will just mention in passing the history of the
+treatment of this question by the Council of the League of Nations,
+which is well known. Should Schacht, as a German and a German Minister,
+judge it in a manner different from that of the foreign Governments?
+
+A second treaty violation by Hitler was the occupation of the Rhineland,
+also in March 1935. This action did not only violate the Versailles
+Treaty ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT: [_Interposing_] The date of the occupation of the
+Rhineland was not March 1935, but March 1936.
+
+DR. DIX: I cannot ascertain that at the moment.
+
+The point in question is that this action took place, namely, the
+occupation of the Rhineland. This action was not only a breach of the
+Treaty of Versailles but also of the Locarno Pact, that is, of an
+undoubtedly voluntarily contracted treaty. Two days later Mr. Baldwin
+stated in the House of Commons, in a speech made public and therefore
+valid as legal evidence, that, while Germany’s conduct could not be
+excused, there was no reason to assume that this action contained a
+threat of hostilities. Was Schacht, a German and a German Minister, to
+take a different and more skeptical attitude in regard to the aggressive
+significance of the act than foreign statesmen? And particularly when he
+was forced to note the fact, which is now history and is universally
+known, that 10 days after this breach of treaty the Locarno Powers,
+except Germany, submitted to the Council of the League of Nations a
+memorandum which proposed the reduction of the number of German troops
+in the Rhineland to 36,500 men and only endeavored to avoid the
+strengthening of the SA and SS in the Rhineland and the erection of
+fortifications and airfields. Should not this memorandum be interpreted
+as a ratification of an alleged breach of the treaty?
+
+A third breach of the treaty was the fortification of Helgoland, which
+was hardly observed by the contracting parties, and merely called forth
+from Mr. Eden, in the now famous public speech before the House of
+Commons on 29 July 1936, the remark that it was not considered favorable
+to increase the difficulties of the proceedings by individual questions
+like the one under discussion. Was the German Minister Schacht to take
+another and more rigorous attitude?
+
+And what about the terroristic annexation of Austria in March 1938 when,
+moreover, Schacht was no longer Reich Minister for Economics? If foreign
+countries had gathered from this action the conviction that Hitler was
+preparing a war of aggression, they would not have abstained from
+threatening to use force. Was the German Minister Schacht to hold a
+different and stricter opinion? He did, in fact, have a different
+opinion at the time and was already eagerly at work with Witzleben and
+others to eliminate Adolf Hitler and his regime by means of a Putsch; an
+effort on the part of these patriotic conspirators which was frustrated,
+as the unequivocal testimony of the witness Gisevius has shown, because
+Hitler was able to record one success after another in foreign politics.
+
+I merely remind you of the unequivocal evidence of Gisevius regarding
+the effects of the Munich Agreement on the influence of the opposition
+group of which Schacht was a leader; I remind you of the evidence of
+Gisevius regarding the warnings and hints in this connection sent across
+the German frontiers to responsible personalities of foreign countries.
+Is it fair to require from the German Minister Schacht a more critical
+attitude to those political developments than that adopted by foreign
+countries whose interests had been injured? As we know from Gisevius,
+from Vocke, and from all the affidavits submitted, he did have this
+critical attitude from 1937 on, in which year he took to the dark ways
+of a conspirator. I remind you of his first contact with the then
+General Von Kluge. I could give many examples such as those just
+mentioned. I do not criticize this attitude of foreign countries; that
+is not for me to do, quite apart from the fact that I have complete
+understanding for the pacifist attitude it reveals, which is fully aware
+of its responsibilities. It is, however, my duty to point out that no
+warlike intention can be imputed to Schacht on account of his opinions
+and attitude, when the same opinions and the same attitude can be
+identified as belonging to the foreign countries whose interests had
+been injured. If foreign countries could entertain the hope of
+maintaining further friendly relations with Hitler, the same right must
+be conceded to Schacht as far as he claims it. He does not, however,
+claim it for himself, at least not after the Fritsch crisis of 1938.
+
+After that time he, in contrast to the foreign countries, had a very
+clear idea of the danger, which fact, according to the evidence of
+Gisevius, is undeniable, and he personally risked his life and liberty
+to maintain peace by attempting to overthrow Hitler. The fact that all
+these Putsch actions before the war and after the outbreak of war were
+unsuccessful cannot, according to the evidence submitted, be considered
+his fault. The responsibility for the failure of this German resistance
+movement does not lie with the latter but elsewhere, within and without
+the German frontiers. I shall return to this later.
+
+There remains, therefore, the fact of rearmament as such. Here, too, I
+can refer essentially to the statements Schacht made in justifying
+himself during his cross-examination. This was exhaustive, and a
+repetition would be superfluous. It is therefore also completely
+superfluous to enter into an academic discussion as to whether Schacht’s
+views were right; that is to say, whether it is correct that a certain
+amount of military force sufficient for defensive purposes is necessary
+for any country and was particularly necessary for Germany, and whether
+he was correct in his opinion that the nonfulfillment by the parties to
+the Versailles Treaty of the obligation to disarm justified the
+rearmament of Germany. The sole point in question is whether these
+opinions and motives of Schacht’s were honest, or whether he pursued
+secret aggressive intentions under cover of this defensive armament. But
+these proceedings have established absolutely nothing to disprove the
+honesty of these opinions and motives. Of course, one can question the
+fact whether the quotation “_si vis pacem, para bellum_” has absolute
+validity; or whether objectively any pronounced rearmament does not
+carry an inherent danger of war, since good armies with competent
+officers naturally strive for a chance for real action. Of course, one
+can defend the thesis that moral strength is stronger than any armed
+strength. The cohesion of the British Empire and the world-wide
+influence of the Vatican’s foreign policy could perhaps be cited as
+proof of this. All these questions carry a certain relativity in
+themselves; at any rate, one thing is certain: Even today in all large
+countries of the world the warning is constantly repeated that one must
+be militarily strong in order to preserve peace. Nations whose
+individualism and love of liberty rejected general conscription and a
+strong standing army now act to the contrary and honestly believe that
+they thereby serve peace. Let us take as an example a nation whose love
+of peace absolutely no one in the world, even the most mistrustful, can
+question, namely, Switzerland. Yet this peace-loving nation has always
+taken pride in maintaining the defense capacity of its people with the
+very intention of protecting its freedom and independence in a peaceful
+manner. One may academically call this idea of discouraging foreign
+aggression by the maintenance of a sufficiently strong defensive army
+imperialistic. It is, at any rate, honestly entertained by peaceful and
+liberty-loving nations and perhaps serves the cause of peace more
+effectively than many so-called antimilitaristic and pacifist doctrines.
+This sound point of view has really nothing to do with militarism.
+Whoever today recognizes this viewpoint as justified for great and small
+nations cannot contest the honesty of this view on the part of Schacht
+in the years 1935 to 1938. I have no more to say about this.
+
+I also need not give a wearisome enumeration of figures and make
+specialized technical statements to the effect that this part of
+rearmament which Schacht first financed with 9,000 million, and then
+reluctantly with a further 3,000 million Reichsmark, was by no means
+sufficient for a war of aggression, in fact, not even for an effective
+defense of the German frontiers. The answers that the witnesses Keitel,
+Bodenschatz, Milch, General Thomas, Kesselring, et cetera, have given to
+this in their depositions and affidavits are available and have been
+submitted to, or officially brought to the attention of, the Tribunal.
+In this respect they are unanimously agreed that even at the outbreak of
+war—that is, 18 months later—Germany was not sufficiently armed for an
+aggressive war; that therefore, when Hitler led this nation into a war
+of aggression in August 1939, it was not only a crime against humanity
+but also against his own people, the people with whose leadership he was
+entrusted.
+
+Therefore I also consider it superfluous to go into long discussions as
+to whether Blomberg’s statement that Schacht was aware of the progress
+of rearmament is correct, or the statement of Schacht and Vocke that
+this was not so. I accept without further discussion the sincerity of
+Blomberg’s statement. But since he had more to do with the technical
+side of rearmament than the Reichsbank had, general experience would
+seem to indicate that the memory of Schacht and Vocke is more reliable
+on this point than Blomberg’s, to whom this report to the Reichsbank was
+a matter of secondary importance for his department. For the Reichsbank
+the desire to be informed about the technical progress of the armament
+as well as about the financial expenditure was a very important matter.
+One remembers such facts better than unimportant secondary matters. In
+any case it is established that until the budget year 1937-38 only
+21,000 millions were spent on armament, of which 12,000 millions were
+financed by credits of the Reichsbank, and that, according to
+Generaloberst Jodl’s statement of 5 June, on 1 April 1938 only 27 or 28
+divisions were ready, whereas in 1939 there were already 73 or 75
+divisions.
+
+It needs no expert to show that this volume of expenditure and armament
+on 1 April 1938 was entirely insufficient for a war of aggression.
+Indeed Hitler was of the same opinion when in his memorandum of August
+1936, which has been submitted to the Court, and which was handed to
+Speer in 1944, he pointed out, along with many derogatory remarks about
+Schacht’s conduct of economic affairs, that 4 precious years had gone
+by, that we had had time enough in these 4 years to determine what we
+could not do, and that he hereby gave orders that the German Army must
+be ready for action in 4 years, that is, in the course of the year 1940.
+
+I should like to remind the Court that after Schacht’s withdrawal as
+President of the Reichsbank, 31,500 millions were spent on armament
+during the two budget years 1938-39 and 1939-40. The issuing and
+expenditure of money on armament therefore continued without Schacht,
+and indeed to a considerably greater extent. Schacht had once written to
+Blomberg that he was not a money-making machine.
+
+He exercised constant pressure on Blomberg along this line. I refer only
+to his letter to Blomberg on 21 December 1935, which has been submitted
+to the Tribunal. He exercised a restraining influence by means of
+explanatory lectures to officers of the War Ministry and of the Armed
+Forces Academy. He refused the railway loan of 1936 requested by the
+Minister of Communications, which was indirectly in the interest of
+armament; and he stopped the credits of the Reichsbank as early as the
+beginning of 1937, concluding them by compromising on a final grant of
+3,000 millions. He refused the credit which the Reich Minister of
+Finance requested from him in December 1938.
+
+He created an automatic brake for armament expenditure through the mefo
+bills, which from the technical and financial point of view was a
+somewhat bold measure, although legally tenable. These served at first
+to finance the armament expenditure but restricted further armament
+expenditure after their expiration on 1 April 1939 because the Reich was
+obligated to redeem them. Schacht’s foresight proved true. The increase
+in employment brought such a rise in the state revenues that it would
+not have been difficult to liquidate the mefo bills at their expiration
+5 years later. Keitel’s statement has proved that during the budget year
+beginning 1 April 1938, 5,000 million marks more were spent for armament
+than during the preceding year, although as from 1 April 1938 the
+Reichsbank credits had completely ceased. Half of the 5,000 millions
+would have sufficed to redeem the mefo bills which matured during the
+budget year beginning 1 April 1939. The use of this money for further
+rearmament would have been avoided; but this was exactly what Schacht
+intended. From the beginning he had limited the validity of the mefo
+bills to 5 years; he stopped the credit assistance of the Reichsbank on
+1 April 1939 in order to limit armament. It was impossible for Schacht
+to foresee that Hitler would simply break a strict credit obligation and
+not redeem the bills. These facts in themselves show that his attempts
+to resign could have had no other reason than opposition to any further
+armament, and the refusal to accept responsibility for it. In this sense
+the assertion of the Prosecution that he wanted to evade responsibility
+is completely correct.
+
+Nothing indicates that any other motives than those which are obvious
+from the facts just mentioned caused him to make this attempt to
+relinquish his duties. If the Prosecution maintains that the reason was
+his antagonism to Göring, this is also correct insofar as Schacht was an
+opponent of the Four Year Plan, of which Göring was the chief. That the
+reason was rivalry of power is a pure supposition, an interpretation of
+actual events which justifies the quotation: “Interpret to your heart’s
+content; should you fail to explain, you will at least insinuate.”
+
+The Reichsbank memorandum of November 1938, which led to the dismissal
+of Schacht and most of his collaborators including Vocke, is also
+unequivocally and forcibly opposed to armament. It naturally had to
+contain reasons for this which were derived from the departmental
+jurisdiction of the Reichsbank. Its aim was obvious. Hence Hitler’s
+remark, “This is mutiny.” The memorandum ends with the demand for
+control of the capital and loan market as well as the management of
+taxation by the Reichsbank. Compliance with this demand would have
+deprived Hitler of every possibility of raising money for further
+armament, and therefore this demand was unacceptable to him. Schacht and
+his colleagues knew this. Accordingly, they deliberately sought a break
+by this step. Schacht now bore no further responsibility. From now on he
+could devote himself exclusively to the plans for a _coup d’état_ by the
+conspiracy group to which he belonged. He became a traitor to Hitler. By
+remaining Minister without Portfolio, he hoped to learn more about what
+went on than if he resigned altogether; this was vital for the aims of
+his conspiracy group. I shall return to this point later.
+
+The fact of armament, as such, therefore, proves absolutely nothing for
+the assertion of the Prosecution that Schacht deliberately contributed
+to the preparation of a war of aggression. Simultaneous economic
+armament, however, belongs of necessity to armament in the modern sense.
+On the German side this was already recognized for the first time at the
+beginning of the first World War by two very important German Jews, the
+founder of the Hamburg-America Line, Albert Ballin, and the great German
+industrialist, Rathenau. This is the same Rathenau who made the
+wonderful speech on peace during the Genoa Conference, which was
+received with wild applause by the delegates of those very powers which
+had opposed his country but 4 years previously as enemies, and who, as
+German Foreign Minister, was the victim of an anti-Semitic outrage in
+the early twenties. I probably can assume that the personality of Albert
+Ballin is known to the Court. Both men recognized, at the very outbreak
+of the first World War, the error of omitting economic mobilization.
+Rathenau then organized the so-called War Raw Materials Department of
+the War Ministry. The first Plenipotentiary General for War Economy, for
+this is what he really was, was thus ideologically a pacifist; and
+certainly since that time there is probably no mobilization plan by any
+nation which does not provide for the purely military armament to be
+accompanied by a corresponding economic preparation for war. Therefore,
+the designation of a Plenipotentiary General for War Economy, even if he
+had taken up his duties, which as the evidence demonstrates most
+convincingly he never did but remained a dummy, does not show anything
+in the way of proof that the intention to wage a war of aggression
+existed. This post is equally necessary when arming for defense. The
+same applies to the institution of the Reich Defense Council, the Reich
+Defense Committee, _et cetera_. As such they are the same harmless,
+matter-of-course factors. They have no incriminating value. Only their
+misuse for the purpose of a war of aggression would be incriminating.
+However, Schacht’s criminal intention in this respect has not been
+established, nor has anything else been found. I therefore refrain from
+going into details on this subject.
+
+In conclusion, the Prosecution sees something incriminating in the
+so-called maintenance of secrecy regarding certain mobilization measures
+and mobilization arrangements, as for example the second Reich Defense
+Law. Here, too, a natural and worldly-wise way of thinking deprives
+these findings of any incriminating character. All nations are
+accustomed to treat mobilization and armament measures as secret. Upon
+further consideration and after closer observation this practice can, of
+course, be recognized as a very superfluous routine matter. Only plans
+and technical details can be really kept secret. The fact of rearmament
+as such can never be kept secret. The same applies to the existence of a
+large body which is to serve the purpose of this rearmament. Either it
+becomes known because it starts to function, or, like the ominous
+Defense Council, it remains hidden and secret only because it does not
+function.
+
+In the memoirs of a Czarist officer regarding his experiences in the
+Russo-Japanese war I found the following humorous observation:
+
+ “If I, as a member of the General Staff, wished an incident to
+ become known, I had it classified as ‘secret’ and my wish was
+ fulfilled. If I wished to keep something secret, which was
+ almost an impossibility, I unobtrusively gave it free
+ circulation and occasionally my wish was fulfilled.”
+
+One should not quibble in a vacuum; but if one wishes to find the truth,
+one must take into account the teachings of experience based on hard
+facts.
+
+Thus, the fact of the military activation of Germany after the seizure
+of power by Hitler and the subsequent rearmament was never a secret to
+the world. The main proceedings have produced a great deal of evidence
+to this effect. We know the report of Consul General Messersmith; we
+know his sworn testimony of 30 August 1945, submitted by the Prosecution
+under Number 2385-PS, according to which the armament program—he speaks
+of a giant armament program immediately following the seizure of
+power—and the rapid development of the air program had been apparent to
+everybody; it had been impossible to move in the streets of Berlin or in
+any other city of importance in Germany without seeing pilots or
+aviators in training. He expressly states, on Page 8 of his testimony,
+that this giant German rearmament program was never a secret and was
+quite publicly announced in the spring of 1935.
+
+I would like to remind you, amongst a great deal of other evidence, of
+the remark of Ambassador Dodd, who contends that he pointed out to
+Schacht that the German Government had bought high-grade airplanes from
+American airplane manufacturers for 1 million dollars and had paid for
+them in gold. Even if Ambassador Dodd perhaps made a mistake in this
+detail, yet all this still proves that German rearmament—the extent of
+which was surely even overestimated abroad at that time—must have been,
+at the very best, an open secret.
+
+Therefore it is not even necessary to refer to the mutual visits of the
+Chiefs of General Staffs, to which Milch and Bodenschatz testified, the
+visits of the Chief of the British Intelligence Service, Courtney, the
+permanent presence in Berlin of military attachés of nearly all
+countries, in order to recognize that the so-called secret rearmament
+was quite public and only safeguarded a few technical secrets, as did
+rearmament in every state. The outside world knew of the existence of
+this rearmament and, in any case, considered it to be compatible with
+world peace longer than Schacht himself did.
+
+It is not for me to criticize the attitude of the outside world, nor is
+it my intention to do so. Each part on the stage of life has its own
+rules of tact, including the part played by the defendant and his
+defense counsel. Their task is to establish a defense, and not to bring
+charges and make an attack. In connection therewith I expressly wish to
+guard against a possible misunderstanding to the effect that I want to
+appear as an accuser, a critic, or a know-it-all in any way. I present
+all this only from the aspect of my submission that the indirect
+circumstantial evidence submitted by the Prosecution is not conclusive.
+
+Furthermore, the Prosecution argues that Schacht was a member of the
+Reich Cabinet, at least as Minister without Portfolio from the time of
+his dismissal in January 1938, as Minister of Economics, until January
+1943. The Prosecution makes the Reich Cabinet responsible—criminally
+responsible—for the belligerent invasions of Hitler. This argumentation
+has an attractively convincing power for somebody who starts with the
+normal concept of a Reich Cabinet. The effect disappears once it has
+been ascertained that the so-called Reich Cabinet was not a cabinet in
+the usual sense applying to a constitutional state.
+
+Judgments should not, however, be based on outward appearances and
+form—not on fiction, but only on actually established conditions. This
+makes it necessary to penetrate sociologically the nature of the Hitler
+regime and to examine whether a member of the Reich Cabinet, hence of
+the Reich Government as such, must in this capacity bear the same
+criminal responsibility as if he were in any other normal state set-up,
+be it a democratic republic or a democratic monarchy or a constitutional
+monarchy or a monarchy which, although absolute, was nevertheless
+founded on law, or some other constitutionally based set-up which bears
+the character of a somehow lawful state based on a constitution. We are
+thus obliged to investigate the actual sociological structure of the
+Hitler regime. We have heard an account on the Führer Order
+(Führerbefehl) in this connection by Professor Jahrreiss. Here, too, I
+want to avoid repetition and would only state the following in
+abbreviated form:
+
+I want to say first of all, in order to avoid once more the danger of a
+misunderstanding, that when I speak of the Hitler regime here I do so
+without referring in any way to the persons sitting in the dock;
+naturally with the exception of Schacht. For the latter, I do so in the
+negative sense, for he did not belong to the regime as such, in spite of
+the fact that he was a member of the Reich Government and President of
+the Reichsbank. I leave the question completely open as to whether any
+of the other defendants should be considered a member or supporter of
+the regime. That question is subject only to the judgment of the
+Tribunal and the evaluation of the defense counsel for each case.
+
+At the very beginning of my argument I indicated that, even for a person
+who lived in Germany during the Hitler regime, it is difficult to
+differentiate between the ostensible distribution of power and the
+actual underlying influence, since this requires a great deal of
+political intuition; it is bound to be impossible to judge for people
+who lived outside Germany and can only be arrived at through the
+findings resulting from the presentation of evidence before this
+Tribunal. We have established here that the Reich Cabinet, whom Hitler
+termed a club of defeatists, was convened for the last time in 1938 and
+that it met then only to receive a communication from Hitler. For actual
+deliberation and the passing of a resolution it had last been convened
+in 1937. We have also established that Hitler deliberately kept all news
+of political importance from the Reich Cabinet, as is proved quite
+unequivocally by the so-called Hossbach minutes of 10 November. During
+this meeting the Führer called the attention of the chiefs of the
+branches of the Wehrmacht and the Reich Foreign Minister, who were
+present—Schacht, of course, was not present and did not learn about the
+Hossbach minutes until he came here—to the fact that the subject for
+deliberation was of such great importance that it would result in full
+Cabinet meetings in other countries but that, just because of its great
+significance, he had decided not to discuss the matter with the Reich
+Cabinet.
+
+Thus, at least after 1937, the members of the Reich Cabinet can no
+longer be considered the architects and supporters of the political
+aspirations of the Reich. The same holds true for the members of the
+Reich Defense Council, which as such was nothing but a bureaucratic and
+routine affair. Accordingly Hitler, in the spring of 1939, explicitly
+excluded the Reich Defense Council also from further war preparations,
+saying: “Preparations will be made on the basis of peacetime
+legislation.”
+
+Despotism and tyranny showed themselves in unadulterated form as from
+1938. It is a characteristic quality of the Fascist as well as the
+National Socialist regime, to have the political will concentrated in
+the head of the Party, who with the help of this Party subjugates and
+becomes master of the State and the nation. Justice Jackson also
+recognized this when he stated, on 28 February 1946, that the apex of
+power rested with a power group outside the State and the Constitution.
+
+To speak, in the case of such a regime, of a responsible Reich
+Government and of free citizens who, through some organizations or
+others, could exert influence on the formation of the political will,
+would be to proceed from entirely wrong hypotheses. Intangible elements
+devoid of all sense of responsibility usually gain influence on the head
+of the State and Party in such regimes. The formation of the political
+will can be recognized in its crystallized form only in the head of the
+State himself; all around him is shrouded in a haze. It is another
+characteristic of such a regime—and this again belongs to its inner
+untruthfulness—that beneath the surface of seemingly absolute harmony
+and union several power groups fight against each other. Hitler not only
+tolerated such opposing groups, he even encouraged them and made use of
+them as a basis for his power.
+
+One of the defendants spoke here of the unity of the German people
+during this war in contrast with the first World War, but I must stress
+in reply that hardly at any time during its history was the German
+nation so torn internally as it was during the Third Reich. The apparent
+unity was merely the quiet of a churchyard, enforced through terror. The
+conflicts between the individual high functionaries of the German
+people, which we have ascertained here, reflect the inner strife-torn
+condition of the German nation, carefully concealed through the terror
+wielded by the Gestapo.
+
+To give only a few examples: We were confronted here with the conflicts
+between Himmler and Frank, between Himmler and Keitel, between Sauckel
+and Seldte, between Schellenberg and Canaris, between Bormann and
+Lammers, between SA and SS, between Wehrmacht and SS, between SD and
+Justice, between Ribbentrop and Neurath, and so on and so forth. The
+list could be continued ad libitum.
+
+Even ideologically the Party in itself was divided into pronounced
+oppositional groups, which was shown already at the very beginning of
+the presentation of evidence by Göring’s testimony. These oppositions
+were fundamental, and they were not bridged by Hitler but rather
+deepened. They were the instrument from which he elicited his power. The
+ministers were not responsible governing persons, as in any other state
+where law is the foundation; they were nothing but employees with
+specialized training who had to obey orders. And if a departmental
+minister, as in the case of Schacht, did not wish to submit to this, it
+resulted in conflict and resignation from his post.
+
+For this very reason no minister could in the long run take full
+responsibility for his department, because he was not exclusively
+competent for it. A minister, in accordance with constitutional law,
+must first of all have access to the head of State; and he must have the
+right to report to him in person. He must be in a position to reject
+interference and influences coming from irresponsible sources. None of
+the characteristics applicable to a minister apply to the so-called
+ministers of Adolf Hitler. The Four Year Plan came as a surprise to
+Schacht. Similarly, the Minister of Justice was surprised by so
+extremely important a law as the Nuremberg Decrees. Ministers were not
+in a position to appoint their staffs independently. The appointment of
+every civil service employee required the consent of the Party
+Chancellery. The intervention and influence of all possible agencies and
+persons of the various Chancelleries—Chancellery of the Führer, Party
+Chancellery, _et cetera_—asserted themselves. They, however, were
+agencies placed above the ministries and they could not be controlled.
+Special delegates governed over the heads of the departmental chiefs.
+Ministers, even the Chief of the Reich Chancellery, as we have heard
+from Lammers, might wait for months for an audience, while Herr Bormann
+and Herr Himmler had free access to Hitler.
+
+The anticamera and camarilla, indispensable accessories of all
+absolutism, have at all times been difficult to fathom as to the
+personal responsibility of the individual circles of which they are
+composed. The irresponsible influences exerted over and affecting Hitler
+were absolutely intangible.
+
+Generaloberst Jodl described to us here how Hitler’s sudden actions,
+caused by some urge and attended by the most serious consequences, could
+be traced back to influences of an entirely obscure and unknown sort,
+such as pure chance, conversations at a tea party, or the like. For the
+objective facts this bears out what I already mentioned in the
+beginning. And so this state of affairs precludes even the possibility
+of the planning of a crime such as a war of aggression within a clearly
+defined circle of persons, much less within the so-called Reich
+Government. But where no planning is possible, there can be no plot, no
+conspiracy either, the most striking characteristic of which is this
+very common planning, even though the participants have different and
+varied roles. Let us assume the broadest conceivable interpretation of
+the ostensible exterior characteristics of the conspiracy. I am
+following Justice Jackson’s line of reasoning. He who takes part in a
+counterfeiters’ plot is guilty of conspiracy, even through he may have
+written only a letter or acted as bearer of the letter. He who
+participates in a plot for robbing a bank is guilty of murder if, in the
+course of the execution, not he but a third party in the group of
+planners commits murder. At all times, however, the prerequisite is a
+body of persons capable of evolving a common plan. Such a thing was not
+possible for Adolf Hitler’s ministers; it was not possible at all under
+Hitler. From this it follows that no conspirator could participate in
+Hitler’s crime of having forced upon his own people and the world a war
+of aggression, except those who served Hitler as assistants.
+
+The forces at work in the Third Reich as depicted thus permit in thesis
+only the assumption that there existed a punishable complicity or
+punishable assistance, not, however, a punishable group offense such as
+a conspiracy. Whether such complicity or such punishable aid in the
+crime of a war of aggression committed by Hitler exists for individual
+defendants personally can only be investigated and decided in each
+individual case. It is my task to investigate this only in the case of
+Schacht.
+
+A collective crime such as conspiracy is, however, excluded as
+inconceivable and impossible in the light of the actual conditions as
+already established. But even if this were not the case, the subjective
+aspect of the deed is completely lacking in the case of Schacht. Even if
+the objective facts of a conspiracy were to exist for a certain circle
+of the accused and even with the most liberal interpretation of the
+concept of conspiracy, it is still essential that the conspirator should
+include the plan of conspiracy and the aims of the conspiracy within his
+will, at least in the form of _dolus eventualis_.
+
+The strict facts constituting a conspiracy can best be illustrated by
+comparison with a pirate ship. In reality every crew member of the
+pirate ship, even a subordinate, is guilty and an outlaw. But a person
+who did not even know that he was on a pirate ship but believed himself
+to be on a peaceful merchant vessel, is not guilty of piracy. He is
+equally innocent if, after realizing the pirate character of the ship,
+he has done everything he could to prevent any piracy, as well as to
+leave the pirate ship. Schacht did both.
+
+As far as that is concerned, research on conspiracy also recognizes that
+a person is not guilty who has withdrawn from the conspiracy by a
+positive act before attainment of the goal of the conspiracy, even if he
+did co-operate previously in the preparation of the plan for conspiracy,
+which was not the case with Schacht. In this connection, I also consider
+as being in my favor Mr. Justice Jackson’s answer when I put up for
+discussion, during Schacht’s interrogation, the question whether the
+persecution of the Jews is also charged to Schacht. Mr. Justice Jackson
+said, yes, if Schacht had helped prepare the war of aggression before he
+withdrew from this plan for aggression and its group of conspirators and
+went over unreservedly to the opposition group, that is, to the
+conspiracy against Hitler. This desertion would then be the positive act
+which I have mentioned whereby a person at first participating in a
+conspiracy would separate himself from it.
+
+This legal problem does not even enter into consideration as far as
+Schacht is concerned, because the evidence has shown that he never
+desired to participate in the preparation for a war of aggression.
+
+As already stated, this accusation of the subjective fact of the
+conspiracy has not been proved either by direct or by indirect evidence.
+For the events up to the year 1938 I can point to the statements made
+previously. It has been proved that from 1938 on, at the latest, Schacht
+fought the bitterest struggle imaginable against any possibility of war
+in such a form that he attempted to overthrow the person responsible for
+this risk of war and this will for aggression and, thereby, the regime.
+
+Your Lordship, I have now arrived at the end of a section, if Your
+Lordship would care to announce a recess now.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. DIX: I beg your pardon for being late, but I was detained at the
+entrance.
+
+Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I have arrived at the discussion of the
+beginning of the opposition by means of the various Putsch actions.
+
+It is quite irrelevant and of incidental importance to investigate
+whether the attempts at a Putsch, which occurred at shorter or longer
+intervals during the war, would have been instrumental in securing
+better peace terms for Germany. This is absolutely meaningless for the
+criminal evaluation of Schacht’s course of action. Doubtlessly,
+according to human reckoning, a successful prewar Putsch would have
+prevented the outbreak of war; and a successful Putsch after the
+outbreak of war would at least have shortened the duration of the war.
+Therefore such skeptical considerations about the political value of
+these Putsch attempts do not disprove the seriousness of the plans and
+intentions for a Putsch, and that is all that counts in a criminal legal
+evaluation. For it proves first of all that a person who has been
+pursuing them since 1938, and even since 1937, if one includes the
+attempt with Kluge, could not possibly previously have had warlike
+intentions. One does not try to overthrow a regime because it involves
+the danger of war, if previously one has oneself worked toward a war.
+One does so only if by all one’s actions, even that of financing
+armament, one wished to serve peace. For this reason these repeated
+Putsch attempts on the part of Schacht do not have any legal
+significance of a so-called active repentance for previous criminal
+behavior but constitute _ex post_ proof that he cannot be accused even
+before 1938 of deliberately working for war, because it would be
+logically and psychologically incompatible with Schacht’s activity of
+conspiracy against Hitler.
+
+These Putsche thus prove the credibility of Schacht in respect to his
+explanation of the reasons and intentions which caused him actively to
+enter the Hitler Government and to finance armament to the extent to
+which he did, namely, to the amount of 12,000 millions. They prove _ex
+post_ the purely defensive character of this financing of armament; they
+prove the credibility of Schacht’s contention of having tactically
+achieved, in addition, a general limitation of armament. If one does
+believe this explanation of Schacht’s, and I think one must believe it,
+then one cannot speak of Schacht’s co-operation in instigating a war of
+aggression.
+
+This credibility is also proved by another circumstance. Schacht
+originally contradicted the testimony of Gisevius and my questions
+following the same line, that he had admired Hitler at the beginning and
+had unreservedly considered him a brilliant statesman. He described this
+in his interrogation as an erroneous assumption. He said that he had
+recognized from the beginning many of Hitler’s weaknesses, especially
+the fact of his poor education, and had only hoped to be in a position
+to control the disadvantages and dangers resulting from them. By this
+contradiction Schacht made his defense more difficult; but he is wise
+enough to have recognized this. Thus what he deliberately forfeited from
+the point of view of evidence which would serve his defense, he gains
+with regard to his credibility upon objective evaluation of evidence
+based on psychological experience. For a person who serves the truth by
+contradiction deserves increased credibility, when the suggested untruth
+or the half-truth is more advantageous to him technically and tactically
+by way of evidence.
+
+There should be no doubt about Schacht’s leading role in the activities
+of the various conspiracies about which Gisevius testified on the very
+basis of this credible testimony. During the cross-examination Mr.
+Justice Jackson confronted Schacht with photographs and films which
+superficially show a close connection with Hitler and his paladins. This
+can only have been done in order to throw doubt on the earnestness of
+his active opposition to Hitler. I must, therefore, deal briefly with
+this point of the photographs and films. Mr. Justice Jackson has coupled
+this accusation with another one by quoting speeches ostensibly
+expressing great devotion on the part of Schacht toward Adolf Hitler
+even during the Putsch period. This accusation is on the same level. I
+believe that this argument cannot stand up either before the experiences
+of life nor before what we can observe of history. History teaches us
+that conspirators, especially if they belong to the closer circle of
+dignitaries of the threatened head of state, show special devotion for
+purposes of camouflage. Nor has it ever been observed that such people
+impart their intentions to the prospective victim in a spirit of
+contradictory loyalty. One could cite many examples of this from
+history.
+
+There exists an effective German drama by a certain Neumann which
+concerns itself with the murder of Czar Paul by his first Minister,
+Count Pahlen. The Czar believes to the very end in the ostentatious
+devotion of Count Pahlen, even while the latter is already sharpening
+his knife. And the historical documents in existence include a note by
+Count Pahlen to the Russian Ambassador in Berlin, immediately before the
+assassination, in which Count Pahlen persists in speaking about “_Notre
+auguste Empereur_,” and so forth. Significantly, this drama bears the
+title _The Patriot_.
+
+Thus, there is a higher patriotism than the merely formal loyalty of a
+servant of the nation. It would be closer to the psychological truth if
+this presumptive devotion, assumed for the sake of appearances, and the
+assurances of loyalty during this period were judged more in favor of
+the objective credibility of Schacht’s explanations than _vice versa_.
+As a conspirator, he had to camouflage himself especially well. To a
+certain degree this had to be done by practically everyone who lived
+under this regime in Germany. As far as the photographs are concerned,
+it is probably an inevitable consequence of every social and
+representative participation in a body that one becomes a victim of the
+camera along with the members of the body whether one likes it or not. A
+member of a Government cannot always avoid being photographed with these
+people on the occasion of their meetings. As a result we have pictures
+that show Schacht between Ley and Streicher and the scene in the film
+showing the reception of Hitler at the railroad station. Viewed ex post,
+these pictures give no pleasure to the observer, and certainly not to
+Schacht either. But they do not prove anything. In a natural evaluation
+belonging to a normal average experience of life, I consider these
+pictures without any value as evidence, either _pro_ or _contra_.
+
+Foreign countries, too, through their prominent representatives, had
+social intercourse with Adolf Hitler’s Government, and this not only
+through their diplomatic corps. I wish to assure you that the Defense is
+in a position to produce pictures of a much more grotesque sort which do
+not seem nearly as natural as Schacht being photographed together with
+men who, after all, were his fellow dignitaries in the Third Reich. To
+produce such pictures, however, might not be very tactful on the part of
+the Defense; yet should it be necessary to investigate the truth in all
+seriousness, a defense counsel might have to take upon himself the odium
+of indiscretion. I do not believe that there is any need for me to do so
+in this case, because the irrelevance and insignificance of such a
+presentation of evidence through pictures taken on state occasions of
+the Third Reich seems to me to be obvious.
+
+The only incriminating point pressed by the Prosecution which is left
+for me to argue now appears to be that Schacht, after his retirement as
+Minister of Economics and even after his retirement as President of the
+Reichsbank in January 1939, remained Minister without Portfolio until
+1943. Schacht declared that this had been stipulated by Hitler as a
+condition for his release from the Ministry of Economics. Hitler’s
+signature, as that of the head of the State, was necessary for his
+dismissal. Had Schacht refused to remain as Minister without Portfolio,
+he would surely have been arrested sooner or later as a political
+suspect and thus been deprived of all possibility of action against
+Hitler. The witness Gisevius has testified as to the discussions at that
+time between him and Schacht concerning the continuation of Schacht’s
+function as Minister without Portfolio. In these deliberations the idea
+was quite justly considered important that Schacht could be of more use
+to the group of conspirators as a scout or an outpost if he remained in
+this position, to outward appearances at least, within the Reich
+Government. Even as Minister without Portfolio, Schacht remained exposed
+to great danger, as is shown by his and Gisevius’ declarations and as
+becomes obvious from Ohlendorf’s statement that Schacht already in 1937
+was on the black list of the State Police.
+
+How much Hitler feared Schacht is proved by his subsequent remarks to
+Speer, which have been discussed here, particularly his remarks about
+Schacht after the attempted assassination on 20 July. I would also
+remind you once more of Hitler’s memorandum of 1936, which he gave to
+Speer in 1944 and which shows that he saw in Schacht a saboteur of his
+rearmament plans. It has been declared and proved by Lammers that
+Schacht tried later on to get rid even of this nominal position. Lammers
+and Schacht have proved furthermore that this position of Minister
+without Portfolio was without any special importance. Hence my reference
+to him as an officer with assimilated rank, that is, an officer without
+command authority, a sham officer. Schacht could not give up the
+position unless there was a row, and the same held true of his position
+as Reichsbank President. Schacht, therefore, had to maneuver in such a
+way that he would be thrown out. He succeeded in this, as I explained,
+as Reichsbank President through the well-known memorandum of the
+Directorate of the Reichsbank and the refusal of credits by the
+Reichsbank in November 1938 contained therein. As far as his position of
+Minister without Portfolio was concerned, he succeeded through his
+defeatist letter of November 1942. In the meantime he made use of the
+time for the attempted _coup d’état_ in autumn 1938 and for the various
+other attempted _coups d’état_ leading up to that of 20 July 1944, which
+finally caused him to be put in a concentration camp.
+
+A criminal reproach can on no account be made against him in his
+position as Minister without Portfolio. For his proved conspiratorial
+activity against Hitler during all this time eliminates by force of
+logic the supposition that he had furthered Hitler’s war plans and war
+strategy during this time. In any event, we can only raise—and even
+that only in the vacuum of abstraction—a political reproach against the
+Schacht of the years 1933-37. But this, too, is fully compensated by the
+extraordinarily courageous attitude of Schacht after this period. To
+obtain its just evaluation, may I remind you of the interesting
+statement of Gisevius to the effect that he, who had at first looked
+with a certain skepticism upon Schacht’s original attitude, not in a
+criminal but in a political sense, had later become completely
+reconciled with Schacht by the extraordinary courage which Schacht
+displayed as opponent and conspirator against Hitler since 1938. I am of
+the opinion, therefore, that the fact that Schacht remained as Minister
+without Portfolio does not incriminate him either directly or
+indirectly, neither according to penal law, which is out of the
+question, nor morally, if one takes into consideration his behavior as a
+whole, his motives, and the accompanying circumstances and conditions.
+
+If the Prosecution now finally argues, on the basis of the text of the
+afore-mentioned memorandum by the Directorate of the Reichsbank, that an
+opposition to war is not evident from the memorandum, but only technical
+reflections on finance and currency, then I have only to refer in this
+respect to my earlier statements and the testimony of Vocke. The
+presentation of facts by Schacht himself would not even be necessary to
+refute this argumentation. Vocke in his capacity as closest collaborator
+declared quite unequivocally that Schacht wished to limit and sabotage
+rearmament from the moment when he recognized that it was becoming a
+potential war danger. The sworn affidavit of Hülse and the sworn
+affidavits of all the collaborators of Schacht in the Reich Ministry of
+Economics tally with the testimony of Vocke in this respect. I need not
+quote them individually. They are known to the Tribunal. The Tribunal
+does not need the commentary of a defense counsel on them; they speak
+for themselves. If the Prosecution now finally bases its argument on the
+text of the memorandum which, it is true, actually only deals with
+financial problems, then again I cannot suppress the remark that such an
+argumentation moves in a vacuum insofar as one does not take the
+experiences of history and the general experiences of life into
+consideration. Naturally, as I have already said, the Directorate of the
+Reichsbank could only bring up arguments from their department,
+particularly so in dealing with a Hitler. One says one thing while
+meaning another.
+
+If the Directorate of the Reichsbank, along with their President,
+Schacht, had revealed their true purpose in this memorandum, namely, to
+avert the danger of war and to combat Hitler’s will of aggression, then
+they would have deprived themselves of the effect of technical
+departmental influence. Hitler very well understood the purpose of this
+memorandum when he shouted, after reading it: “That is mutiny!” With
+this, Hitler recognized the only thing that can be said of Schacht as
+conspirator: He was never a mutineer and conspirator against world
+peace; but, insofar as he was a conspirator and mutineer, he was so only
+against Adolf Hitler and his regime.
+
+Again in this case I must ask the High Tribunal to turn their attention
+to Appendix Number II, which I must insert at this moment, because the
+matter that is dealt with here did not reach me for translation until
+after I had submitted my final speech.
+
+I said that Schacht, insofar as he was a conspirator, was so only
+against Hitler. As such, he was the subject of ironical belittling by
+Generaloberst Jodl and my colleague Nelte through the epithet,
+“frock-coat and drawing-room revolutionary.” Now history teaches that
+the quality of the tailor does not play any role in the case of the
+revolutionary. And as far as the drawing room is concerned, shacks have
+no revolutionary precedence over palaces. I would just recall the
+political drawing rooms of the great French Revolution or, for example,
+the elegant officers’ club of the select Preobrashensk regiment under
+many a Czar. Should the Gentlemen of the Tribunal be of the opinion that
+Schacht and his accomplices themselves should have done the shooting,
+then all I can say is that things were not as easy as all that. Schacht
+would have loved to do the shooting himself; he proclaimed that here
+emphatically. But it was not possible for him to do so without
+possessing the power to master the attendant confusion, thereby making
+the attempt a revolutionary success. Thus generals with troops were
+necessary. I do not wish to repay Generaloberst Jodl with the same coin
+and shall therefore refrain from saying “a necessary evil.”
+
+The further reproach of the basic lack of working-class elements to
+strengthen the Putsche is contradicted by the social composition of the
+revolutionaries of 20 July. As I stated before, all this is irrelevant
+for the decision of the Tribunal. But my client is morally entitled to
+expect his defense counsel not to let this ironical thrust pass,
+especially since it was delivered in the limelight of public opinion.
+
+In summing up I may say: After the elections in July 1932 it was certain
+that Hitler was able and bound to seize power. Previous to this Schacht
+had particularly warned the foreign countries of this development, and
+thus he had not contributed to it. After the seizure of power only two
+roads were open to him, as to every German: He either had to estrange
+himself or to enter the Movement actively. The decision at these
+crossroads was a purely political one without any criminal aspect. Just
+as we respect the reasons which caused the foreign countries to
+collaborate with Hitler much more intensively and in a more pro-German
+way than with the previous democratic Governments of Germany, we must
+recognize the good faith of all those Germans who believed themselves
+able to serve the country and humanity better by remaining in the
+Movement, that is, within the Party or the apparatus of officialdom,
+because of the greater possibilities of exerting their influence, than
+by grumbling and keeping aloof. To serve Hitler as minister and
+President of the Reichsbank was a political decision, about the
+political correctness of which one can argue _ex post facto_ but one
+which certainly lacked any criminal character. Schacht has always
+remained loyal to the motivating reason for his decision, namely, to
+combat any radicalism from an influential position. Nowhere in the
+world, which knew his oppositional attitude, could he see any signs of
+warning or support. He saw only that the world trusted Hitler much
+longer than he himself did and permitted Adolf Hitler to gain honors and
+foreign political successes, which hampered Schacht’s work which had
+already for a long time been directed toward removing Adolf Hitler and
+his Government. He led this struggle against Adolf Hitler and his
+Government with a courage and determination which must make it appear a
+pure miracle that not until after 20 July 1944 did fate overtake him,
+when he was sent to a concentration camp and was in danger of losing his
+life either through the Peoples’ Court or through a spectacular act of
+the SS. He is sufficiently wise and self-critical to realize that from a
+purely political angle the picture of his character will be adjudged
+diversely in history, or at least in the immediate future, according to
+favor or hatred of the parties. He humbly resigns himself to the
+judgment of history, even if one historian or another will label his
+political line as incorrect. But with the pride of a good conscience he
+faces the judgment of this High Tribunal. He stands before his judges
+with clean hands. He also stands before this Tribunal with confidence,
+as he has already manifested in a letter which he addressed to this
+Tribunal before the beginning of the proceedings, in which he states
+that he is grateful to be able to expose before this Tribunal and before
+the whole world his actions and doings and their underlying reasons. He
+stands before this Tribunal with confidence because he knows that favor
+or hatred of the parties will have no effect on this Tribunal. While
+recognizing the relativity of all political actions in such difficult
+times, he remains sure of himself and full of confidence with regard to
+the criminal charges which have been raised against him. Whoever would
+be found guilty of being criminally responsible for this war and the
+atrocities and inhuman acts committed in it, Schacht, according to the
+evidence which has been given here with minute exactness, can confront
+that culprit with the words which Wilhelm Tell flings in the face of the
+emperor’s assassin, Parricida: “I raise my clean hands to Heaven, and
+curse you and your deed!”
+
+I therefore request the findings to be established to the effect that
+Schacht is not guilty of the accusation which has been raised against
+him and that he be acquitted.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Kranzbühler for the Defendant Dönitz.
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER OTTO KRANZBÜHLER (Counsel for the Defendant Dönitz): Mr.
+President, Gentlemen of the Tribunal: “War is a cruel thing, and it
+brings in its train a multitude of injustices and misdeeds.”[2] With
+these words of Plutarch’s, Hugo Grotius begins his examination of
+responsibility for war crimes; and they are as true today as they were
+2,000 years ago. Acts constituting war crimes, or considered as such by
+the opponent, have at all times been committed by belligerents. But this
+fact was always held against the vanquished parties and never against
+the victors. The law which was applied here was necessarily always the
+law of the stronger.
+
+While more or less stable rules have been governing land warfare for
+centuries, in naval warfare the conceptions of the belligerents with
+regard to international law have always clashed. No one knows better
+than the British statesmen to what extent these conceptions are dictated
+by national or economic interests. I refer in this respect to noted
+witnesses such as Lord Fisher and Lord Edward Grey.[3] Therefore, if
+ever in history a naval power would have had the idea of prosecuting a
+defeated enemy admiral, based on its own conception of the rules of
+naval warfare, the sentence would have been a foregone conclusion from
+the very indictment.
+
+At this trial two admirals are under indictment for a naval war which
+has been termed criminal. Thus the Tribunal is confronted with a
+decision regarding conceptions of law which are necessarily as divergent
+as the interests of a naval power and a land power. It is not only the
+fate of the two admirals which depends upon this decision. It is also a
+question of personal honor to hundreds of thousands of German seamen who
+believed they were serving a good cause, and who do not deserve to be
+branded by history as pirates and murderers. It is for these men, the
+living as well as the dead, that I feel bound by a moral obligation to
+reject the accusations raised against German naval warfare.
+
+What are these accusations? They are divided into two main groups:
+Unlawful sinking of ships and deliberate killing of shipwrecked
+personnel. I shall deal first with the accusation of the illegal sinking
+of ships.
+
+Two reports by Mr. Roger Allen, of the British Foreign Office, made in
+the autumn of 1940 and spring of 1941, form the nucleus of that
+accusation. I do not know to whom and for what purpose these reports
+were made. According to their form and content they appear to serve
+propaganda purposes, and for that reason alone I consider them to have
+little value as evidence. Even the Prosecution submitted only part of
+the accusations made therein. The reports trace only one-fifth of the
+total number of supposedly unlawful attacks back to submarines, whereas
+four-fifths are ascribed to mines, airplanes, or surface craft. The
+Prosecution omits these four-fifths, and this reticence may be explained
+by the fact that the use of these combat means on the British side
+differed in no way from that on the German side.
+
+With regard to the use of submarines, however, there does seem to exist
+a difference between the principles followed in Germany’s conduct of the
+naval war and that of our enemies. At any rate, the public in enemy
+countries and in many neutral countries believed so during the war, and
+partly still believes it today. Propaganda dominated the field. At the
+same time the vast majority of all critics neither knew exactly what
+principles applied to German U-boat warfare, nor on what factual and
+legal foundations they were based. It shall be my task to attempt to
+clarify this.
+
+The reports by Mr. Roger Allen culminate in the assertion that the
+German U-boats, beginning with the summer of 1940, torpedoed everything
+within range. Undoubtedly, the methods of submarine warfare gradually
+intensified under the pressure of the measures directed against Germany.
+This war, however, never degenerated into an orgy of shooting governed
+only by the law of expediency. Most of what might have been expedient
+for a U-boat was left undone to the last day of the war because it could
+only be regarded as legally inadmissible, and all measures of which
+Germany in her conduct of naval warfare is being accused today by the
+Prosecution were the result of a development in which both sides took
+part through measures and countermeasures, as occurs in the course of
+every war.
+
+The London Protocol of 1936 formed the legal basis for German submarine
+warfare at the beginning of this war. These regulations were
+incorporated verbatim into Article 74 of the German Prize Ordinance,
+which even Mr. Roger Allen calls a reasonable and not inhuman
+instrument. This Prize Ordinance was sent in 1938 in draft form to the
+two U-boat flotillas and to the U-boat training school and served as a
+basis for the training of commanders. Stopping and examining merchant
+vessels was performed as a tactical task. In order to facilitate for the
+commander in economic warfare the quick and correct evaluation of his
+legal position towards ships and cargoes of the enemy and of neutral
+countries, the prize disc was constructed, which through simple
+manipulations indicated the articles of the Prize Ordinance to be
+applied. Thus, insofar as preparations had been made at all for economic
+warfare by submarines they were based exclusively on the German Prize
+Ordinance, and thus on the London Protocol.
+
+The German High Command actually did adhere to this legal foundation in
+the initial stages of the war. The combat instructions for U-boats of 3
+September 1939 contained clear orders to the effect that submarine
+warfare was to be carried on in accordance with the Prize Ordinance.
+Accordingly, sinkings were permissible only after stopping and examining
+the ship, unless it attempted to escape or offered resistance. Some
+examples were submitted to the Tribunal, from the abundance of available
+instances, showing the chivalrous spirit in which the German submarine
+commanders complied with instructions given. In particular, assistance
+afforded to the crews of ships lawfully sunk, after having been stopped
+and examined, occasionally reached a point where it could scarcely be
+justified on military grounds. Lifeboats were towed over long distances,
+whereby the few available U-boats were diverted from their combat
+mission. Enemy ships which might have been sunk lawfully were permitted
+to go free in order to send the crews of ships previously sunk to port
+aboard them. It is therefore only correct that Mr. Roger Allen stated
+that the German U-boats, during the first weeks of the war, adhered
+strictly to the London regulations.
+
+Why was this practice not kept up? Because the conduct of the enemy made
+such a procedure militarily impossible, and at the same time created the
+legal prerequisites for its modification.
+
+I shall consider the military side first. From the very first day of the
+war, U-boat reports reached the Flag Officer of U-boats and the Naval
+Operations Staff stating that hardly an enemy ship submitted voluntarily
+to being stopped and examined. The merchant vessels were not content
+with attempting to escape through flight or by changing their course and
+bearing directly down upon the U-boat in order to force it to dive.
+Every U-boat sighted was at once reported by radio; and subsequently, in
+the shortest space of time, attacked by enemy airplanes or naval forces.
+However, it was the arming of all enemy merchant vessels that settled
+the matter. As early as 6 September 1939 a German U-boat was shelled by
+the British steamship _Manaar_, and that was the starting signal for the
+great struggle which took place between the U-boats, on the one hand,
+and the armed merchant vessels equipped with guns and depth charges, on
+the other hand, as equal military opponents.
+
+In order to show the effect of all the measures taken by the adversary,
+I have presented to the Tribunal some examples which I do not wish to
+repeat. They show unequivocally that further action against enemy
+merchant ships in accordance with the Prize Ordinance was no longer
+feasible from the military standpoint and meant suicide for the
+submarine. Nevertheless, the German command for weeks on end continued
+to act according to the regulations governing the Prize Ordinance. Only
+after it was established that action on the part of enemy merchant
+ships—especially armed action—no longer took the form of individual
+measures but of general instructions, was the order given on 4 October
+1939 to attack all armed enemy merchant ships without warning.
+
+The Prosecution will perhaps take the standpoint that, in lieu of this,
+submarine warfare against armed merchant vessels should have been
+discontinued. In the last war the most terrible weapons of warfare were
+ruthlessly employed by both sides on land and in the air. In view of
+this experience the thesis can hardly be upheld today that in naval
+warfare one of the parties waging war should be expected to give up
+using an effective weapon after the adversary has taken measures making
+the use of it impossible in its previous form. In any case such a
+renunciation could only be considered if the novel utilization of the
+weapon were undeniably illegal. But this is not the case for the
+utilization of German submarines against enemy merchant shipping,
+because the measures taken by the enemy changed not only the military
+but also the legal situation.
+
+According to German legal opinion a ship which is equipped and utilized
+for battle does not come under the provisions granting protection
+against sinking without warning as laid down by the London Protocol for
+merchant ships. I wish to stress the fact that the right of the merchant
+ship to carry weapons and to fight is not thereby contested. The
+conclusion drawn from this fact is reflected in the well-known formula:
+“He who resorts to weapons must expect to be answered by weapons.”
+
+During cross-examination the Prosecution referred to this interpretation
+of the London Protocol as fraudulent. It admits only the closest literal
+interpretation and considers the sinking of a merchant ship as
+admissible only if the latter has offered active resistance. It is not
+the first time that fundamental differences of opinion exist between
+contracting parties with respect to the interpretation of a treaty, and
+the extremely divergent interpretations of the meaning of the Potsdam
+Agreement of 2 August 1945 provide a recent example. Diversity of
+conception, therefore, does not permit the conclusion that the one or
+the other party acted fraudulently during the signing or the subsequent
+interpretation of a treaty. I will endeavor to show how unjustified this
+charge is particularly in regard to the German interpretation of the
+London Submarine Protocol.
+
+There are two terms on which the German interpretation hinges, namely,
+that of “merchant vessel” and “active resistance.” If I now consider
+some legal questions, this will in no way represent a comprehensive
+exposition. I can only touch on the problems and due to lack of time
+must limit myself also when dealing with research on the subject. I
+shall primarily refer to American sources, because the interests of
+naval strategy of that nation were not as firmly established as those of
+the European nations and its research literature can thus claim greater
+objectivity.
+
+The text of the London Protocol of 1936 is based, of course, on a
+declaration which was signed at the London Naval Conference of 1930. The
+committee of jurists appointed at that time expressed its opinion
+concerning the greatly disputed definition of a merchant vessel in the
+report of 3 April 1930:
+
+ “The committee wishes to place on record that the expression
+ ‘merchant vessel’ where it is employed in the declaration is not
+ to be understood as including a merchant vessel which is at the
+ moment participating in hostilities in such a manner as to cause
+ her to lose her right to the immunities of a merchant vessel.”
+
+This definition clarifies at least one thing, namely, that by no means
+every vessel flying a merchant flag may lay claim to being treated as a
+merchant vessel in the sense of the London Agreement. Beyond this, the
+explanation has few positive aspects because the question through what
+kind of participation in hostilities a vessel loses her right to the
+immunity of a merchant vessel is again subject to the interpretation of
+the contracting parties. The London Conference, as far as I can see, did
+not consider this ticklish question any further, and one is probably
+entitled to assume that this remarkable reserve is based on experiences
+which the same powers had accumulated in Washington 8 years before.
+
+The Washington Conference of 1922 was held under the impression of the
+first World War; and therefore it is no wonder that Great Britain, the
+naval power which during the World War had suffered most from German
+submarine warfare, now tried to outlaw and abolish altogether by
+international law submarine warfare against merchant shipping. The
+resolution, named after the American chief delegate, Root, which in its
+first part substantially corresponded to the London text of 1930, served
+that aim. But in the second part the Root Resolution goes further and
+stipulates that any commander who, no matter whether he acted with or
+without higher orders, violated the rules established for the sinking of
+merchant vessels should be punished as a war criminal like a pirate.
+Finally it was recognized that under the conditions stipulated in the
+resolution submarine warfare against merchant shipping was impossible,
+and such warfare was therefore renounced altogether by the contracting
+powers. The Root Resolution designates these principles as an
+established part of international law. While it was accepted as such by
+the delegates, none of the five participating naval powers, U.S.A.,
+Britain, France, Japan, and Italy ratified it.
+
+In connection with the Root Resolution, however, another question was
+discussed which is of the greatest importance for the interpretation of
+the London Protocol, namely, the definition of the term “merchantman.”
+Here the two conflicting views in the entire U-boat question became
+clearly evident. On the one side there stood Britain, on the other
+France[4], Italy, and Japan, while the United States took the position
+of a mediator. According to the minutes of the Washington Conference,
+the Italian delegate, Senator Schanzer, opened the offensive of the
+weaker naval powers by expressly emphasizing that a merchantman, when
+regularly armed, might be attacked by a submarine without preliminaries.
+In a later session Schanzer repeated his statement that the Italian
+delegation applied the term of “merchantman” in the resolution only to
+unarmed merchant vessels. He declared this to be in explicit accordance
+with the existing rules of international law.[5]
+
+The French delegate, M. Sarraut, at that time received instructions from
+his Foreign Minister, M. Briand, to second the reservations of the
+Italian delegate.[6] He thereupon moved to have the Italian reservations
+included in the minutes of the session.
+
+The Japanese delegate, Hanihara, supported this trend with the statement
+that he thought it was clear that merchant vessels engaged in giving
+military assistance to the enemy ceased in fact to be merchant
+vessels.[7] It can therefore be seen that in 1922, three of the five
+powers represented expressed the opinion that armed merchant vessels
+were not to be regarded as merchant vessels in the sense of the
+Agreement.
+
+Since the whole resolution threatened to collapse because of this
+difference of opinion, a way out was found which is typical of
+conferences of this kind. Root closed the debate with the statement that
+in his opinion the resolution held good for all merchant ships as long
+as the ship remained a merchant vessel.[8] With this compromise a
+formula was created which, while representing a momentary political
+success, would not however carry any weight in the case of war, for it
+was left to every participating power to decide whether or not it would
+grant the armed merchant vessels the protection of the resolution in
+case of war.
+
+I have described these events of the year 1922 a little more in detail
+because the powers which took part in them were the same as those which
+participated in the London Naval Conference of 1930. The London
+Conference was the continuation of the Washington Conference, and the
+subjects that had been discussed and included in the minutes of the
+first conference were of great importance for the second conference.
+Experts too—and by no means only German but above all American and
+French experts—based their examinations on the close connection of both
+conferences, and it was precisely for that reason that they declared the
+result achieved in the question of submarines to be ambiguous and
+unsatisfactory. Here I merely wish to point to Wilson’s summarizing
+report on the London Naval Treaty.[9]
+
+This report, besides the ambiguity of the concept “merchant vessel,”
+also stresses the uncertainty connected with the words “active
+resistance”; and it is with these very words that an exception from the
+protection of the merchantman is connected, an exception which likewise
+is not contained in the actual text of the London Agreement but which
+nevertheless is generally recognized. I am referring to merchantmen in
+an enemy convoy. If the London Agreement were interpreted literally, it
+would be understood that even merchantmen in an enemy convoy must not be
+attacked without warning but that an attacking warship would have to put
+the escort vessels out of action first and then stop and search the
+merchantmen. However, this suggestion, which is impossible from a
+military point of view, evidently is not made even by the Prosecution.
+In the report of the British Foreign Office, which has been mentioned
+several times, it says:
+
+ “Ships sailing in enemy convoys are usually deemed to be guilty
+ of forcible resistance and therefore liable to be sunk
+ forthwith.”
+
+Here even the Prosecution accepts an interpretation of the words “active
+resistance,” an interpretation which results in no way from the treaty
+itself but is simply a consequence of military necessity and thus
+dictated by common sense.
+
+And this very same common sense demands also that the armed merchantman
+be held just as guilty of forcible resistance as the convoyed ship. Let
+us take an extreme instance in order to make the matter quite clear. An
+unarmed merchant ship of 20,000 tons and a speed of 20 knots, which is
+convoyed by a trawler with, let us say, 2 guns and a speed of 15 knots,
+may be sunk without warning, because it has placed itself under the
+protection of the trawler and thereby made itself guilty of active
+resistance. If, however, this same merchant ship does not have the
+protection of the trawler and instead the 2 guns, or even 4 or 6 of
+them, are placed on its decks, thus enabling it to use its full speed,
+should it in this case not be deemed just as guilty of offering active
+resistance as before? Such a deduction really seems to me against all
+common sense. In the opinion of the Prosecution the submarine would
+first have to give the merchant ship, which is far superior to it in
+fighting power, the order to stop and then wait until the merchant ship
+fires its first broadside at the submarine. Only then would it have the
+right to use its own weapons. Since, however, a single artillery hit is
+nearly always fatal to a submarine but as a rule does very little harm
+to a merchant ship, the result would be the almost certain destruction
+of the submarine.
+
+ “When you see a rattlesnake rearing its head, you do not wait
+ until it jumps at you but you destroy it before it gets the
+ chance.”
+
+These are Roosevelt’s words, in which he justified his order to the
+United States naval forces to attack German submarines. This reason
+seemed sufficient to him to order the immediate use of arms even without
+the existence of a state of war. It is a unique instance in the history
+of warfare, however, to grant one of two armed opponents the right to
+fire the first shot and to make the other wait to be hit first. Such an
+interpretation is contradictory to all military reason. It is no wonder,
+therefore, if in view of such divergent opinions, the experts on
+international law, even after the London Treaty and the signing of the
+London Protocol of 1936, consider the treatment of armed merchant
+vessels in naval warfare to be an unsolved question. Here too I should
+like to refer to only one source of research, which enjoys especially
+high authority. It is the draft of an agreement on the rights and duties
+of neutrals in naval warfare, an agreement which leading American
+professors of international law, such as Jessup, Borchard, and Charles
+Warren, published in the _American Journal of International Law_ of July
+1939 and which includes arguments which furnish an excellent idea of the
+latest trend of opinion. Article 54 of this draft corresponds word for
+word to the text of the London Agreement of 1936, with one notable
+exception: The term “merchant vessel” is replaced by “unarmed vessel.”
+The next article then continues:
+
+ “In their action with regard to enemy armed merchant vessels,
+ belligerent warships, whether surface or submarine, and
+ belligerent military aircraft are governed by the rules
+ applicable to their action with regard to enemy warships.”
+
+This opinion is first of all explained by historical development. During
+the time when it was customary to arm merchant vessels, that is, until
+the end of the last century, there was no question of any protection for
+the merchant vessel against immediate attack by an enemy warship. With
+the introduction of armor plating the warship became so superior to the
+armed merchant vessel that any resistance on the part of the latter was
+rendered futile, and the arming of merchant ships therefore gradually
+ceased. Only this defenselessness against warships, and this alone,
+granted merchant vessels the privilege of not being attacked without
+warning by the enemy: “As merchantmen lost effective fighting power they
+acquired a legal immunity from attack without warning.”
+
+This immunity was never conceded to the merchant vessel as such but only
+to the defenseless and harmless merchant vessel. In regard to this the
+American expert on international law, Hyde,[10] stated in 1922, that is,
+after the Washington Conference and the afore-mentioned Root Resolution
+on U-boat warfare:
+
+ “Maritime states have never acquiesced in a principle that a
+ merchant vessel so armed as to be capable of destroying a vessel
+ of war of any kind should enjoy immunity from attack at sight,
+ at least when encountering an enemy cruiser of inferior
+ defensive strength.”
+
+Legal as well as practical considerations, therefore, led the
+above-mentioned American authorities, after the signing of the London
+Agreement and shortly before the outbreak of this war, to form the
+opinion that armed merchant ships do not enjoy protection from attacks
+without warning.
+
+Here the old discrimination between defensive and offensive armaments is
+also rejected as inapplicable. It is a well-known fact that the American
+Secretary of State, Lansing, in his note to the Allies on 18 January
+1916, took the point of view that any kind of armament aboard a merchant
+vessel will make its fighting power superior to that of a submarine and
+that such armament is therefore of an offensive nature.[11]
+
+In the later course of the first World War, the United States changed
+its opinion and declared that mounting guns on the stern could be taken
+as proof of the defensive character of the armaments. This standpoint
+was adopted in some international agreements and drafts, as well as by
+British jurists in particular. It does not do justice to the practice of
+naval warfare.
+
+First of all, in this war the guns on many vessels were mounted from the
+very start in the bows, for instance, regularly on fishing trawlers.
+Furthermore, the antiaircraft weapons of the merchant vessel, which were
+especially dangerous for the submarine, were frequently placed on the
+bridge, and could therefore be used in all directions. Besides, there
+can be no differentiation between defensive and offensive armaments as
+to the way the weapons are placed.
+
+In this respect orders alone and the way in which these weapons are
+meant to be employed are the decisive factors. Soon after the war had
+started the orders of the British Admiralty had already fallen into
+German hands. A decision of the Tribunal has made it possible for me to
+submit them. They are contained partly in the _Confidential Fleet
+Orders_, chiefly, however, in the _Defense of Merchant Shipping
+Handbook_. They were issued in 1938. They do not therefore deal with
+countermeasures against illicit German actions but, on the contrary,
+were already issued at a time when warfare in accordance with the London
+Agreement was the only form of submarine warfare taken into
+consideration in Germany.
+
+The instructions further show that all British merchant vessels acted,
+from the first day of the war, according to orders received from the
+British Admiralty. These involved the following points with respect to
+submarine warfare:
+
+(1) Reporting of submarines by radio telegraphy.
+
+(2) The use of naval artillery.
+
+(3) The use of depth charges.
+
+These instructions were supplemented on 1 October 1939, when a call was
+transmitted over the radio to ram all German submarines.
+
+It might seem unnecessary after this survey to make any mention at all
+of the defensive and offensive character of such orders. The orders on
+the use of artillery by merchant vessels, however, do make such
+differentiation; that is, guns are to be used for defense only, as long
+as the enemy on his part adheres to the regulations of international
+law, and for the offensive only when he no longer does. The orders
+covering the practical execution of these directives reveal, however,
+that there is no difference at all between defensive and offensive use.
+Admiral Dönitz explained this in detail when he was heard in Court, and
+I do not want to repeat it. Actually, from the very beginning of the war
+merchant vessels were under orders to fire on every occasion on every
+submarine which came within range of their guns. And that is what the
+captains of British merchant vessels did. The reason for this offensive
+action can certainly not be found in the conduct of German submarines
+during the first weeks of the war, for even the Foreign Office report
+admits that this conduct was correct. On the other hand, British
+propaganda may have had great influence, since in connection with the
+unintentional sinking of the Athenia on 3 September 1939, it
+disseminated through Reuters on 9 September the assertion that
+unrestricted submarine warfare was in progress and upheld this assertion
+notwithstanding the fact that the conduct of German submarines during
+the first weeks of the war refuted this accusation. Together with the
+announcement of the British Admiralty’s ramming orders of 1 October
+1939, the merchant navy was again officially informed that the German
+U-boats had ceased to respect the rules of naval warfare and that
+merchant vessels were to adjust their conduct accordingly. It seems to
+me of no importance that a corresponding written supplement to Admiralty
+orders was not issued until the spring of 1940, because nowadays a naval
+war is not directed by letters but by wireless. But according to the
+latter, the British captains, as from 9 September or 1 October 1939 at
+the latest, were directed to use their guns offensively against the
+German U-boats in accordance with the Admiralty’s instructions as
+contained in its handbook. The German order to attack armed enemy
+merchant vessels without warning was issued only on 4 October. Thus it
+was justified in any case, even if one did acknowledge a difference in
+treatment for vessels with defensive and offensive armament.
+
+The guns on the merchant vessels and the orders concerning their use
+were, however, only a part of a comprehensive system of the use of
+merchant vessels for military purposes. Since the end of September 1939
+the fastest vessels, that is, those ships that were the least endangered
+by submarines but, on the other hand, were especially suited for chasing
+U-boats, received depth charge chutes, that is, armaments which call for
+location of a submerged submarine and thus may be judged as typical
+weapons for the offensive.
+
+However, another factor of greater general importance, and also of
+greater danger to the submarines, was the order to report every enemy
+ship on sight, giving its type and location. This report was destined,
+so said the order, to facilitate taking advantage of an opportunity,
+which might never recur, to destroy the enemy by naval or air forces.
+This is an unequivocal utilization of all merchant vessels for military
+intelligence service with intent directly to injure the enemy. If one
+considers the fact that according to the hospital ship agreement even
+the immunity of hospital ships ceases, if they relay military
+information of this type, then one need have no doubts about the
+consequences of such behavior on the part of a commercial vessel. Any
+craft putting out to sea with the order and intention of using every
+opportunity that occurs to send military reports about the enemy to its
+own naval and air forces is taking part in hostilities during the entire
+course of its voyage and, according to the afore-mentioned report of
+1930 of the committee of jurists, has no right to be considered a
+merchant vessel. Any different conception would not do justice to the
+immediate danger which a wireless report involves for the vessel
+reported and which subjects it, often within a few minutes, to attack by
+enemy aircraft.
+
+All of the Admiralty’s directives, taken together, show that British
+merchant vessels, from the very first day of the war, closely
+co-operated with the British Navy in combating the enemy’s naval forces.
+They were part of the military communications network of the British
+naval and air forces and their armament of guns and depth charges, the
+practical training in manipulation of the weapons, and the orders
+relative to their use, were actions taken by the British Navy.
+
+We consider it out of the question that a merchant fleet in this manner
+destined and utilized for combat should count among the vessels entitled
+to the protection of the London Protocol against sinking without
+warning. On the basis of this conception and in connection with the
+arming of all enemy merchant vessels, which was rapidly being completed,
+an order was issued on 17 October 1939 to attack all enemy merchant
+ships without warning.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kranzbühler, we may as well break off now.
+
+SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I am sorry to detain the Tribunal, but
+I promised to tell the Tribunal about the two affidavits put forward for
+the Defendant Seyss-Inquart. We have no objection to them. I promised to
+tell Your Lordship today. I am sorry to have to detain you.
+
+ [_The Tribunal adjourned until 16 July 1946 at 1000 hours._]
+
+ NOTES
+
+-----
+
+[2] _De jure pacis ac belli_, Book II, Chapter XXIV, Paragraph 10.
+
+[3] Lord Edward Grey: “Twenty-five Years of Politics 1892-1916.”
+(Retranslated into English from the German edition published by
+Bruckmann, Munich 1926). “International Law has always been very
+flexible.... A belligerent possessing an over-powerful navy has at all
+times been in search of an interpretation of International Law which
+would justify a maximum of intervention in respect of merchandise liable
+to reach the enemy. This attitude was naturally adopted by Great Britain
+and the Allies owing to their supremacy at sea. The British position on
+this subject had not always been the same. When we figured among the
+neutrals, we naturally contested the right to maximum intervention
+claimed by the belligerents.”
+
+[4] Yamato Ichihalie, _The Washington Conference and After_, Stanford
+University Press, Cal., 1928, Page 80, “The chief reason for the British
+plea was the apprehension of the craft in the hands of the French navy.”
+
+[5] _Conference on the Limitation of Armaments_, Washington, November
+12, 1921-February 6, 1922, Washington, Government Printing Office, 1922,
+Pages 606, 688, 692.
+
+[6] _French Yellow Book_, La Conférence de Washington, Page 93.
+
+[7] Protocol Pages 693, 702.
+
+[8] Protocol Page 704.
+
+[9] _American Journal of International Law_, 1931, Page 307.
+
+[10] Hyde, _International Law_, 1922, Vol. II, Page 469.
+
+[11] _U.S. Foreign Relations_, 1916, Supplement Page 147.
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED
+ AND SEVENTY-NINTH DAY
+ Tuesday, 16 July 1946
+
+
+ _Morning Session_
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Mr. President, Gentlemen of the Tribunal: I
+would like to sum up my statements of yesterday and make the following
+remarks regarding the conduct of German U-boats against enemy merchant
+vessels.
+
+I believe that the German construction of the London Agreement of 1936,
+in the light of the position taken by some of the powers involved, as
+generally known to all experts, as well as according to the opinion of
+numerous and competent jurists of all countries, was in no way
+fraudulent. If I were to express myself with all caution, I would say
+that it is, legally, at least, perfectly tenable, and thus not the
+slightest charge can be raised against the German Naval Command for
+issuing its orders on a sensible and perfectly fair basis. We have shown
+that these orders were given only in consequence of the conditions
+created by publication of the British measures, which, according to the
+German concept of law, justified the orders issued.
+
+Before I leave this subject I should like to recall to the mind of the
+Tribunal the special protection which the German orders provided for
+passenger vessels. These passenger vessels were excluded for a long time
+from all measures involving sinking of ships, even when they sailed in
+an enemy convoy and therefore could have been sunk immediately,
+according to the British conception. These measures indicate very
+clearly that the accusation of disregard and brutality is unjustified.
+The passenger vessels were only included in the orders concerning other
+vessels when in the spring of 1940 there was no longer any harmless
+passenger traffic at all, and when these ships, because of their great
+speed and heavy armament, proved to be particularly dangerous enemies of
+the submarines. If therefore Mr. Roger Allen’s report cites as an
+especially striking example of German submarine cruelty the sinking of
+the _City of Benares_ in the autumn of 1940, then this example is not
+very well chosen because the _City of Benares_ was armed and went under
+convoy.
+
+I shall turn now to the treatment of neutrals in the conduct of German
+submarine warfare, and I can at once point again in this connection to
+the example which Mr. Roger Allen cites especially for the sinking of a
+neutral vessel contrary to international law. It concerns the torpedoing
+of the Danish steamer _Vendia_, which occurred at the end of September
+1939. The Tribunal will recall that this ship was stopped in a regular
+way and was torpedoed and sunk only when it prepared to ram the German
+submarine. This occurrence led the German Government to protest to the
+Danish Government on account of the hostile conduct shown by a neutral
+boat.
+
+This one example is just to show how different things look if not only
+the result in the form of the sinking of a neutral ship is known, but
+also the causes which led to this result. Until the last day of the war
+the fundamental order to the German submarines was not to attack
+merchantmen recognized as neutral. There were some accurately defined
+exceptions to this order, about which the neutral powers had been
+notified. They affected in the first place ships which conducted
+themselves in a suspicious or hostile manner, and secondly ships in
+announced operational areas.
+
+To the first group belonged, above all, those vessels which sailed
+blacked-out in the war area. On 26 September 1939 the Commander of
+U-boats asked the High Command of the Navy for permission to attack
+without warning vessels proceeding in the Channel without lights. The
+reason was clear. At night the enemy’s troop and matériel shipments were
+taking place, by which the second wave of the British expeditionary army
+was ferried across to France. At that time the order was still in effect
+that French ships were not to be attacked at all. But since French ships
+could not be distinguished from English vessels at night, submarine
+warfare in the Channel would have had to be discontinued completely
+after dark in compliance with this order. The Tribunal heard from a
+witness that in this way a 20,000-ton troop transport passed unmolested
+in front of the torpedo tubes of a German submarine. Such an occurrence
+in war is grotesque and therefore of course the Naval Operations Staff
+approved the request of the Commander of U-boats.
+
+The Prosecution has now made much ado about a note written on this
+occasion by an assistant at the Naval Operations Staff, Kapitänleutnant
+Fresdorf. The Chief of Section, Admiral Wagner, already disapproved of
+the opinions expressed in this note; therefore they did not result in
+corresponding orders. The order to attack blacked-out ships was issued
+by radio without any further addition on the part of the Naval
+Operations Staff and on 4 October it was extended to further regions
+along the British coast, and again without any addition in the sense of
+the above-mentioned note.
+
+Examining the question of blacked-out vessels from the legal standpoint,
+Vanselow, the well-known expert on the law governing naval warfare,
+makes the following remark:[12]
+
+ “In war a blacked-out vessel must in case of doubt be considered
+ as an enemy warship. A neutral as well as an enemy merchant
+ vessel navigating without light voluntarily renounces during the
+ hours of darkness all claim to immunity from attack without
+ being stopped.”
+
+I furthermore refer to Churchill’s declaration, made in the House of
+Commons on 8 May 1940, concerning the action of British submarines in
+the Jutland area. Since the beginning of April they had had orders to
+attack all German vessels without warning during the daytime, and all
+vessels, and thus all neutrals, as well, at night. This amounts to
+recognition of the legal standpoint as presented. It even goes beyond
+the German order, insofar as neutral merchant vessels navigating with
+all lights on were sunk without warning in these waters. In view of the
+clear legal aspect it would hardly have been necessary to give an
+express warning to neutral shipping against suspicious or hostile
+conduct. Nevertheless, the Naval Operations Staff saw to it that this
+was done.
+
+On 28 September 1939 the first German note was sent to the neutral
+governments with the request that they warn their merchant ships against
+any suspicious conduct, such as changes in course and the use of
+wireless upon sighting German naval forces, blacking out, noncompliance
+with the request to stop, _et cetera_. These warnings were subsequently
+repeated several times, and the neutral governments passed them on to
+their captains. All this has been proved by documents which have been
+submitted. If therefore, as a result of suspicious or hostile conduct,
+neutral ships were treated like enemy ships, they have only themselves
+to blame for it. The German submarines were not allowed to attack any
+one who as a neutral maintained a correct attitude during the war, and
+there are hundreds of examples to prove that such attacks never did
+occur.
+
+Now I wish to deal with the second danger which threatened neutral
+shipping: The zones of operations. The actual development, briefly
+summed up, was as follows:
+
+On 24 November 1939 the Reich Government sent a note to all seafaring
+neutrals in which it pointed out the use of enemy merchant ships for
+aggressive purposes, as well as the fact that the Government of the
+United States had barred to its own shipping a carefully defined naval
+zone around the central European coast, the so-called U.S.A. combat
+zone. As the note states, these two facts give the Reich Government
+cause—I quote:
+
+ “... to warn anew and more strongly that in view of the fact
+ that the actions are carried on with all the technical means of
+ modern warfare, and in view of the fact that these actions are
+ increasing in the waters around the British Isles and near the
+ French coast, these waters can no longer be considered safe for
+ neutral shipping.”
+
+The note then recommends as shipping lanes between neutral powers
+certain sea routes which are not endangered by German naval warfare and,
+furthermore, recommends legislative measures according to the example
+set by the United States. In concluding, the Reich Government rejects
+responsibility for any consequences which might follow if warning and
+recommendation should not be complied with. This note constituted the
+announcement of an operational area equivalent in size to the U.S.A.
+combat zone, with the specified limitation that only in those sea zones
+which were actually endangered by actions against the enemy
+consideration could no longer be given to neutral shipping.
+
+The Naval Operations Staff did indeed observe this limitation. The
+neutral powers had more than 6 weeks in which to take the measures
+recommended by the German Government for the safety of their own
+shipping and to direct their shipping along the routes announced.
+Starting in January the German command then opened up to the German
+naval forces, within the operational area announced, certain accurately
+defined zones around the British coast, in which an attack without
+warning against all ships sailing there was admissible. The naval chart
+on which these zones had been marked was submitted to the Tribunal. The
+chart shows that these zones, and only these, were gradually set up
+where, as a result of mutually increasing attacks and defensive actions
+at sea and in the air, engagements continually occurred, so that any
+ship entering this area was operating in the direct presence of the
+naval forces of both powers. The last of these zones was designated in
+May 1940. These zones were not, and need not have been, announced
+because they were all within the area of operations as proclaimed on 24
+November 1939. The distance of these zones from the enemy coast was on
+the average 60 sea miles. Outside their boundaries the declaration
+concerning the area of operations of 24 November was not observed, that
+is to say, neutral ships could be stopped and sunk only in accordance
+with the Prize Ordinance.
+
+This situation changed when, after the collapse of France in the summer
+of 1940, the British Isles became the center of war operations. On 17
+August 1940 the Reich Government sent to the neutral governments a
+declaration in which the entire area of the U.S.A. combat zone around
+England without any limitation was designated as an operational area.
+
+ “Every ship”—so the note reads—“which sails in this area
+ exposes itself to destruction not only by mines but also by
+ other combat means. Therefore the German Government once more
+ urgently warns against entering this endangered area.”
+
+From this time on the area was fully utilized and the immediate use of
+arms against craft encountered in it was permitted to all naval and air
+forces, except where special exceptions had been ordered. The entire
+development described was openly dealt with in the German press, and
+Grossadmiral Raeder granted interviews to the foreign press on this
+subject, which clearly showed the German viewpoint. If therefore in the
+sea zones mentioned neutral ships and crews sustained losses, at least
+they cannot complain about not having been warned explicitly and
+urgently beforehand.
+
+This statement in itself has not much meaning in the question of whether
+areas of operation as such constitute an admissible measure. Here, too,
+the Prosecution will take the position that in the London Agreement of
+1936 no exceptions of any kind were made for areas of operation and that
+therefore such exceptions do not exist.
+
+It is a well-known fact that operational areas were originally
+proclaimed in the first World War. The first declaration of this kind
+came from the British Government on 2 November 1914, and designated the
+entire area of the North Sea as a military area. This declaration was
+intended as a reprisal against alleged German violations of
+international law. Since this justification naturally was not
+recognized, the Imperial Government replied on 4 February 1915 by
+designating the waters around England as a military area. On both sides
+certain extensions were made subsequently. I do not wish to go into the
+individual formulations of these declarations and into the judicial
+legal deductions which were made from their wording for or against the
+admissibility of these declarations. Whether these areas are designated
+as military area, barred zone, operational area, or danger zone, the
+point always remained that the naval forces in the area determined had
+permission to destroy any ship encountered there. After the World War
+the general conviction of naval officers and experts on international
+law alike was that the operational area would be maintained as a means
+of naval warfare. A development, typical for the rules of naval warfare,
+was confirmed here, namely, that the modern technique of war forcibly
+leads to the use of war methods which at first are introduced in the
+guise of reprisals, but which gradually come to be employed without such
+a justification and recognized as legitimate.
+
+The technical reasons for such a development are obvious: The
+improvement of mines made it possible to render large sea areas
+dangerous. But if it was admissible to destroy by mines every ship
+sailing, despite warning, in a designated sea area, one could see no
+reason why other means of naval warfare should not be used in this area
+in the same way. Besides, the traditional institution of the blockade
+directly off enemy ports and coasts by mines, submarines, and aircraft
+was made practically impossible, so that the sea powers had to look for
+new ways to bar the approach to enemy coasts. Consequently it was these
+necessities which were the compelling factors in bringing about the
+recognition of the operational area.
+
+It is true that there was by no means a uniform interpretation
+concerning the particular prerequisites under which the declaration of
+such areas would be considered admissible, just as there was none with
+regard to the designation which the belligerent power must choose. The
+conferences of 1922 and 1930 did not change anything either in that
+respect, as can be seen, for instance, from the efforts made after 1930,
+especially by American politicians and experts in international law, for
+a solution of this question.[13]
+
+Unfortunately, there is no time at my disposal to discuss these
+questions in detail and therefore it must suffice for the purposes of
+the defense to state that during the conferences in Washington in 1922
+and in London in 1930 the operational area was an arrangement or system
+known to all powers concerned, which operated in a way determined by
+both sides in the first World War; that is, that all ships encountered
+in it would be subject to immediate destruction. If the operational area
+were to have been abolished in the afore-mentioned conferences,
+especially in the treaty of 1930, an accord should have been reached on
+this question, if not in the text of the agreement then at least in the
+negotiations. The minutes show nothing of the kind. The relationship
+between operational area and the London Agreement remained unsettled.
+
+The French Admiral Castex[14] has the same viewpoint; Admiral Bauer,
+Commander of Submarines in the first World War, voiced his disapproval
+in 1931 of the application of the London rules in the operational area,
+and this opinion was not unknown to the British Navy.[15] In a thorough
+study published by Professor Ernst Schmitz[16] in 1938 a merchant vessel
+which enters an operational area despite general prohibition is deemed
+to be guilty of “persistent refusal to stop.” The powers participating
+in the conferences in Washington and London carefully refrained, as also
+in other cases, from tackling controversial questions on which no accord
+could be reached. Therefore every power remained at liberty to champion
+in practice such an opinion as corresponded with its own interests.
+There was no doubt left in the minds of the participants as to this
+fact, and I have as a witness for this no less a person than the French
+Minister for Foreign Affairs at that time, M. Briand. In his instruction
+of 30 December 1921 to Sarraut, the French chief delegate in Washington,
+he announces his basic readiness to conclude an agreement on submarine
+warfare. However, he then points out a series of questions described as
+essential parts of such an agreement, among them the arming of merchant
+ships and the definition of combat zones. The instruction goes on:
+
+ “It is indispensable to examine these questions and to solve
+ them by a joint agreement, for surface vessels as well as for
+ submarines and aircraft, in order not to establish ineffective
+ and deceptive stipulations.”[17]
+
+Particularly with respect to the question concerning the area of
+operations, Briand characterizes the submarine rules as being
+“ineffective and deceptive.”
+
+After this testimony nobody would designate the German conception as
+fraudulent, according to which ships in declared areas of operation
+forfeit the protection under the London Agreement. Even Mr. Roger
+Allen’s report concedes this.[18] Therefore the attacks of the
+Prosecution seem to be directed, as I understand from the
+cross-examination, not so much against the existence of such zones as
+against their extent, and we have repeatedly heard the figure of 750,000
+square sea miles. Incidentally, it must be noted that this figure
+includes the territorial area of Great Britain, Ireland, and western
+France; the maritime area only amounts to 600,000 square miles. I quite
+agree, however, that through operational areas of such a size the
+interests of the neutrals were badly prejudiced.
+
+It is all the more remarkable that the afore-mentioned American draft of
+the convention of 1939, which concerns the rights and duties of
+neutrals, provides for a considerable expansion of the operational area.
+Such an area, which is termed “blockade zone” in the draft, was to
+include the waters up to a distance of 50 sea miles from the blockaded
+coast.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kranzbühler, the Tribunal would like to know what
+that American draft of 1939 is, to which you refer.
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: It is the draft set up by the American
+Professors Jessup Borchard and Charles Warren, dealing with the rights
+and duties of neutrals in sea warfare. It was published in the _American
+Journal of International Law_ of July 1939.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Jessup and Warren, you say?
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Jessup Borchard and Charles Warren.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: This would correspond roughly to the area of
+waters in which attacks without warning were authorized until 17 August
+1940; it covers approximately 200,000 square sea miles.
+
+However, it seems to me almost impossible to approach from a juridical
+angle such an eminently practical question as that of the extent of an
+operational area. As long as this question is not settled by an
+agreement the actual determination will always be a compromise between
+what is desirable from a military point of view and what is politically
+possible. It seems to me that the law is only violated when a
+belligerent misuses his power against neutrals. The question as to
+whether such misuse takes place should be made dependent both upon the
+attitude of the enemy toward the neutrals and upon the measures taken by
+the neutrals themselves.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: One minute. Dr. Kranzbühler, does not the right to
+declare a certain zone as an operational zone depend upon the power to
+enforce it?
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I do not quite follow the point of your
+question.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Well, your contention is, apparently, that any state at
+war has a right to declare such an operational zone as it thinks right
+and in accordance with its interests, and what I was asking you was
+whether the right to declare an operational zone, if there is such a
+right, does not depend upon the ability or power of the state declaring
+the zone to enforce that zone, to prevent any ships coming into it
+without being either captured or shot.
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I do not believe, Mr. President, that there
+exists agreement of expert opinion regarding that question. In contrast
+to the blockade zone in a classical sense where full effect is
+necessary, the operational zone only provides for practical endangering
+through continuous combat actions. This practical threat was present in
+the German operational zone in my opinion, and I refer in that
+connection to the proclamation of President Roosevelt regarding the
+U.S.A. combat zone, where the entering of that zone was prohibited,
+because as a result of combat actions shipping must of necessity be
+continuously endangered.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The proclamation of the President of the United States
+was directed, was it not, solely to United States vessels?
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I am referring to it only to establish proof
+of the German interpretation that this area was endangered, and
+practical danger seems to be the only legal and necessary prerequisite
+for declaring an operational zone.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Would you say that it was a valid proclamation if Germany
+had declared the whole of the Atlantic to be an operational zone?
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Mr. President, I would say that at the
+beginning of the war that would not have been possible, for the German
+forces at that time, without doubt, did not constitute an effective
+danger to the entire Atlantic sea traffic. I am of the opinion, however,
+that with the increase in the number of U-boats on the one hand, and
+with the increase of defense by hostile aircraft on the other, the
+danger zone of course expanded, and therefore the development of this
+war quite logically led to the point where operational zones were
+gradually extended and enlarged.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Do you mean, then, that you are basing the power of the
+state to declare a certain zone as an operational zone not upon the
+power of the state to enforce its orders in that zone, but upon the
+possibility of danger in that zone?
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Yes.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: You say it depends upon the possibility of danger in the
+zone?
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I would not say the possibility of danger,
+Mr. President, but the probability of danger, and the impossibility for
+the belligerent to protect neutral shipping against this danger.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: May I ask you what other legal basis there is for the
+theory you are putting forward, other than the adoption of the blockade?
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I am referring as a legal basis especially
+to the practice of the first World War, and the statements made by
+experts after the first World War, and also to the generally recognized
+rules about mined areas. The mined areas actually in this war proved to
+be operational zones where every means of sea warfare was used to sink
+without warning. I shall later refer to this topic once more.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: During the presentation of documents, the
+Tribunal has eliminated all those which I intended to utilize in order
+to prove that British naval warfare also paid no attention to the
+interests of neutrals when they were in contradiction with their own
+interests. If it is the Tribunal’s wish, I will not go into the details
+of the British measures, and in summing up I will mention them only
+insofar as they are indispensable for the legal argumentation. The
+following points are essential:
+
+(1) The British regulations of 3 September 1939 concerning contraband
+goods, which practically precluded neutral mercantile traffic with
+Germany through the introduction of the so-called “hunger blockade.”
+
+(2) The decree concerning control ports for contraband goods, which
+compelled neutral ships to make great detours right through the war
+zone, and to which must be imputed without doubt a series of losses of
+neutral ships and crews.
+
+(3) The introduction of an export blockade against Germany on 27
+November 1939, by means of which the importation of German goods was cut
+off for neutrals.
+
+(4) The introduction of the navicert system and the black lists, which
+put the whole of neutral trade under British control and which made
+ships refusing to accept this system liable to be seized and
+confiscated.
+
+I do not have to examine the question here whether these British
+measures toward neutrals were admissible or not from the point of view
+of international law. In any case the neutrals themselves considered
+many of them inadmissible, and there was hardly a single one which did
+not bring forth more or less vehement protests, for instance from Spain,
+the Netherlands, Soviet Russia, and the United States. From the
+beginning, the British Government for its part had forestalled any legal
+examination of the measures by renouncing the optional clause of the
+Permanent International Tribunal in The Hague, through a note of 7
+September 1939. This step was expressly vindicated by the necessity for
+providing the British Navy with full freedom of action.
+
+On the British side the fact was emphasized in the first World War and
+ever since that although British measures did prejudice the interests
+and possibly also the rights of the neutrals, they did not imperil
+either the ships or the crews and were therefore to be considered
+morally superior to the inhuman German measures. Actually, as mentioned
+before, the obligation to enter control ports was dangerous for neutral
+ships and crews and for this very reason the neutral countries protested
+against it. But apart from this, it seems to me that the actual
+divergence between the British and German measures for blockading the
+adversary is not founded upon moral differences, but rather upon
+difference in sea power. In the waters where the British Navy did not
+exercise naval supremacy, namely, off the coasts we occupied, and in the
+Baltic Sea, it used the same methods of naval warfare as we did.
+
+In any case the official German opinion was that the afore-mentioned
+British control measures against neutrals were inadmissible, and the
+Reich Government reproached the neutral powers with the fact that,
+although protesting, they in point of fact submitted to the British
+measures. This is clearly stated in the proclamation issued on the
+occasion of the declaration of the blockade on 17 August 1940.
+Consequently, the following facts confronted, the German Naval Command:
+
+(1) A legal trade between the neutrals and the British Isles no longer
+existed. On the grounds of the German answers to the British
+stipulations concerning contraband goods and the British export
+blockade, any trade to and from England was contraband trade and
+therefore illegal from the point of view of international law.
+
+(2) The neutrals in practice submitted to all British measures, even
+when these measures were contrary to their own interests and their own
+conception of legality.
+
+(3) Thus, the neutrals directly supported British warfare, for by
+submitting to the British control system in their own country they
+permitted the British Navy to economize considerably on fighting forces
+which, according to the hitherto existing international law, should have
+exercised trade control at sea and which were now available for other
+war tasks.
+
+Therefore the German Government, in determining its operational area
+with a view to preventing illegal traffic from reaching England, saw no
+reason for giving preference to the neutrals over its own military
+requirements, all the less so since neutral shipping, which despite all
+warnings continued to head for England, demanded a great deal of money
+for this increased risk and therefore despite all risks still considered
+trade with England a profitable business.[19]
+
+In addition to that, the most important neutrals themselves took
+measures which can be regarded as a completely novel interpretation of
+the existing laws of naval warfare. All the American countries jointly
+proclaimed the Pan-American safety zone, an area along the American
+coast within a distance of approximately 300 sea miles. In these waters,
+comprising altogether several million square miles, they required
+belligerents to forego the exercise of these rights which, according to
+hitherto existing international law, the naval forces of the
+belligerents were entitled to apply to neutrals. On the other hand, as I
+have already mentioned, the President of the United States prohibited,
+on 4 November 1939, U.S. citizens and ships from entering the waters
+extending over approximately one million square miles along the European
+coast. Thus the development of the laws of naval warfare, under the
+influence of the neutrals, necessarily led to the recognition of large
+areas reserved either for the purpose of safety or for that of combat.
+In this connection the American President explicitly stated in his
+proclamation that the maritime zone he had closed was “endangered by
+combat action” as a result of technical developments. The proclamation
+thus only took into account the development of modern weapons; the
+long-range coastal artillery which, for example, could easily fire
+across the English Channel; the invention of locating devices which
+permitted coastal supervision of maritime traffic over large areas; and
+particularly the increased speed and range of aircraft.
+
+From this development the German Naval Command drew the same conclusion
+as the above-mentioned neutrals, namely, that defensive and offensive
+action would necessarily have to cover large maritime areas in this war.
+It was therefore not through arbitrary action that the German
+operational area, which the Prosecution objects to, grew to such a size;
+it was only because the German Naval Command was adapting itself to a
+system which was recognized by the other powers also as justified.
+
+In order to examine the legality of the German measures on the basis of
+enemy methods, may I ask the Tribunal to recall the naval chart on which
+the British zones of warning and danger are marked. These zones cover
+about 120,000 square sea miles. Even if these dimensions are smaller
+than those of the German operational area, it seems to me that the
+difference between 100,000 and 600,000 square miles is not so much a
+question of legal judgment as one of coastal length and of strategic
+position on the sea. This observation is confirmed by the American
+practice against Japan, as described by Admiral Nimitz. He says:
+
+ “In the interest of the conduct of operations against Japan the
+ area of the Pacific Ocean is declared a zone of operations.”
+
+This zone of operations covers more than 30 million square miles. All
+ships therein, with the exception of U.S. and Allied, and hospital
+ships, were sunk without warning. The order was issued on the first day
+of the war, on 7 December 1941, when the Chief of the Admiralty ordered
+unrestricted submarine warfare against Japan.
+
+It is not for me to examine whether this order, issued on the first day
+of the war, is to be looked upon and justified as a measure of reprisal.
+For me the important thing is to show what actual practice looked like,
+and that is unequivocal.
+
+The Prosecution finds particularly blameworthy the orders to carry out
+attacks without warning in the operational areas, if possible without
+being noticed, so that mine hits could be claimed. Orders to this effect
+existed for the period between January and August 1940, that is to say,
+during the period when submarines were not permitted to act without
+warning throughout the operational area of 24 November 1939, but only in
+the specially defined areas off the British coast. In this camouflage
+the Prosecution sees proof of a bad conscience amounting to the
+recognition of wrongdoing. The real reasons for the measures ordered
+were both military and political. For the admirals concerned the
+military reasons, of course, took first place, and these alone were
+known to the Commander of U-boats. The enemy was to be left in
+uncertainty as to what weapons of naval warfare had caused his losses,
+and his defense was to be led astray in this manner. It is obvious that
+such misleading of the enemy is fully justified in time of war. The
+measures had the desired military success, and in numerous cases the
+British Navy employed flotillas of mine sweepers on the spot where a
+ship had been torpedoed, and conversely started a submarine chase where
+a loss had occurred through mine hits.
+
+For the Supreme Command, however, it was not the military but the
+political reasons that were the determining factor. These invisible
+attacks were meant to provide an opportunity of denying to the neutrals
+that the sinkings were due to submarines, and of tracing, them back to
+mines. This actually did happen in some cases. Does that mean that the
+German Government itself considered the use of submarine action without
+warning within the area of operations to be illegal? I do not think so.
+
+In view of the repeated accusations which the Prosecution have construed
+here and elsewhere from the camouflaging of measures and the denial of
+facts, I feel obliged to make a few remarks on the point as to whether
+there is any obligation at all in international politics to tell the
+truth. However things may be in peacetime, in times of war at any rate
+one cannot recognize any obligation to tell the truth in a question
+which may be of advantage to the enemy. I need only point to Hugo
+Grotius who says: “It is permissible to conceal the truth wisely.
+Dissimulation is absolutely necessary and unavoidable.”[20]
+
+What would it have meant for the military situation if U-boat sinkings
+such as in the instances dealt with here had not been denied but
+admitted instead? First of all, since that would have come to the
+knowledge of the enemy too, we should have lost the military advantage
+which lay in misleading his defense. Furthermore—and this is no less
+important—we might quite possibly have furnished our enemy with allies
+who would have helped him at least with propaganda, if not with their
+weapons. In view of the fact that some of the neutrals concerned were so
+dependent on England, they probably would not have recognized the German
+viewpoint as to the legitimacy of the operational areas, especially
+since this viewpoint was contrary to their own interests. It would have
+led to political tensions, and possibly to armed conflicts. Our enemies
+would have derived the only immediate advantage from it. From the
+standpoint of the law this endeavor to camouflage the use of submarines
+with regard to the neutrals does not seem objectionable to me.
+
+But if the Prosecution uses this with the intention of moral defamation,
+it is applying standards which heretofore have never been applied to the
+conduct of a war and to the politics of any other country in the world.
+It was precisely in naval warfare that the same methods of camouflage
+were employed by the other side, too. The operational areas which Great
+Britain declared off the European coasts from Norway to Biscay were,
+with the exception of the Biscay area, declared mine danger zones. But
+we know from Churchill’s statement of May 1940, as well as from
+testimonies of witnesses, that in these areas there were unlimited
+attacks with submarines, speedboats and, above all, with airplanes.
+Consequently very often neither the German command nor the neutral
+country which had been attacked knew whether a loss sustained in such an
+area really should be traced back to a mine or to another weapon of
+naval warfare. To conclude that the camouflaging of a measure
+constitutes its illegality thus seems to me entirely without basis.
+
+Within the German operational zone all ships were on principle attacked
+without warning. However, orders had been given to make exceptions in
+the case of certain neutrals, such as, in the beginning, Japan, the
+Soviet Union, Spain, and Italy. In this measure the Prosecution saw the
+endeavor of the Naval Operations Staff to terrorize the smaller neutral
+countries whereas it dared not pick a quarrel with the big ones. The
+real reason for this differentiating treatment is given in Document
+UK-65 in the notation on the report which the Commander-in-Chief of the
+Navy made to the Führer on 16 October 1939.
+
+According to this the neutral governments mentioned are requested to
+declare that they will not carry contraband; otherwise they would be
+treated just like any other neutral country. The reason for the
+different treatment was merely that certain countries were willing and
+able to forbid their vessels from carrying contraband to England,
+whereas others could not or would not do so because of their political
+attitude or their economic dependence on England. Therefore it is not a
+question of terrorizing the smaller neutrals and sparing the bigger
+ones, but of preventing traffic in contraband and sparing legal
+commercial trade. Since no general legal maxim exists which compels the
+belligerent power to treat all neutral powers alike, no objection can be
+raised on the basis of international law. It would indeed be strange if
+here in the name of humanity the demand were made that German submarines
+should have sunk even those ships which they did not want to sink at
+all.
+
+The Tribunal saw from the standing war orders submitted that during the
+further course of the war even the small powers, which were the only
+neutral ones left, could by virtue of shipping agreements cross the
+operational area along certain routes without being molested by German
+submarines. In this way for instance Sweden and Switzerland as well as
+Turkey could carry on their maritime trade during the entire war.
+
+Outside the operational area announced the German submarines were never
+permitted to attack neutral ships. In this respect the Naval Command
+refrained from waging any submarine warfare against neutral merchant
+shipping, since enemy air surveillance made stopping and searching too
+dangerous for German submarines. Against the disadvantage of submarine
+warfare within the operational area, the neutrals had, outside the area,
+the advantage of remaining completely unmolested, even if they were
+shipping contraband goods, which fact in itself made them liable to be
+sunk after being stopped. Thus a neutral vessel outside the operational
+area was only in danger if it behaved in a suspicious or hostile way or
+if it was not clearly marked as neutral. The German Naval Operations
+Staff again and again called the attention of the neutral powers to this
+necessity.
+
+In this connection I must mention the order of 18 July 1941, according
+to which United States vessels within the operational area were placed
+on an equal basis with all other neutrals, that is to say, could be
+attacked without warning. The Prosecution have seen in this special
+proof that the submarine warfare against neutrals was waged in a
+“cynical and opportunist” way. If this is meant to convey that it was
+influenced also by political considerations, then I am ready to admit
+it. But I do not consider this a reproach; since war itself is a
+political instrument, it is in keeping with its essence if individual
+parts of it are placed under the leadership of politics. In particular,
+no reproach should be seen in the orders of the German Command as
+regards the utilization of submarines against the United States, because
+they precisely furnish proof of the efforts to avoid any conflict with
+the United States.
+
+As the Tribunal knows from documents and the testimonies of witnesses,
+the ships of the United States during the first years of the war were
+exempt from all measures of naval warfare, and this applied even when
+contrary to the original American legislation they sailed into the
+U.S.A. combat zone and thus into the German operational area in order to
+carry war matériel to England.
+
+This policy was not changed until, in addition to the many unneutral
+acts of the past, the active employment of the American Navy had been
+ordered for the protection of British supply lines.
+
+Everybody is familiar with the statements of President Roosevelt, which
+he made at that time, about the “bridge of boats over the Atlantic” and
+the support which should be given to England “by every means short of
+war.” It may be considered a matter of doubt whether the “realistic
+attitude”[21] which the U.S. naval and air forces were ordered to take
+at that time did not already constitute an illegal war, as has been
+claimed just now on the part of the Americans.[22]
+
+At least the United States had abandoned her neutrality and claimed the
+status of a “nonbelligerent,” which also presented a new aspect of
+international law in this war. If in this connection one wishes to raise
+the charge of cynicism, it should hardly be directed against the orders
+which were issued as a justified reaction to the American attitude.
+
+I have endeavored to present to the Tribunal a survey of the essential
+orders issued, and to say a few things with respect to their legality.
+No doubt there were instances of attacks on ships which according to the
+orders mentioned should not have been attacked. There are just a few
+such cases, and some of them have been brought up at this Trial. The
+best known concerns the sinking of the British passenger vessel
+_Athenia_ on 3 September 1939 by _U-30_ under the command of
+Kapitänleutnant Lemp. The sinking of this ship was due to the fact that
+the commander mistook it for an armed merchant cruiser.
+
+If the Tribunal should still hesitate to believe the concurring
+statements of all the witnesses heard here on this critical instance,
+which was used especially for propaganda purposes, these doubts ought to
+be removed by the behavior of the same commander in the days and weeks
+following the sinking. Kapitänleutnant Lemp, as the log of _U-30_ at
+that time shows, adhered strictly to the Prize Ordinance, and from this
+log I was able to submit several examples of the fair and gentlemanly
+conduct of German commanders even when by such conduct they greatly
+endangered their submarines.
+
+Only on the return of _U-30_ from the operations at the end of September
+1939 were the Commander of U-boats and the Commander-in-Chief of the
+Navy fully informed of the whole affair of the sinking of the _Athenia_.
+Upon his return the commander immediately reported to the Commander of
+U-boats the mistake which he himself meanwhile recognized as such, and
+was sent to Berlin to report in person.
+
+Dr. Siemers will deal with the political aspect of this matter. I only
+mention the military occurrences. Admiral Dönitz received the following
+communication from the Naval Operations Staff:
+
+(1) The affair was further to be dealt with politically in Berlin.
+
+(2) Court-martial proceedings were not necessary since the commander
+acted in good faith.
+
+(3) The entire matter was to be kept in strict secrecy.
+
+On the grounds of this order the Commander of U-boats gave orders that
+the report on the sinking of the _Athenia_ be deleted from the log of
+_U-30_ and that the log be complemented in such a manner as to make the
+absence of the entry inconspicuous. As the Tribunal has seen, this order
+was not adequately carried out, obviously for the reason that the
+officer in charge had no experience whatever in such dealings.
+
+The Prosecution pointed to this changing of the War Diary as a
+particularly criminal act of falsification. This, it seems to me, is
+based on a misunderstanding of the facts. The War Diary is nothing but a
+military report by the commander to his superiors. What occurrences
+should or should not be included in reports of this kind is not decided
+by any legal or moral principle, but is solely a matter of military
+regulations. The War Diary was meant to be secret; however, it was—like
+many secret matters—accessible to a very large group of people. This is
+already apparent from the fact that it had been circulated in eight
+copies, of which some were intended not only for higher staffs but for
+schools and for training flotillas as well. Therefore, whenever an
+occurrence was to be restricted to a small group of individuals, it was
+not to be reported in the War Diary. Since the sequence of the War Diary
+continued, the missing period had to be filled in with another,
+necessarily incorrect, entry. I can see nothing immoral in such a
+measure, much less anything illegal. As long as there is secrecy in time
+of war—and that is the case in all countries—it means that not all
+facts can be told to everybody, and therefore one sometimes may have to
+make incorrect statements. A certain moral offense could perhaps be seen
+in such action in the case of the _Athenia_ if thereby a falsification
+for all times had been intended. This, however, was by no means the
+case. The commander’s report with regard to the sinking of the _Athenia_
+was of course submitted in the original form to the immediate superiors,
+the Commander of U-boats and the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, and
+kept in both their offices. I should like further to say briefly that a
+general order not to enter certain happenings into the War Diary has
+never existed.
+
+The _Athenia_ case brings another fact to light and that is the manner
+in which the compliance of U-boat commanders with any orders issued was
+enforced. In spite of the justified conception of the Naval Operations
+Staff that the commander acted in good faith, he was put under arrest by
+Admiral Dönitz because by exercising greater caution he perhaps might
+have recognized that this was not an auxiliary cruiser. Punishment was
+meted out in other cases, too, where orders had been mistakenly
+violated.
+
+The Tribunal is familiar with the wireless communications of September
+1942, by which, on occasion of the sinking of the _Monte Corbea_, the
+commander had been informed that upon his return he would have to face
+court-martial proceedings for violation of orders regarding conduct
+toward neutrals. All commanders received notice of this measure.
+
+The Tribunal will please consider what such strict warnings mean to a
+commander at sea. If the directives of the American manual for
+courts-martial were to be considered as a basis, then court-martial
+proceedings against officers should only be initiated in cases where
+dismissal from the service seems warranted.[23] That should never be the
+case when the violation of an order is an accidental one. For a
+commanding officer who is supposed with his soldiers to wage war and
+gain successes, it is extremely hard and, in fact, under certain
+circumstances actually a mistake to have one of his commanders on his
+return from a successful operation tried before a court-martial because
+of a single slip which occurred in that action.
+
+Every military command acts in accordance with these principles. In this
+connection I will refer to the unreserved recognition which the
+commander of the British destroyer _Cossack_ received for setting free
+the prisoners of the _Altmark_ in spite of the incidents which occurred
+during this action, which were probably regretted by the British too.
+
+I had to go into those matters in order to meet the accusation that all
+sinkings carried out against orders were afterward sanctioned by the
+High Command in that no drastic steps were taken against the commanders.
+Especially in the field of submarine warfare compliance with orders
+issued was insured by the continuous personal contact of the commanders
+with their commanding officer. Upon conclusion of every enemy operation
+an oral report had to be made, and all measures taken were subjected to
+sharp criticism, while instructions were given at the same time for
+future behavior.
+
+The German submarines undertook many thousands of combat operations
+during this war. In the course of these, orders issued were violated
+only in very rare instances. If one considers how difficult it is for a
+submarine to establish its exact position and the boundaries of an
+operational area, and to distinguish an armed from an unarmed ship, a
+passenger ship from a troop transport, or a neutral from an enemy ship,
+the low number of sinkings considered unjustified by the Germans, too,
+must be taken as proof of an especially effective and conscientious
+leadership.
+
+After this discussion of the factual development of German submarine
+warfare, I still have to deal with the accusations built up by the
+Prosecution from certain preparatory deliberations on the subject of the
+organization of submarine warfare.
+
+Simultaneously with the combat instructions of 3 September 1939, whereby
+German submarines were ordered to adhere in their operations strictly to
+the Prize Ordinance, an order was prepared in the Naval Operations Staff
+decreeing action without warning in case the enemy merchantmen were
+armed. In addition to this, during the first days of the war there was
+an exchange of correspondence with the Foreign Office on the subject of
+declaring prohibited zones.
+
+The Prosecution looks upon these two documents as proof of the intention
+to conduct a war contrary to international law from the very start. I,
+on the other hand, regard these same documents as proof of the fact that
+the Naval Operations Staff was fully unprepared for a war with England,
+and that it was only when the British had already declared war that they
+began to set about thinking in the most elementary manner on how such a
+war should be conducted. Since neither surprise attacks on armed
+merchant vessels nor the declaration of prohibited zones violate
+international law, a belligerent might well be allowed to consider after
+the outbreak of war if and when he wants to make use of these
+opportunities. As we know from the afore-mentioned orders of the British
+Admiralty, as early as 1938 a thorough study of all the possibilities
+resulting from the war upon commercial shipping had been made and
+elaborated for practical purposes.
+
+This same standpoint holds good also for the memorandum of the Naval
+Operations Staff of 15 October 1939, which has been quoted several times
+by the Prosecution. Its very heading shows that it is a study:
+“Possibilities for the Intensification of Naval Warfare.”
+
+In accordance with the heading, the memorandum provides an examination
+of the military demands for effective naval warfare against England, and
+of the legal possibilities for fulfilling these demands. The result was
+the order of 17 October 1939, decreeing the immediate use of arms
+against all enemy merchant vessels, since, as we have already shown,
+they had been armed and incorporated into the military system. Further
+intensifying measures were for the time being recognized as not yet
+justified, and the suggestion was made to wait and see what the further
+conduct of the enemy would be.
+
+One sentence in this memorandum arouses special suspicion on the part of
+the Prosecution. It says that naval warfare must, as a matter of
+principle, be kept within the framework of existing international law.
+However, measures which might result in successes decisive for the war
+would have to be taken even if new laws of naval warfare were created
+thereby.
+
+Does this really constitute a renunciation of international law? Quite
+the contrary. A departure from existing international law is made
+dependent only on two quite limited conditions: (1) A military one,
+namely, that measures are involved which are of decisive importance for
+the outcome of the war, that is, also of importance in shortening the
+war;[24] (2) a moral one, namely, the nature of the new measures makes
+them suitable for incorporation into the new international law.
+
+The memorandum itself states that this would be possible only within the
+framework of the laws of military combat ethics and a demand is
+therefore made for rigid adherence without any exceptions to these
+ethics of warfare. Under these conditions there can hardly be any doubt
+as to the possibility of formulating new international laws.
+
+The well-known expert on international law, Baron von
+Freytagh-Loringhoven says, and I quote:
+
+ “... always been war which has given its strongest impulses to
+ international law. Sometimes they have been of a positive,
+ sometimes of a negative nature. They have led to further
+ development of already existing institutions and norms, to the
+ creation of new forms or the reversion to old ones, and not
+ infrequently also to failures.”[25]
+
+Especially in this Trial, which itself is supposed to serve the
+development of new international law, the possibility of such a
+development cannot be denied.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will not sit in open session after 1 o’clock
+tomorrow, Wednesday; it will sit in closed session during the afternoon.
+The Tribunal will not sit in open session on Saturday; it will sit in
+closed session on Saturday morning.
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Before the recess I was speaking about the
+possibilities of development of naval law.
+
+The American prosecutor, Justice Robert Jackson, in his report to the
+President of the United States with regard to this problem, expressed
+his opinions as follows, and I quote:[26]
+
+ “International law is not capable of development by legislation,
+ for there is no continuously sitting international legislature.
+ 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.”
+
+These words carry a full justification of the clause objected to by the
+Prosecution in the memorandum of the Naval Operations Staff. And the
+fact that the Allies also deemed war-deciding measures to be justified
+even though they were contradictory to hitherto valid concepts of
+international law is proved by the use of the atomic bomb against
+Japanese cities.
+
+Since I am interested in justifying the actual measures taken by the
+Naval Command in Germany; I have not dealt with the point as to which
+one of the two admirals accused carried greater or lesser responsibility
+for one or another. As a formal basis in nearly all cases a Führer
+decree exists. Both admirals, however, stated here that they considered
+themselves fully responsible for all orders of naval war which they gave
+or transmitted. I should like to add to that only two remarks.
+
+As far as political considerations were decisive for orders of the
+U-boat war, the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy had no influence on them.
+The Commander of U-boats had not been notified of such considerations
+any more than of the political settlement of incidents which arose
+through U-boats.
+
+My second remark concerns the question as to what extent a military
+commander may be held responsible for the accuracy of legal reasonings
+which he does not indulge in himself, but which are delivered to him by
+the leading experts of his country, who after all are not just
+small-town lawyers. In addition, the Commander of U-boats had only
+tactical tasks and his staff contained only a few officers, none of whom
+was qualified to examine questions of international law of the import
+mentioned here. He therefore had to rely on the fact that the orders
+issued by the Naval Operations Staff were examined as to their legality
+and were in order. That is probably handled in a like manner in every
+navy in the world. A professional seaman is not competent for legal
+questions; with this reason the Tribunal cut off a remark by Admiral
+Dönitz about a legal question. This condition must, however, be
+considered in applying the principle which the German Supreme Court,
+during the war crimes trials after the first World War, formulated in
+this regard, and I quote: “The culprit must be conscious of the
+violation of international law by his actions.”
+
+This appears to me to be equally just, as I should deem it to be
+incompatible with the demands of justice if soldiers were charged with a
+criminal responsibility in deciding legal questions which could not be
+settled at international conferences and are hotly disputed among the
+experts themselves.
+
+In this connection I should like to mention that the London Pact of 1930
+did not from the Root Resolution of 1922 adopt the principle of criminal
+prosecution for violations of the rules of U-boat warfare. The five
+naval powers participating in this conference apparently came to the
+conclusion that the problems of naval warfare cannot be solved by means
+of penal law. And this fact applies fully today, too.
+
+I am now coming to the second basic charge of the
+Prosecution—intentional killing of shipwrecked crews. It is directed
+only against Admiral Dönitz, not Admiral Raeder. The legal basis for the
+treatment of shipwrecked crews for those ships which are entitled to the
+protection of the London Agreement of 1936 is laid down in the agreement
+itself. There it says that, before the sinking, crews and passengers
+must be brought to safety. This was done by the German side, and the
+difference of opinion with the Prosecution concerns only the question
+already dealt with, namely, which ships were entitled to protection
+under the agreement and which were not.
+
+In the case of all ships not entitled to protection under the agreement,
+sinking should be considered a military combat action. The legal basis,
+therefore, with regard to the treatment of shipwrecked crews, in these
+cases is contained in the Hague Convention concerning the Application of
+the Principles of the Geneva Convention to Naval Warfare of 18 October
+1907, although it was not ratified by Great Britain. According to this,
+both belligerents shall after each combat action make arrangements for
+the search for the shipwrecked, as far as military considerations allow
+this. Accordingly the German U-boats were also bound to assist the
+shipwrecked of steamers sunk without warning as long as by doing so,
+first, the boat would not be endangered and, secondly, the
+accomplishment of the military mission would not be prejudiced.
+
+These principles are generally acknowledged. In this connection I am
+referring to the order of the British Admiralty, for example, and I
+quote: “No British ocean-going merchantman shall aid a ship attacked by
+a U-boat.”
+
+I further refer to the affidavit of Admiral Rogge, according to which in
+two cases, personally witnessed by him, nothing was done by a British
+cruiser to rescue the shipwrecked, because U-boats were assumed to be
+nearby, once correctly so and once erroneously. A higher degree of
+self-endangering would appear to apply to U-boats as compared with other
+types of vessels because of their exceptional vulnerability.
+
+As to the second exception to rescue duty, namely, prejudice to the
+military mission, the U-boat is also subject to special conditions. It
+has no room to take guests aboard. Its supply of food, water, and fuel
+is limited and any considerable expenditure will prejudice its combat
+mission. Furthermore, it is typical for the U-boat that the combat
+mission may call for an unobserved attack and therefore exclude rescue
+duty. In order also to present an opinion about the tactics of the
+opposite side, I quote from the statement of Admiral Nimitz:
+
+ “In general U.S. submarines did not rescue enemy survivors if it
+ meant an unusual additional danger for the submarine or if the
+ submarine was prevented from further carrying out its mission.”
+
+In the light of these principles I will briefly deal with rescue
+measures by U-boats until the autumn of 1942. The basic order was issued
+by the Naval Operations Staff on 4 October 1939, and specified rescue
+whenever possible from the military standpoint. This was temporarily
+restricted by Standing War Order 154. This order, issued in December
+1939, applied to the small number of submarines at that time operating
+immediately off the British coast. It may be seen from the order itself
+that every paragraph deals with combat in the presence of enemy escort
+and patrol forces. The last paragraph therefore also deals only with
+this aspect and serves the warranted purpose of protecting submarine
+commanders against the dangers to which, under the existing
+circumstances, they would in every case expose their boats by rescue
+measures. When after the Norwegian campaign the scene of activity of the
+submarines gradually shifted to the open Atlantic, this order became
+outdated, and it was finally canceled in the autumn of 1940. In the
+period that followed, the German submarine commanders carried out rescue
+measures whenever they could assume responsibility from the military
+standpoint. This is known to the Tribunal from numerous specific
+examples cited here, contained both in the statements of submarine
+commanders submitted here and in the war diaries. This situation was
+changed through Admiral Dönitz’s order of 17 September 1942, in which he
+forbade rescue measures on principle. The decisive sentences are:
+
+ “The rescue of members of the crew of a ship sunk is not to be
+ attempted. Rescue is contradictory to the most primitive demands
+ of warfare, which are the annihilation of enemy ships and
+ crews.”
+
+It has been disputed by the Prosecution that this actually prohibits
+rescue. It looks upon this order as a hidden provocation to kill the
+shipwrecked, and it has gone through the press of the world as a command
+for murder. If any accusation at all has been refuted in this Trial,
+then it seems to me to be this ignominious interpretation of the order
+mentioned above.
+
+How was this order brought on? Beginning with June 1942, the losses of
+German submarines through the Allied air force rose by leaps and bounds,
+and jumped from a monthly average of 4 or 5 during the first 6 months of
+1942 to 10, 11, 13, finally reaching 38 boats in May 1943. Orders and
+measures from the command of submarine warfare multiplied in order to
+counter those losses. They were of no avail and every day brought fresh
+reports of air attacks and losses of submarines.
+
+This was the situation when on 12 September it was reported that the
+heavily armed British troop transport _Laconia_ with 1,500 Italian
+prisoners of war and an Allied crew of 1,000 men and some women and
+children aboard had been torpedoed. Admiral Dönitz withdrew several
+submarines from current operations for the purpose of rescuing the
+shipwrecked, no distinction being made between Italians and Allies. From
+the very start the danger of enemy air attacks filled him with anxiety.
+While the submarines during the following days devotedly rescued, towed
+boats, supplied food, and so forth, they received no less than three
+admonitions from the Commander to be careful, to divide the shipwrecked,
+and at all times to be ready to submerge. These warnings were of no
+avail. On 16 September one of the submarines displaying a Red Cross flag
+and towing life boats was attacked and considerably damaged by an Allied
+bomber; one lifeboat was hit and losses caused among the shipwrecked.
+Following this report the Commander sent three more radio messages with
+orders immediately to submerge in case of danger and under no
+circumstances to risk the boats’ own safety. Again without avail. In the
+evening of that day, 17 September 1942, the second submarine reported
+that during rescue actions it had been taken unawares and bombed by an
+airplane.
+
+Notwithstanding these experiences, and in spite of the explicit order
+from Führer headquarters not to endanger any boats under any
+consideration, Admiral Dönitz did not discontinue rescue work, but had
+it continued until the shipwrecked were taken aboard French warships
+sent to their rescue. However, this incident was a lesson. Due to enemy
+air reconnaissance activity over the entire sea area, it was simply no
+longer possible to carry out rescue measures without endangering the
+submarine. It was useless to give orders over and over again to
+commanders to undertake rescue work only if their own boats were not
+endangered thereby. Earlier experiences had already shown that their
+human desire to render aid had led many commanders to underestimate the
+dangers from the air. Yet it takes a submarine with decks cleared at
+least one minute to submerge on alarm, while an airplane can cover 6,000
+meters in that time. In practice this means that a submarine engaged in
+rescue action when sighting a plane has not time enough to submerge.
+
+These were the reasons which caused Admiral Dönitz directly after the
+close of the _Laconia_ incident to forbid rescue measures on principle.
+This was motivated by the endeavor to preclude any calculation on the
+part of the commander as to the danger of air attack whenever in
+individual cases he should feel tempted to undertake rescue work.
+
+It is difficult to judge the actual effects of this order. From 1943 on
+about 80 percent of the submarines were fighting against convoys, where
+even without this order rescue measures would have been impossible.
+Whether or not some commander would have, without this order, again
+risked concerning himself with the lifeboats, nobody can tell with
+certainty. As is known, an order existed since the middle of 1942 to
+bring in as prisoners, if possible, captains and chief engineers. Over a
+period of almost 3 years this order was carried out not even a dozen
+times, which proves how high the commanders themselves estimated the
+danger to their boats in surfacing. On the other hand, nothing was more
+distressing for members of the crews of torpedoed ships than to be taken
+aboard a U-boat, because of course they knew that their chance of being
+rescued was much better in a lifeboat than on a U-boat which, with a
+probability of at least 50 percent, would not return to its base.
+Therefore, I arrive at the conclusion, as did Admiral Godt, that the
+_Laconia_ order may have cost the lives of some Allied seamen just as it
+may have saved the lives of others. Be that as it may, in the face of
+the enormous losses by the enemy air forces the order forbidding rescue
+was justified. It was completely in line with the basic idea of the
+precedence of one’s own vessel and of one’s own task, as prevailing in
+all navies; a principle which I believe I have proved as commonly valid
+in view of existing British and American orders and practices.
+
+How then can the Prosecution consider this order an “order to murder”?
+Grounds for this are said to be furnished by the discussion between
+Hitler and the Japanese Ambassador, Oshima, in January 1942, in which
+Hitler mentioned a prospective order to his U-boats to kill the
+survivors of ships sunk. This announcement, the Prosecution infers,
+Hitler doubtless followed up, and Admiral Dönitz carried it out by the
+_Laconia_ order. Actually, on the occasion of a report on U-boat
+problems which both admirals had to make in May 1942, the Führer
+suggested that in future action should be taken against the shipwrecked,
+that is, to shoot them; Admiral Dönitz immediately rejected this sort of
+action as thoroughly impossible and Grossadmiral Raeder unreservedly
+agreed with him. Both admirals specified the improvement of torpedoes as
+the only permissible way to increase losses among the crews. In the face
+of the opposition of both admirals Adolf Hitler dropped his proposal,
+and following this report no order whatever was given concerning
+shipwrecked crews, let alone concerning the killing of the shipwrecked
+by shooting. The destruction of the crews through improved efficiency of
+the torpedoes is an idea which for the first time cropped up during this
+discussion in May 1942, and which recurs in later documents of the Naval
+Operations Staff. I must therefore express myself on the legality of
+such a tendency. According to classical international law the
+destruction of combatants constituted a legal aim of war actions, not
+however that of noncombatants.[27] In view of the development of the
+last wars one may be doubtful whether this classical theory still has
+any validity. I am inclined to regard the hunger blockade as the first
+important infringement of this theory, which by cutting off all food
+supply was aimed at the civilian population, therefore the noncombatants
+of a country. The victims of this during the first World War were
+estimated at 700,000 people.[28] Although this blockade was frequently
+acknowledged to be inadmissible according to international law,[29] it
+was nevertheless practiced, and therefore it amounts to an infringement
+of the principle of protection for noncombatants against war
+measures.[30]
+
+The second great infringement was brought on by aerial warfare. I do not
+wish to discuss the unsolvable question of who started it, but only to
+state the fact that war from the air, at least during the two final
+years, was aimed against the civilian population. If in dozens of
+attacks on residential quarters of German cities thousands or tens of
+thousands of civilians were among the victims while soldiers numbered
+only a few dozen or a few hundred, then nobody can assert that the
+civilian population was not included in the target of the attack. The
+mass dropping of explosives and incendiary bombs on entire areas does
+not permit of doubt, and the use of the atomic bomb has produced final
+evidence thereof.
+
+In view of the hundreds of thousands of women and children who in this
+manner miserably perished in their houses by being buried, suffocated,
+or burnt to death, I am surprised at the indignation of the Prosecution
+about the loss of about 30,000 men who lost their lives in war areas on
+ships which were armed and carried war material, and often enough bombs
+destined for German cities. Moreover, most of these men died in combat,
+that is, by mines, aircraft action, and especially in attacks on
+convoys, all actions which according to British conception, too, were
+lawful.
+
+The German Naval Operations Staff regarded these men as combatants. The
+British Admiralty takes the opposite standpoint in its orders to the
+merchant navy. In this connection Oppenheim, the foremost British expert
+on international law, before the outbreak of the first World War still
+maintained that the crew should be put on the same level as
+combatants.[31] He points to the century-old practice, especially
+followed in Britain, of taking the crew of merchant ships prisoner of
+war. He find’s this principle confirmed in the 11th Hague Convention of
+1907, and looks upon the crew of the merchant navy as potential members
+of the navy. The legal position in their defense against a warship is
+described by him as “entirely analogous to the position of the
+population of an unoccupied territory which takes up arms in order to
+combat invading troops.” It is well known that such a force is
+considered a combat unit. According to Paragraph 2 of the Hague
+Convention on Land Warfare, they are considered combatants irrespective
+of whether or not the individual actually makes use of weapons.
+Accordingly, Oppenheim also refused to make any distinction among the
+crew, between men who are enrolled in the enemy navy and men who are
+not.
+
+If this interpretation was already valid before the first World War, it
+certainly was unassailable in the year 1942, at a time when there were
+no more unarmed enemy ships and when the neutrals who happened to enter
+the zone of operations were exclusively moving in enemy convoys, which
+made them, just like enemy ships, integral parts of the enemy forces.
+All of them had lost their peaceful character and were considered as
+being guilty of active resistance. Active resistance against acts of war
+is not permitted to any noncombatant in land warfare and results in his
+being punished as a _franc-tireur_. And in naval warfare should a ship’s
+crew be entitled to the combatant’s privileges, without suffering any of
+his disadvantages? Should a crew be permitted to participate in every
+conceivable act of war, even including the use of guns and depth
+charges, and yet remain noncombatant? Such an interpretation renders
+illusory the entire concept of a noncombatant. Nor does it make any
+difference whether or not only part of the crew has anything to do with
+the firing of the guns. The ship as an entity represents a fighting
+unit, and on board a merchant ship more people actually had something to
+do with the handling of weapons than on board a submarine. These men
+were trained under military supervision, they fired the guns along with
+gunners of the navy, and the use of their weapons was regulated
+according to the Admiralty’s orders.[32] The crews of ships were
+accordingly combatants and thus it was legitimate for the adversary to
+try to destroy them by the use of arms.
+
+This explains at the same time the sentence about the destruction of
+ships and crews, which is considered by the Prosecution as a specific
+indication that the _Laconia_ order bore the character of a murder
+order. There has been enough discussion concerning the meaning of this
+sentence as an argument for forbidding rescue work. It may, taken out of
+its context, give cause for misunderstanding. But whoever goes to the
+trouble of reading the entire order cannot misunderstand it. To me the
+decisive crime appears to be that, in accordance With its origin, it was
+never meant to be a murder order and was not interpreted as such by the
+commanders. This is proved by the declarations and statements of dozens
+of submarine commanders. From its context it could not have been
+interpreted as a murder order. In fact in the next paragraphs it was
+explicitly ruled that so far as possible certain members of the crew
+should be brought back as prisoners. Surely one must credit a military
+command with enough intelligence, when giving such a murder order at
+all, to refrain from additional orders to conserve a number of witnesses
+of its crime.
+
+Contrary to the Prosecution, the British Admiralty clearly did not
+believe in such a murder order. Otherwise it would not have given orders
+to its captains and chief engineers to escape capture by German
+submarines by camouflaging themselves as plain sailors while in the
+lifeboats. According to the interpretation by the Prosecution, such an
+order would indeed have meant that the captain would have been killed by
+the submarine along with all the other members of the crew.
+
+Furthermore, the Prosecution have quoted the order to attack so-called
+“rescue ships” as evidence of the intention to kill shipwrecked people.
+However, only the individual who is either in the water or in a lifeboat
+is shipwrecked. A shipwrecked combatant who is again on board a ship is
+nothing but a combatant, and accordingly the legitimate aim of an
+attack. I have already pointed out, during the hearing of evidence, the
+shooting down of German sea rescue planes with intent to kill the
+rescued airmen, in order to show that the enemy acted according to the
+same conception.
+
+I shall discuss as briefly as possible the depositions of witnesses on
+which the Prosecution tries to base its interpretation of the Laconia
+order. In my opinion, the deposition of Oberleutnant zur See Heisig, as
+made here before the Tribunal, is irrelevant. His earlier affidavit is
+wrong, and we know why from the witness Wagner. Here, before the
+Tribunal, Heisig has explicitly denied that in Grossadmiral Dönitz’s
+address to the cadets of the submarine school in September 1942 there
+was any reference to the effect that shipwrecked people should be fired
+upon. Rather did he personally draw this conclusion from the passage
+that total war must be waged against ship and crew, with added reference
+to air bombing. His interpretation may be explained by the fresh
+impression of the bombing of Lübeck, which he had just experienced. The
+other listeners did not share this interpretation; in fact, it did not
+even occur to them. This is evident from the deposition of three persons
+who heard the address. The further assertion of Heisig, that an officer
+unknown to him had instructed him on an unknown occasion that the men
+should be ordered below deck when exterminating shipwrecked people, I
+consider as an improvisation of his imagination, which appears to be
+easily excited. If this had really been the case, then so astonishing an
+occurrence, which would have been in contradiction to all training
+principles of the Navy, must have made such an impression on a young
+officer that he would have retained some recollection of the full
+circumstances of such an instruction.
+
+The testimony of Korvettenkapitän Möhle must be taken much more
+seriously, because he had—there is no doubt about it—at least hinted
+to a few submarine commanders that the _Laconia_ order demanded, or at
+least approved of, the killing of shipwrecked. Möhle did not receive
+this interpretation either from Admiral Dönitz himself, nor from the
+Chief of Staff nor his chief assistant, Fregattenkapitän Hessler; that
+is to say, from none of the officers who alone would have been qualified
+to transmit such an interpretation to the chief of a flotilla.
+
+How Möhle actually arrived at this interpretation has in my opinion not
+been explained by the Trial. He maintains that it was due to the fact
+that Korvettenkapitän Kuppisch from the staff of the Commander of
+U-boats had told him the story of _U-386_, a boat whose commander had
+been reprimanded for not having shot Allied airmen drifting in a rubber
+dinghy. This explanation of Möhle’s cannot be correct. It is proven
+beyond any doubt by the War Diary and by witnesses that the commander of
+_U-386_ had been reprimanded because he did not take on board the airmen
+concerned and bring them back. The whole affair concerning _U-386_,
+furthermore, took place a year after the _Laconia_ incident in September
+1943 and Korvettenkapitän Kuppisch, who was supposed to have told it,
+had already been killed in action as a U-boat commander in August 1943.
+It is not my task to try to explain how Möhle actually acquired his
+knowledge about the _Laconia_ order. One thing at any rate has been
+proven, namely, that Admiral Dönitz and his staff had not caused this
+briefing to be given, nor did they know anything about it. Considering
+the frequent personal contacts between the U-boat commanders and the
+staff of the Commander of U-boats this can only be explained by the fact
+that the few commanders whom Möhle thus briefed did not take his words
+seriously.
+
+Is Admiral Dönitz thus responsible for the interpretation of the
+_Laconia_ order as given by Möhle? Criminal responsibility in the first
+place presupposes guilt, that is to say, possibility of foreseeing the
+result. Considering the close contact with his flotilla chiefs and
+commanders, for whom alone the _Laconia_ order was intended, Admiral
+Dönitz could not foresee that a flotilla chief might give such an
+interpretation to that order without taking any steps to be enlightened
+by the Commander of U-boats. Such conduct is beyond anything that could
+reasonably be expected.
+
+Therefore all guilt is excluded. Criminal responsibility requires
+another criterion, namely, that results shall be proven. This also is
+entirely lacking. The Prosecution have not even made a serious attempt
+to prove that any one of the commanders briefed by Möhle in that sense
+ever actually fired on shipwrecked crews. As far as we are informed,
+such a thing occurred only once in this war on the German side in the
+case of Kapitänleutnant Eck. It is significant that this case was
+presented not by the Prosecution, but by the Defense. For the conduct of
+Eck has nothing whatsoever to do with the _Laconia_ order as the
+Prosecution desires to construe it. He was not concerned with the
+destruction of human lives but with the removal of wreckage and floats
+from which the Allied airplanes could deduce the presence of a German
+U-boat in the area. For this conduct he and two of his officers were
+sentenced to death, and thereby punished with a severity which less
+agitated times will no longer comprehend.
+
+The two cases presented by the Prosecution, where shipwrecked crews
+allegedly were shot at, are so obviously unsuited to prove this
+accusation that I need not deal with them any further. The testimony
+about the sinking of the _Noreen Mary_ bears the stamp of phantasy in
+various points, and in the case of the attack on the _Antonica_ the
+intention to destroy shipwrecked people is out of the question because
+everything was over in 20 minutes and the night was dark.
+
+I was in the fortunate position to be able to present to the Tribunal a
+compilation of the Naval Operations Staff concerning a dozen cases in
+which Allied forces had allegedly shot at German shipwrecked crews. It
+seems to me that every one of these instances is better than that of the
+Prosecution, and some appear rather convincing. I therefore attach all
+the more value to the sober attitude assumed by the Naval Operations
+Staff when transmitting their opinion on these cases to the Führer’s
+headquarters.
+
+They point out that: (1) Part of the incidents occurred during combat
+operations; (2) shipwrecked men swimming in the water might easily be
+led to believe that a miss on other targets was aimed at them; (3) so
+far no written or verbal order for the use of arms against shipwrecked
+crews had been traced. I can only request that these principles be
+equally applied to the incidents presented by the Prosecution.
+
+In the same written opinion to the Führer’s headquarters the Naval
+Operations Staff reject reprisals by destroying enemy shipwrecked; that
+was on 14 September 1942, 3 days before the _Laconia_ order. Since the
+latter, as a radio order, came to the knowledge of the Naval Operations
+Staff, it would doubtlessly have been canceled in accordance with the
+opposite viewpoint just expressed to the Führer’s headquarters if it had
+been understood to be an order for the shooting of shipwrecked crews.
+
+And now I am coming to the positive counterevidence against the opinion
+of the Prosecution. It consists in the first place of the number of
+rescued Allied sailors. This amounted, according to a survey by the
+British Minister of Transport in 1943, to 87 percent of the crews. Such
+a result is simply not compatible with an order for destruction.
+Furthermore, it has been established that Grossadmiral Dönitz in 1943,
+that is, after the _Laconia_ order, rejected all consideration of action
+against shipwrecked crews.
+
+In a written opinion given to the Foreign Office on 4 April 1943, a
+directive to the U-boats to take action against lifeboats or shipwrecked
+crews was considered impossible by the Naval Operations Staff, since
+that would go against the grain of every sailor. In June 1943
+Grossadmiral Dönitz, on receiving reports from Korvettenkapitän Witt
+about British aviators having fired on shipwrecked crews of German
+submarines, most decidedly rejected the idea of attacking a foe rendered
+defenseless in combat, stating that this was incompatible with our
+principles of warfare.
+
+Summing up, I am convinced that the assertion of the Prosecution that
+German submarines had received an order to murder shipwrecked men has
+been strikingly disproved. Grossadmiral Dönitz stated here that he would
+never have allowed the spirit of his submarine men to be endangered by
+mean acts. With losses ranging from 70 to 80 percent, he could only
+replenish his troops with volunteers if he kept the fight clean, in
+spite of its being tough. And if the Tribunal will recall the
+declaration of the 67 commanders in British captivity, it will have to
+admit that he created an attitude and morale which survived defeat.
+
+I have endeavored to present to the Tribunal the most important facts
+supplemented by a number of legal considerations regarding naval warfare
+in order to clarify the most important problems to be discussed here
+from the point of view of the Defense. We are concerned with the
+examination of the behavior of admirals in naval warfare, and the
+question of what is permissible according to international law is
+intimately connected with what is necessary according to the military
+standpoint. Therefore, in examining this particular point of the
+Indictment, I deeply regret that the Charter of this Tribunal deprives
+the accused officers of a privilege guaranteed to them as prisoners of
+war by the Geneva Convention, namely, the passing of judgment by a
+military tribunal applying the laws and regulations binding on its own
+officers. According to Article 3 of the Charter, I am not allowed to
+question the competency of this Tribunal. I can therefore only request
+the Tribunal to make up for the unfairness that I see in the
+afore-mentioned article of the Charter by applying the same standards,
+where the military appreciation and moral justification of the actions
+of these German admirals is concerned, as the Tribunal would apply to
+admirals of their own countries. A soldier, out of practical knowledge
+of the procedure in warfare as applied not only by his own country but
+also by the adversary, is keenly sensitive to the dividing line between
+combat and war crimes. He knows that the interpretation of international
+law concerning what is allowed or forbidden in naval warfare is in the
+last resort governed by the interests of his country. An insular power
+like Great Britain, having long and vulnerable sea lanes, has always
+looked upon these questions from a different angle than the continental
+powers. The attitude of the United States from the renunciation of
+submarine warfare by the Root Resolution of 1922 to unrestricted
+submarine warfare against Japan in 1941, reveals how a change in
+strategic position can entail a change in legal evaluation. No one can
+tell to what extent a changed strategic position at sea will cause a
+modification of legal conception. No one can know to what degree the
+development of air forces and the efficacy of bombs will increasingly
+force navies under water and render obsolete all previous conceptions of
+submarine warfare.[33] For a naval officer these are obvious
+reflections, and they should prevent a man of law from settling
+controversial questions of law and policy pertaining to naval war at the
+expense of those whose professional duty it is to direct navies.
+
+In the first World War German submarine warfare was accompanied by a
+storm of indignation. It seems significant to me today that the British
+historian, Bell, in a paper intended only for official use of the
+Foreign Office, judges the right to such indignation as follows:
+
+ “It is an old rule of military honor never to belittle the deeds
+ of an enemy who has put up a stiff and brave fight. If this rule
+ had been followed in England, the public would better appreciate
+ the place which the war between submarines and commerce will
+ occupy in the history of strategy and of war. It is unfortunate
+ that the cries of terror as well as the unseemly insults of
+ journalists were repeated by responsible people, with the result
+ that the slogans ‘piracy’ and ‘murder’ entered the vocabulary
+ and have engendered the corresponding feelings in the hearts of
+ the people.”[34]
+
+I must now treat the other points of the Indictment against Grossadmiral
+Dönitz which are not concerned with naval war. To begin with, there is
+the charge of preparation of aggressive wars. It is known how much
+contradiction this very accusation has aroused on the part of
+professional officers of probably all Allied countries. In answer to
+such attacks in public, Justice Jackson formulated for the press (_The
+Stars and Stripes_, European Edition, 5 December 1945) the ideas of the
+Prosecution regarding this subject as follows:
+
+ “I have made it clear that we do not prosecute these militarists
+ because they served their country, but because they dominated it
+ and led it into war. Not because they conducted the war, but
+ because they have been driving to war.”
+
+If this standard is used, then for the defense of Admiral Dönitz against
+the charge of preparing aggressive wars I need only point to the result
+of the evidence. At the beginning of the war he was a relatively young
+commander; his only task was the training and commanding of submarine
+crews; he did not belong to the General Staff in the meaning of the
+Indictment and did not participate in any of the addresses which were
+presented here as proof of war intentions. The charge that he had
+advocated the occupation of submarine bases in Norway is likewise
+disproved. The same applies to the allegation that in 1943 he had
+proposed an attack upon Spain in order to capture Gibraltar. The
+conquest of Gibraltar against the will of Spain was absolutely
+impossible and out of the question during the entire war, and especially
+so in 1943.
+
+For Germany the war had already reached a stage of defense, even of
+dangerous setbacks, on all fronts at the time when Admiral Dönitz was
+appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Navy on 1 February 1943. This fact
+may be significant for his participation in the so-called conspiracy.
+The Prosecution is not very clear about the precise moment at which they
+want to fix the beginning of such participation. In the individual
+Indictment intimate connection with Hitler since 1932 is mentioned.
+This, however, is obviously an error. Admiral Dönitz did not become
+acquainted with Hitler until the autumn of 1934, on the occasion of the
+submission of a military report, and in the following years talked to
+him briefly and always only about military problems, altogether eight
+times, and never alone. Since, aside from this fact, the defendant never
+belonged to any organization which is accused of conspiracy by the
+Prosecution, I see no connection of any kind with this conspiracy prior
+to 1 February 1943.
+
+All the more important is the question of the retroactive effects of
+joining the conspiracy, as has been illustrated by the British
+Prosecutor by the example of the perpetrators of railway sabotage. This
+idea of guilt, retroactive on past events, is very difficult for the
+German jurist to understand. The continental concept of law is reflected
+by the formulation of Hugo Grotius: “To participate in a crime a person
+must not only have knowledge of it but also the ability to prevent
+it.”[35]
+
+While the entire legal concept of the conspiracy in itself represents a
+special creation of Anglo-Saxon justice in our eyes, this applies even
+more to the retroaction of the so-called conspiracy. A judgment laying
+claim to international validity, one which should be understood by the
+peoples of Europe and especially by the Germans, must be based upon
+generally recognized principles of law. This, however, is not the case
+regarding a retroactive guilt. Though such a legal construction may seem
+fitting in dealing with certain typical crimes, it seems to me entirely
+inapplicable in judging events such as are being discussed here.
+
+Admiral Dönitz became the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy in the course
+of a normal military career entirely free of politics. The appointment
+was based upon the proposal of his predecessor, Grossadmiral Raeder, for
+whom his proven abilities in the guidance of U-boat warfare alone were
+the determining factor. Specific acceptance of the appointment was no
+more required than in the case of an appointment to any other military
+position. Admiral Dönitz entertained the sole thought, as any officer
+might well have done in a similar position, whether he would be equal to
+the task and whether he could accomplish it in the best interest of the
+Navy and of his people. All other considerations which the Prosecution
+apparently expected of him during this period, namely, as to the
+legitimacy of the Party Program and of the policy of the Party from 1922
+on, as well as German internal and foreign policy since 1933, can be but
+fictitious; they have nothing to do with the facts. Fictions of such
+nature are not limited by time nor by reality. Is the responsibility for
+past measures on taking over a high position to extend only to acts of
+the present cabinet, or is it to extend to acts of former cabinets, and
+over what period? Is it to comprise only one’s own internal and foreign
+policy or is it to include one’s allies? Such considerations cannot be
+refuted logically; however, they lead to unacceptable results and show
+the impracticability of the idea of retroaction regarding the so-called
+conspiracy.
+
+To measure by exact standards the participation in such a conspiracy is
+difficult enough, if events not of a criminal but of a military and
+political nature are involved. Of what meaning are such concepts as
+“voluntary accession” and “knowledge of the criminal plan” when in times
+of greatest danger an officer assumes the task to prevent the collapse
+of his nation’s maritime warfare?
+
+Even the Prosecution seems to realize this. For, corresponding to their
+general idea, they attempt to link Admiral Dönitz with the conspiracy in
+a political way. This is accomplished by the assertion that he became a
+member of the Reich Cabinet by virtue of his appointment to the High
+Command of the Navy. This allegation is based upon the decree whereby
+the Commanders-in-Chief of the Army and of the Navy were invested with
+the rank of Reich Minister and upon the order of Hitler were to
+participate in Cabinet meetings.
+
+It is evident that one is not actually a Reich minister merely by being
+invested with the rank of Reich minister. Also one is not a member of
+the Cabinet if one is only permitted to participate in it upon special
+orders. This obviously indicates that he was only to be consulted on
+technical matters, but never had authority to gain information about
+other departments, much less to give advice. One cannot, however, speak
+of a political task and a political responsibility without the existence
+of such an authority. For an activity as a minister all legal basis is
+lacking. According to the Reich Defense Law there existed for the entire
+Armed Forces but one minister, the Reich War Minister. This post
+remained unoccupied after the resignation of Field Marshal Von Blomberg.
+The business of the ministry was conducted by the Chief of the High
+Command of the Armed Forces. A new ministry was not created either for
+the Army or for the Navy. The Commanders-in-Chief of the Army and of the
+Navy therefore would have had to be ministers without portfolio. Since,
+however, they each headed a department, namely, the Army and the Navy,
+such an appointment would have constituted a contradiction to all legal
+customs of the State. The countersigning of all laws in which the
+minister participates according to his jurisdiction must be considered
+the basic criterion of all ministerial activity. There exists not a
+single law which was countersigned by the Commander-in-Chief of the
+Navy. I have demonstrated this to the Tribunal by the example of the
+Prize Ordinance. That is to say that, even applying the legal standards
+of a democratic system, the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy cannot be
+designated as a member of the Reich Cabinet, because he lacked all
+authority of participation in legislative acts and every collective
+responsibility for policies assumed. His task was, and remained, a
+military one even though for reasons of etiquette he was put on an equal
+basis in rank with other Reich ministers.
+
+The Prosecution themselves realized that a Reich Government in the
+constitutional sense no longer existed during the war, and consequently
+stated that the actual governing was carried out by those who
+participated in the situation conferences at the Führer’s headquarters.
+As all witnesses examined here stated, we are concerned here with events
+of a purely military nature, where incoming reports were presented,
+military measures discussed, and military orders issued. Questions of
+foreign policy were only very rarely touched upon if they had any
+connection with military problems; they were, however, never discussed
+and no decision was rendered on them in these Führer conferences on the
+situation. Internal policy and the security system were never on the
+agenda. Insofar as nonmilitary persons participated, they were
+attendants or listeners who gathered information for their respective
+departments.
+
+The Reichsführer SS or his deputy were present for the command of the
+Waffen-SS, and during the last year of war also for the Reserve Army.
+Admiral Dönitz always participated in these Führer conferences when he
+was at the Führer’s headquarters. Notes taken down by whoever
+accompanied him on all these meetings and discussions of the
+Commander-in-Chief are all in the possession of the Prosecution. As the
+Prosecution has not presented a single one of these notes from which it
+would appear that the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy participated in
+reporting on or in discussing and deciding affairs of a political
+nature, one can assume that such notes do not exist.
+
+Thus the testimony of witnesses has been confirmed according to which
+the Führer conferences had nothing whatever to do with governing in a
+political sense, but were exclusively an instrument of the military
+leadership. Therefore, an over-all responsibility of Grossadmiral Dönitz
+for all events that occurred since 1943, which in the course of this
+Trial have been designated as criminal, certainly does not exist.
+Consequently, I shall deal only with those individual allegations by
+which the Prosecution tries directly to connect Admiral Dönitz with the
+conspiracy. I believe I am all the more justified to proceed in that
+manner, as a short time ago the Tribunal refused the cross-examination
+of witnesses in the Katyn case with the argument that no one was
+accusing Admiral Dönitz in connection with this case. I conclude,
+therefore, that at any rate in the eyes of the Tribunal he is only
+accused of such cases wherein he allegedly directly participated.
+
+To begin with, this does not apply to the Führer’s order for the
+extermination of sabotage Commandos, dated 18 October 1942. The
+Prosecution has tried to establish that this order had been presented to
+Admiral Dönitz in detail, together with all possible objections, shortly
+after his assumption of the position of Commander-in-Chief of the Navy.
+It has failed to establish this assertion. In fact Dönitz, as he himself
+admits, did read or have presented to him the order in question in the
+autumn of 1942 in his capacity of Commander of U-boats, and in the same
+form in which the front-line commanders received it.
+
+I do not wish to speak here of the circumstances which led to objections
+against this order on the part of the High Command of the Armed Forces.
+Indeed, all these circumstances could not be discernible to one who
+received this order at the front. For such a man it was a matter of
+reprisal against saboteurs who seemed to be soldiers, but did not fight
+according to the regulations which are binding upon soldiers. Whether
+such reprisals were admissible at all according to the Geneva
+Convention, and to what extent, could not be judged by, nor did that
+come within the competence of, the recipient of the order. Every
+superior officer, at any rate, probably recognized that the order not to
+grant any pardon, and to hand over such persons in certain cases to the
+SD, was in itself an infringement of the rules of war. However, since
+the essence of any reprisal is to avenge a wrong on the part of the
+enemy with a wrong on one’s own part, this does not prove anything
+concerning the legitimacy or illegitimacy of the reprisal order. If no
+one but the leadership of the State is competent to order reprisals,
+then hundreds or thousands of German officers cannot be required today
+to have considered themselves also competent, and to have been
+presumptuous enough to verify orders whose actual and legal basis was
+entirely unknown to them. In this case the principle prevails, at least
+for the front-line commanders, that the subordinate may, when in doubt,
+rely on the order as given.[36]
+
+Now, the Prosecution seems to be of the opinion that Admiral Dönitz a
+few months later, when he had become Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, had
+the opportunity and also the obligation to inform himself as to the
+basis of the Commando Order. This conception fails to appreciate the
+duties of a Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. He has to wage naval war.
+The whole German naval war, especially submarine warfare, in the spring
+of 1943, owing to huge losses inflicted by the enemy air force, was on
+the verge of collapse. These were the worries with which the new
+Commander-in-Chief had to cope, in addition to an abundance of new
+problems concerning the Navy which were coming up. How can one require
+such a man as in the quietest of times to cope with an order of remote
+date, which had nothing whatever to do with naval warfare? On the
+contrary, a special paragraph explicitly excluded prisoners taken during
+naval operations.
+
+A word or two on the channels of command. The naval units were under the
+control of the Naval Operations Staff only in those matters which
+belonged to the duties of the Navy, that is to say, naval warfare and
+coastal defense by artillery. Concerning so-called territorial questions
+they were not subordinate to the Naval Operations Staff but to the Armed
+Forces commander of the theater of war in which their basis was
+established. Orders concerning such measures of war on land were given
+without collaboration on the part of the Naval Operations Staff and
+their execution was not reported to them. Just as hardly anyone can
+think seriously of holding a general responsible for German submarine
+warfare, just as little, in my opinion, does it seem justified to hold
+an admiral responsible for orders given in land warfare.
+
+Mr. President, I have come to the end of a section.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Certainly. We will break off.
+
+ [_The Tribunal recessed until 1400 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ _Afternoon Session_
+
+FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Before the noon recess I was discussing the
+fact that units of the Navy were not subordinate to the Naval Operations
+Staff in matters affecting warfare on land.
+
+This channel of orders for territorial questions also explains the
+complete ignorance of Admiral Dönitz and of his colleagues in the Naval
+Operations Staff about the delivery to the SD of the crew of the
+Norwegian motor torpedo boat _MTB 345_ after its capture by units under
+Admiral Von Schrader. As the testimony of witnesses and the records of
+the Oslo War Crimes Court show, the Naval Operations Staff only received
+an operational report about the capture of the boat and the number of
+prisoners. All other details, the discovery on board of material for
+sabotage, of civilian suits and sabotage orders, and the treatment of
+the crew as saboteurs according to the Commando Order were regarded as
+territorial matters, and as such dealt with by Admiral Von Schrader and
+the Armed Forces commander in Norway. The decision regarding the fate of
+the crew came from the Führer’s headquarters in reply to an inquiry from
+Gauleiter Terboven. Not only is there no proof that the Naval Operations
+Staff took part in those territorial questions, but this must in fact be
+considered refuted on the basis of the evidence submitted and the chain
+of command as explained.
+
+I regard as the second attempt of the Prosecution to establish a
+participation in the alleged conspiracy to commit war crimes the
+submission of Admiral Wagner’s minutes on the question of withdrawal
+from the Geneva Convention in the spring of 1945. The details are
+contained in Wagner’s testimony, according to which the Führer pointed
+out in a conference on 17 February that the enemy propaganda about the
+good treatment of prisoners of war was clearly having an influence on
+the units fighting on the Western Front, and that many cases of
+desertion to the enemy were being reported. He ordered that the question
+of a withdrawal from the Geneva Convention be investigated. In this way
+he wanted to convince his own soldiers that they could no longer rely
+upon receiving good treatment as prisoners of war, and thus create a
+countereffect against enemy propaganda. Two days later Hitler returned
+to this idea, although he then put forward another reason as the main
+one. He termed enemy warfare in the East and the bomb attacks on the
+German civilian population an outright renunciation of international law
+by the enemy, and he, for his part, also desired to free himself from
+all obligations by withdrawing from the Geneva Convention. Once more he
+asked for the opinion of the Armed Forces in this matter and addressed
+himself directly to Grossadmiral Dönitz, who did not answer. The
+attitude of the military leaders on this matter was unanimously
+negative.
+
+On the next day, just before the daily conference on the situation, a
+10-minute conversation took place between Grossadmiral Dönitz,
+Generaloberst Jodl, and Ambassador Hewel; in the course of this
+conversation Dönitz expressed his negative attitude. According to the
+notes of Admiral Wagner he said that “it would be better to take the
+measures considered necessary without previous announcement and, at any
+rate, to save face before the world.” The Prosecution sees in this a
+readiness and a design to expose hundreds of thousands of Allied
+prisoners of war to arbitrary murder.
+
+Admiral Dönitz himself has no recollection of this sentence. That is not
+surprising, as this is not a record, but a summary of a lengthy
+conversation in four sentences, the summary being worded on the day
+after the conversation by Admiral Wagner. This summary admits that the
+Grossadmiral disapproved of any “wild measures” which would put us in
+the wrong from the beginning, and considered justifiable only measures
+actually warranted by the conduct of the enemy in each case. Since
+Wagner himself, as the author of the transcript, should know best what
+he meant thereby, I personally cannot add anything to this statement.
+The interpretation of the Prosecution is equally little supported by
+other circumstances. There was no question at all of keeping any
+measures secret; they had to be made known, regardless of whether they
+were meant to deter our own deserters or as reprisals. But Wagner’s note
+does not mention any kind of concrete measures to be taken, and all
+witnesses present at this situation conference in Hitler’s headquarters
+state that not a word was spoken on that subject. The idea of killing
+prisoners of war could not, therefore, have been present in the minds of
+any of the participants in this discussion which Wagner noted down.
+
+Now it has come to light here, through the statements of the Defendants
+Ribbentrop and Fritzsche, that apart from the action for which he was
+preparing the ground during the discussion with the generals, Hitler had
+evidently at the same time planned a second action, in which only
+Goebbels and Himmler were to participate, and which by chance also came
+to Ribbentrop’s knowledge. In this action the shooting of thousands of
+prisoners of war seems to have been contemplated as a reprisal against
+the air attack on Dresden. Hitler, very wisely, did not give the
+slightest indication of such a plan to the generals. This plan was not
+followed up and no reprisals were taken.
+
+And now I return to the facts. It is a fact that Admiral Dönitz
+disapproved of the withdrawal from the Geneva Convention, and that
+Hitler, in view of the attitude of all military leaders who clearly
+opposed it did not follow up the idea any further. It is also a fact
+that no measures in violation of international law were taken by the
+Germans as a result of this remark which the Prosecution has criticized,
+and finally it is a fact that enemy sailors who were captured were sent
+to a prisoner-of-war camp of the Navy where they were treated in an
+exemplary way up to the last day of the war.
+
+Whoever, in his own sphere, behaved as Admiral Dönitz did with regard to
+the prisoners of war of the Navy, cannot reasonably be charged with
+having thrown overboard all standards of law and ethics applying to
+prisoners of war. A British commander has certified that when the
+prisoner-of-war camp of the Navy was taken over by British troops, all
+prisoners without exception said that they had been treated with
+fairness and consideration. The Tribunal will, no doubt, appreciate such
+unanimous expression of views, especially after what has come to light
+elsewhere in these proceedings with regard to the breakdown not only by
+Germans in the proper treatment of prisoners of war.
+
+I shall now deal with the conspiracy to commit Crimes against Humanity,
+and I should like first of all to point out that Admiral Dönitz is not
+accused, under Count Four of the Indictment, of direct commission of
+Crimes against Humanity. Not even participation in the conspiracy to
+commit Crimes Against Humanity was contended in the detailed charges.
+That, I would say, is an admission that there was in fact no relation,
+between his activity and the Crimes against Humanity of which the
+Prosecution has brought evidence. Nevertheless the Prosecution presented
+some documents which are apparently meant to prove his participation in
+the responsibility for certain Crimes against Humanity.
+
+In judging these documents the most important question always is: What
+did Admiral Dönitz know of those alleged crimes? On this subject I
+should like to make one point clear. During the entire war he resided
+and lived at his staff headquarters, first on the North Sea coast, after
+1940 in France, in 1943 for a short time in Berlin, and then in the Camp
+Koralle near Berlin. When he was at the Führer’s headquarters, he stayed
+with the naval staff there. Even outside his duty, his time was thus
+spent almost exclusively with naval officers. This may have been a
+weakness, but it is a fact which gives an additional explanation of his
+lack of knowledge of many events.
+
+The fact that the defendant forwarded a proposal by the Ministry for
+Armaments to employ 12,000 men from concentration camps as workers in
+the shipyards proves, according to the Prosecution, that Admiral Dönitz
+knew and approved of the arrest of countless innocent people and their
+ill-treatment and extermination in concentration camps.
+
+He actually knew, of course, that concentration camps existed and he
+also knew that, apart from the professional criminals, people arrested
+for political reasons were kept there. As has already been explained
+here, the protective custody of political adversaries for reasons of
+safety is a measure adopted by all states, at any rate in an emergency,
+and knowledge of such a measure can therefore incriminate no one.
+However, an unusually high number of political prisoners—out of
+proportion to the number of the population—may stamp a regime as a
+regime of terror, but taking into account a population of 80 million in
+the fifth year of a grim war, even twice or three times the number of
+12,000 men, which is the number mentioned by Admiral Dönitz, would not
+indicate a regime of terror, and the Prosecution will hardly claim that.
+
+Admiral Dönitz stated here that the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, as
+well as his collaborators and the overwhelming part of the German
+people, did not know of the abuses and killings that occurred in the
+concentration camps. All that the Prosecution has put forward against
+this are assumptions, but no proofs.
+
+On this point, therefore, I will only refer to the statement of the then
+Minister for Armaments, Speer, according to which the inmates of
+concentration camps were much better off in industrial work than in
+camp, and that they tried with all means to obtain employment in such
+work. The proposal forwarded therefore did not imply anything inhuman,
+but rather the opposite.
+
+The same request also contains a suggestion to take energetic measures
+against sabotage in Norwegian and Danish shipyards, where seven out of
+eight vessels under construction had been destroyed. If need be, the
+personnel should be entirely or in part employed as “KZ workers”
+because, so it says, sabotage of such dimensions can only occur if all
+the workers silently condone it. This therefore amounts to a proposition
+for security measures to consist in keeping the workers who actively or
+passively participated in sabotage in a camp close to the shipyard, so
+that their connections with sabotage agents would be cut off. I do not
+believe that juridical objections can be raised against such measures of
+security. According to the practice of all occupation troops even
+measures of collective punishment would be justified in such cases.[37]
+
+Actually the measures proposed were never carried out and the
+Prosecution presumably presents them only to accuse Admiral Dönitz quite
+generally of a brutal attitude toward the inhabitants of occupied
+territories. For this same purpose it even refers to a statement of the
+Führer at a conference on the military situation in the summer of 1944,
+according to which terror in Denmark must be fought with counterterror.
+Admiral Dönitz’s only connection with this statement was that he heard
+it and that his companion, Admiral Wagner, wrote it down. The Navy had
+no part in this statement, nor did it take any measures as a result of
+it.
+
+In contrast to this line of evidence of the Prosecution, I should like
+to emphasize the attitude which Admiral Dönitz actually showed toward
+the population of the occupied territories. There is before the Tribunal
+a survey of the administration of justice by the naval courts in
+protecting the inhabitants of the occupied territories against excesses
+by members of the Navy. The survey is based on an examination of about
+2,000 files on delicts and some of the judgments given are quoted with
+the facts and the reasons of the verdicts. Judging from that survey, one
+can fairly say that the naval courts protected the inhabitants in the
+West and in the East with justice and severity, including their lives as
+well as their property and the honor of their women. This administration
+of justice was constantly supervised by the Commander-in-Chief of the
+Navy as the Chief Court Administrator. Under terms of legal procedure it
+was his duty to confirm death penalties imposed on German soldiers.
+
+The time at my disposal does not permit a more detailed discussion of
+some of these judgments. A phrase expressed in one of them may be taken
+to apply to all: All soldiers must know that in occupied territory as
+well the life and property of others will be fully safeguarded. This was
+the general attitude in the Navy, and the severity of the penalties
+inflicted proves how seriously it was taken.
+
+I need only say a few words about the order issued in the spring of
+1945, in which a German prisoner of war, a noncommissioned officer, was
+cited as an example, because he had unobtrusively and systematically
+done away with some Communists who were attracting attention to
+themselves in their prison camp. As Admiral Wagner recalled, it was
+actually an informer who was liquidated. But the facts were camouflaged
+as described in order to avoid giving enemy intelligence a clue to the
+camp and the person of the noncommissioned officer. There cannot be any
+doubt that this order in its true background could be justified in view
+of the enormous number of political murders which have been committed
+with the connivance or assistance of governments engaged in the war, the
+perpetrators being today extolled as heroes. I cannot, however, consider
+as serious the argument that the unfortunately camouflaged wording could
+be proof of a general plan to liquidate Communists. A court judgment for
+the protection of Communists will reveal the true circumstances. A
+sergeant had stolen hospital blankets which were intended for Soviet
+prisoners of war and had extracted a dead prisoner’s gold teeth. This
+sergeant was sentenced to death by a naval court and executed after the
+sentence had been confirmed by the Commander-in-Chief.
+
+Finally, the Prosecution also established a connection with the Jewish
+question through a remark in which Grossadmiral Dönitz speaks of the
+“creeping poison of Jewry.” On this point I should like to add some
+comments. Dönitz knew as little of the plan for the destruction of the
+Jews as he did of its execution. He did know of the resettlement in the
+Government General of Jews living in Germany. I do not think that a
+resettlement of this sort can be condemned at a time when expulsions of
+Germans on a much larger scale are taking place before the eyes of a
+silent world. Here, too, I refer to a sentence of long penitentiary
+terms against two German sailors who, together with some Frenchmen, had
+robbed French Jews. From the findings of the court I again quote a
+sentence which characterizes the general attitude: “That the crimes were
+committed against Jews does not excuse the defendants in any way.”
+
+Similarly, it seems to me that the efforts of the Prosecution to include
+Admiral Dönitz in its construction of the conspiracy by terming him a
+fanatical Nazi have failed. He was neither a member of the Party nor was
+he ever politically prominent before his appointment as
+Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. The assertion of the Prosecution that he
+became Commander-in-Chief of the Navy because of his political attitude
+lacks all foundation. As a professional officer, to whom every political
+activity was forbidden by the Reich Defense Law, he had no reason for
+dealing with National Socialism in any way. However, he, too, like
+millions of other Germans, recognized the unique success of Hitler’s
+leadership in social and economic fields and, of course, also the
+liberation from the obligations of Versailles which Hitler had brought
+about and which particularly concerned Admiral Dönitz as a soldier.
+Therefore, at the time of his appointment as Commander-in-Chief of the
+Navy, he was politically in no way active, although loyal to the
+National Socialist State.
+
+This appointment introduced two new elements into his relations with
+National Socialism. There was first of all his personal contact with
+Adolf Hitler. Like almost everyone else who had personal dealings with
+this man, he too was most deeply impressed by him. The respect for the
+head of the State and loyalty to the Supreme Commander inherent in the
+professional officer were complemented by admiration for the statesman
+and strategist. It is difficult fully to appreciate such an attitude in
+view of the information which has come to light in the course of this
+Trial. I feel neither called upon nor able to judge a personality like
+Adolf Hitler. But one thing seems to me certain, namely, that with a
+consummate art of camouflage he skillfully concealed the repulsive
+traits of his character from those of his collaborators to whom he did
+not dare reveal this part of his nature. The Hitler with whom the new
+Commander-in-Chief of the Navy became acquainted at that time, and whom
+he admired, was therefore an entirely different man from the one which
+the world—rightly or wrongly—pictures today.
+
+The second new element in the relations between Grossadmiral Dönitz and
+National Socialism was that in the performance of his military duties he
+necessarily came into contact with the political authorities of the
+Reich. Whether he needed more men, more ships, or more arms, in the end
+he always had to discuss these matters with the political authorities,
+and in order to be successful in his demands, he had to make sure that
+any political mistrust was eliminated from the very start. This he
+deliberately did, and he demanded the same of his subordinates. To him
+the Party was not an ideological factor, but rather the actual exponent
+of political power. He was linked with it in the common aim to win the
+war, and for the achievement of this aim he considered it his ally. But
+to obtain the advantages which one expects of an ally, one must be
+willing to make certain sacrifices, especially sacrifices in overlooking
+faults and in ignoring conflicting issues.
+
+However, his connection with the Führer and his contact with the Party,
+which were concomitants of his position and of his duties as
+Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, never led him to participate in anything
+for which he could not assume responsibility before his conscience. Some
+points of the Prosecution even go to prove this. The Führer demanded
+action against shipwrecked crews; Admiral Dönitz rejected it. The Führer
+asked for withdrawal from the Geneva Convention; Admiral Dönitz rejected
+it. He stubbornly and successfully resisted the Party’s influence upon
+the Armed Forces. Thanks to his resistance the National Socialist
+Führungsoffiziere did not become political commissars, but were, as
+genuine officers, merely advisers to their commander, who retained the
+sole responsibility for the leadership of his unit. The transfer of
+proceedings against soldiers on political grounds from the military
+courts to the People’s Courts, which had been advocated by the Party,
+was prevented by Grossadmiral Dönitz until the winter of 1944-45, and a
+Führer order to this effect issued at that time was never carried out in
+the Navy. Thus he never identified himself with the Party and can
+therefore surely not be held responsible for its ideological endeavors
+or its excesses, just as in foreign politics a government would not be
+ready to assume responsibility for such things if they had been done by
+an ally.
+
+I do not by any means want to give the impression that Admiral Dönitz
+was not a National Socialist. On the contrary, I just want to use him as
+an example to disprove the theory that every National Socialist as such
+must be a criminal. This Tribunal is the sole instance in which
+authoritative personalities of the great Allied Powers are dealing
+directly and in detail with the last 12 years of the German past. It is,
+therefore, the only hope of very many Germans for the removal of a fatal
+error which is causing the weaker elements of our nation to become
+hypocrites and is thus proving a decisive obstacle on the road to
+political recovery.
+
+And now I should like to deal with the charge that in February 1945
+Admiral Dönitz protracted the inevitable surrender out of political
+fanaticism, and I wish to do so for a particular reason. This charge,
+which seems hardly to have anything to do with the Indictment before an
+International Tribunal, weighs particularly heavily in the eyes of the
+German people, for this nation truly knows what destruction and losses
+it endured in those last months from February until May 1945. I have
+submitted declarations of Darlan, Chamberlain, and Churchill from the
+year 1940 in which those statesmen, in a critical hour for their
+countries, called for desperate resistance, for the defense of every
+village and of every house. Nobody will conclude from this that these
+men were fanatical National Socialists. The question of unconditional
+surrender is indeed of such colossal import to a nation, that in fact it
+is not possible until after the event to judge whether a statesman who
+had to face this question did or did not do the right thing. Admiral
+Dönitz, however, was not a statesman in February 1945, but the
+Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. Should he have asked his subordinates to
+lay down their arms at a time when the political authority of the State
+still considered military resistance as opportune and necessary? Nobody
+will seriously demand that.
+
+Much more difficult seems to me the question of whether, in view of the
+high esteem Hitler had for him, he should not have considered it his
+duty to point out clearly to Hitler the hopelessness of prolonged
+resistance.
+
+Personally, I would have affirmed this to be his duty toward his nation,
+if Admiral Dönitz himself at that time had considered that surrender was
+justified. He did not consider it justified, and he gave his reasons:
+Surrender implied a halt of the armies and of the population; the German
+Army on the Eastern Front—still numbering more than 2 million men in
+February 1945—and the entire civilian population of the German eastern
+provinces would thereby have fallen into the hands of the Soviet armies,
+and in a bitterly cold winter month, too. Admiral Dönitz, therefore, was
+of the opinion, shared by Generaloberst Jodl, that the losses in men
+suffered in that way would be far greater than the losses which would
+necessarily be caused if the capitulation were postponed until the
+warmer season. Only in future years, when more exact data regarding
+casualties of the Army and of the civilian population both before and
+after the surrender in the East and in the West are available, will it
+be possible to view this opinion objectively. But it may already be said
+today that such considerations arose entirely from a full sense of
+responsibility for the life of German men and women.
+
+The same sense of responsibility caused him, when he became head of the
+State on 1 May 1945, to cease hostilities against the West, but to
+protract the surrender in the East for a few days, days in which
+hundreds of thousands were able to escape to the West. From the moment
+when—to his own complete surprise—he was given a political task, he
+calmly and intelligently averted a threatening chaos, prevented
+desperate mass action without a leader, and assumed responsibility
+before the German people for the gravest action which any statesman can
+take at all.
+
+Thus, to revert to the beginning of the Indictment, he did nothing to
+start this war, but he took the decisive steps to end it.
+
+Since that moment the German nation has learned of many things which it
+did not expect, and more than once it has been referred to the
+unconditional surrender which the last head of the State carried
+through. It is for this Tribunal to decide whether in the future this
+nation will be reminded of the binding value of the signature of a man
+who is being outlawed as a criminal before the whole world by his
+partners in the agreement.
+
+At the beginning of my speech I mentioned the doubts which any trial of
+war criminals is bound to call forth in the mind and heart of any
+lawyer. They must weigh upon all who bear any responsibility in such a
+trial. I could not more fittingly describe the task of all the
+responsible persons than in the words of a British attorney speaking of
+the trials before the German Supreme Court in the year 1921. I quote:
+
+ “The war criminals’ trials were demanded by an angry public
+ rather than by statesmen or the fighting services. Had public
+ opinion in 1919 had its way, the trials might have presented a
+ grim spectacle, of which future generations would have been
+ ashamed. But thanks to the statesmen and the lawyers, a public
+ yearning for revenge was converted into a real demonstration of
+ the majesty of right and the power of law.”[38]
+
+May the verdict of this Tribunal stand in a similar way before the
+judgment of history.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Siemers for the Defendant Raeder.
+
+DR. WALTER SIEMERS (Counsel for Defendant Raeder): Gentlemen of the
+Tribunal, in my final speech for the Defendant Grossadmiral Dr. Raeder,
+I should like to keep to the order I chose for my document books and for
+the whole presentation of my evidence. I think a survey of the whole
+case will thus be made easier.
+
+Raeder, who has just turned 70 years of age, has been exclusively a
+soldier, body and soul, ever since the age of 18, that is to say, for
+nigh on half a century covering an eventful period. Although he was
+never concerned with anything but his duties as a soldier, the
+Prosecution has accused him, in this great Trial against National
+Socialism, not only as a soldier, namely, as Commander-in-Chief of the
+German Navy, but, a singular and decisive point, as a politician, as a
+political conspirator, and as a member of the Government, three things
+which in truth he never was.
+
+I am, therefore, faced with the singular task of defending Raeder as a
+politician, although it was precisely, as I shall demonstrate, his life
+principle as an officer to keep aloof from politics, and to command an
+officers’ corps and a Navy likewise committed to remain entirely free
+from politics.
+
+If the Prosecution levels such manifold and grave accusations against
+Raeder, this is primarily because it has conceived a notion entirely
+foreign to the German Armed Forces, namely the notion of an admiral
+being responsible for foreign policy and for the outbreak of a war.
+
+I shall disprove this conception and show that it was unjustified and
+unfounded even in Hitler’s National Socialist State. True, Hitler again
+and again placed politics in the forefront of the nation and endeavored
+to give the nation a one-track political education. Foreign countries
+knew this, and they may well therefore be all the more surprised by the
+fact that Hitler refrained from such political shaping in one single
+instance. Every administration, every organization, and every police
+institution was directed by Hitler on political principles, with the
+single exception of the Armed Forces. The Armed Forces, and the Navy in
+particular, remained for a long time and far into the war absolutely
+unpolitical. And not only did Hitler give Raeder an assurance to this
+effect, but he had also given the same assurance to Hindenburg as Reich
+President. This explains the fact, which has also been made clear in
+this Trial, that up to 1944 no officer could be a member of the Party,
+and if he was, then his membership was suspended.
+
+After these preliminary reflections it will be understood why Raeder, as
+his interrogation showed, was disconcerted and amazed at these
+accusations which amount to a political charge. A man who is nothing but
+a soldier cannot understand why he should suddenly and without any
+relation to his military duties be made responsible for things which at
+no time came within the compass of his activity.
+
+I shall naturally also discuss the military accusations, with the
+exception of submarine warfare, which, for the sake of uniformity, has
+already been dealt with by Dr. Kranzbühler on behalf of Raeder, too.
+
+It will be seen from other military accusations, as for instance in the
+cases of Norway and Greece, that again and again there arises this
+discrepancy between the political and the military aspects: Raeder acted
+as Commander-in-Chief on the basis of military considerations, whereas
+the Prosecution now calls him to account on the basis of political
+considerations, by evaluating the military actions as political ones.
+
+The first instance of this discrepancy already lies in the accusations
+raised against Raeder with regard to the period before 1933, that is,
+before National Socialism. In connection with these accusations it must
+not be overlooked that Hitler, the head of the alleged conspiracy for
+the waging of wars of aggression, did not rule Germany at that time, and
+yet already at that time there is supposed to have existed a common
+conspiracy between Hitler and a part of the defendants.
+
+This is all the more surprising because Raeder, as a naval officer and
+after 1928 as Chief of the Naval High Command, at that time had nothing,
+absolutely nothing at all, to do with National Socialism, and did not
+even know Hitler and his co-workers in the Party. The accusations
+concerning the violations of the Versailles Treaty are included by the
+Prosecution in the conspiracy, although the violations did not take
+place under Hitler’s leadership, but under the leadership or with the
+approval of the democratic governments in Germany at the time. This
+shows that the Prosecution does not only want to attack National
+Socialism through this Trial, as has been emphasized again and again
+during the war and after the collapse, but that the Indictment extends
+its scope to large circles in Germany which had nothing to do with
+National Socialism, some of whom were even direct enemies of National
+Socialism.
+
+(1) For this very reason it seemed to me extremely important to clear up
+the question of the violation of the Treaty of Versailles in the course
+of the presentation of evidence in the Raeder case. I have endeavored to
+do so with the approval of the Tribunal, and I am firmly convinced that
+I have succeeded. I need not discuss each of the violations, which have
+been treated in detail and which the Prosecution has produced in
+Document C-32. It should be sufficient if I refer to the extensive
+evidence as well as to the following facts:
+
+Every single point was either a mere trifle or else a military
+measure—such as for example the antiaircraft batteries—based
+exclusively on the notion of defense. Raeder has plainly admitted that
+treaty infractions did occur, but the trivial nature of the infractions
+showed that these measures could not possibly have been connected with
+an intention to wage wars of aggression.
+
+Moreover, I need only point out that from the legal point of view a
+treaty violation cannot _ipso jure_ be a crime. Certainly the violation
+of a treaty between nations is no more permissible than the violation of
+a contract between private firms in commercial law. Such a violation is,
+however, not a punishable action, much less a crime. Even on the basis
+of the argument of the Prosecution, such action would be punishable only
+if the violation had been undertaken with criminal intent, that is, if
+it had been aimed at a war of aggression in contradiction to the Kellogg
+Pact. However, not even the Prosecution will be able to maintain this,
+and it has already indirectly intimated as much by refraining from
+taking up these points during the cross-examination of witnesses.
+
+(2) The position is somewhat different with regard to a charge which the
+Prosecution discussed in detail only during cross-examination, namely,
+the charge concerning the participation of the German Navy in U-boat
+constructions in Holland; in this connection the Prosecution has relied
+upon Document C-156, the book by Kapitän zur See Schüssler entitled,
+_Der Kampf der Marine gegen Versailles_, as well as on statements
+contained in the notes of the naval historian, Admiral Assmann, found in
+Document D-854.
+
+These documents prove that the German Navy had a share in a U-boat
+designing office in Holland, the firm N. V. Ingenieurskantoor voor
+Scheepsbouw. This participation occurred during the period before the
+Navy was under Raeder’s command. The Tribunal will recall that Raeder
+did not become Chief of the Naval Command until 1 October 1928, whereas
+participation in the designing office in Holland dates back to 1923 and
+the following years.
+
+May I emphasize, however, that in not a single instance was a U-boat
+built for the German Navy, and that consequently no U-boats were
+obtained or put into commission by the German Navy. In this connection I
+refer to the Versailles Treaty, Exhibit Number Raeder-1; Article 188 _et
+sequentes_ of the Treaty of Versailles contain the terms with regard to
+the Navy. According to Article 188, Germany was bound to deliver her
+U-boats to the Allied nations or to dismantle them. This obligation
+Germany fulfilled completely. Moreover, Article 191 stipulates the
+following; I quote: “The construction and purchase of all submarine
+vessels, even for commercial purposes, is forbidden in Germany.”
+
+It appears from this clear treaty clause that participation in the Dutch
+firm was not a violation of the Treaty of Versailles. According to
+Article 191, Germany was only forbidden to construct or purchase
+U-boats, moreover, strictly speaking, only in Germany.
+
+As a matter of fact, no U-boat was built in Germany in violation of the
+Treaty, and no U-boat was built for Germany abroad either. Participation
+in a foreign designing office was not forbidden, nor was this the
+purpose of the Treaty of Versailles. The point was merely that Germany
+should not create a U-boat force for herself. The Navy, however, was
+permitted to participate in a designing office so as to keep abreast of
+modern submarine construction, to gather information for the future, and
+to lay the foundation for an eventual construction of submarines, when
+permitted, by training technical experts (See Exhibit Number Raeder-2,
+Lohmann Affidavit). The afore-mentioned documents, submitted by the
+Prosecution, prove that the submarines designed by the Dutch firm and
+built abroad were put into service abroad, namely by Turkey and Finland.
+
+Even if one were to take the view that designing work also was
+prohibited, then what was said under Figure (1) also applies. The
+designing was limited to only a few submarines, so that this small
+number in itself proves that there cannot have been any intention of
+waging wars of aggression.
+
+(3) In case the High Tribunal should be unable to follow this train of
+thought as a sole argument, I may point out in addition that the lack of
+an aggressive intention is also evident from the fact that the trivial
+violations of the treaty were in a certain way compensated. I refer to
+the second affidavit of Admiral Lohmann, Exhibit Number Raeder-8, which
+shows that according to the Treaty of Versailles Germany was allowed to
+build 8 armored ships, whereas in fact she only built 3; it shows also
+that instead of 8 cruisers only 6 were built up to 1935, and that
+instead of 32 destroyers or torpedo boats, only 12 destroyers and no
+torpedo boats were built. In fact, with regard to the really important
+weapons, and especially those which may be considered as offensive
+weapons, the Navy kept far below the maximum permitted by the Treaty of
+Versailles, and this indeed to such an extent that by comparison the
+trivial violations in naval matters hardly count.
+
+(4) According to the Weimar Constitution of 11 August 1919, Articles 47
+and 50 (Exhibit Number Raeder-3), the President of the Reich had supreme
+command of all the Armed Forces. In order to be valid, the decrees of
+the Reich President required the countersignature of the Reich
+Chancellor or the Reich ministers concerned, in this case, the Minister
+of Defense. I quote: “Responsibility is assumed through the
+countersignature.” Thus, from the point of view of constitutional law it
+is absolutely clear that the responsibility rests with the Minister of
+Defense or the Reich Government and the President of the Reich. It is,
+of course, true that before 1928, that is, before Raeder became the
+responsible Chief of the Naval Command, the Navy took a number of
+measures without the knowledge of the Reich Cabinet. But the evidence
+which I presented, especially the statement of the former Reich Minister
+Severing, shows that, contrary to the statements of the Prosecution, no
+secret measures were taken after Raeder became Chief of the Naval High
+Command. Severing has confirmed that the Müller-Stresemann-Severing
+Cabinet, in a Cabinet meeting of 18 October 1928, obtained a clear
+picture of the secret measures of the Armed Forces by interrogating
+Raeder as Chief of the Naval High Command and Heye as Chief of the Army
+Command.
+
+Both Raeder and Heye, after they had given an explanation, were obliged
+and directed by the Cabinet, in conformity with the afore-mentioned
+paragraphs of the Reich Constitution, to take no future measures without
+the knowledge of the Minister of Defense or the Cabinet. At the same
+time the Cabinet established that the secret measures taken before
+Raeder’s time were only trifling matters, and expressly assumed
+responsibility for them. If the Cabinet, in conformity with the
+Constitution, assumed the responsibility, this amounted to a legally and
+constitutionally effective procedure which exonerated Raeder as Chief of
+the Naval High Command and relieved him of responsibility. It appears,
+therefore, to be inadmissible that the defendant, who no longer bears
+the responsibility, should be made responsible for actions for which the
+Cabinet assumed responsibility.
+
+The attitude of the Cabinet in the Cabinet meeting of 18 October 1928
+further shows that none of these actions can have had as their basis any
+criminal intent to wage a war of aggression, for even the Prosecution
+will not desire to assert that men like Stresemann, Müller, and Severing
+intended to wage wars of aggression, but instead will have to believe
+Severing when he says that Stresemann, Müller, and he himself assumed
+responsibility for these violations only because they were based purely
+on conceptions of defense. One will also have to believe Severing’s
+words that such conceptions of defense were justified, since in the
+twenties the danger that Germany might be attacked, for instance by
+Poland, was quite real, and she would then not have been in a position
+to defend herself with the small Armed Forces allowed her by the
+Versailles Treaty. This danger was particularly evident in connection
+with Polish border incidents in East Prussia and Silesia and during the
+occupation of Vilna, and it even increased when all attempts of
+Stresemann and Müller failed to achieve adherence to the promise to
+disarm which the other powers had given in the Versailles Treaty.
+
+How difficult Germany’s position was and how justified measures of
+defense were, Justice Jackson himself admitted in his opening speech,
+when he said, I quote:
+
+ “It is quite possible that Germany in the twenties and thirties
+ was confronted with desperately difficult tasks, tasks which
+ would have justified the boldest measures, but not war.”
+
+I shall not even go as far as Mr. Justice Jackson, but I believe that
+these measures taken by the Navy are certainly covered by his own
+concept of “boldest measures.”
+
+The British prosecutor, Mr. Elwyn Jones, attempted during the
+cross-examination of Severing to prove that Raeder did not observe the
+obligations imposed on him in the Cabinet meeting of 18 October 1928,
+because Severing, according to his testimony, was not informed of the
+construction abroad of the small submarines for Turkey and Finland. In
+this connection, two things must be considered:
+
+a. During his testimony Severing did not remember the details, but only
+the fundamental and decisive questions; with regard to the details, he
+naturally relied on the competent minister, in this case, the Reich
+Defense Minister.
+
+b. According to Severing’s testimony it was an exception that the Chief
+of the Naval High Command appeared before the entire Cabinet on 18
+October 1928. Raeder as Chief of the Naval High Command was not obliged
+to inform all the members of the Cabinet, but was, in accordance with
+the Constitution, merely obliged to inform the Reich Defense Minister,
+and that Raeder did. What the Reich Defense Minister then for his part
+submitted to the other members of the Cabinet and to the Reichstag was
+not only beyond Raeder’s knowledge, it was also outside Raeder’s
+responsibility, and solely within that of the Reich Defense Minister and
+the Cabinet.
+
+In conclusion may I point out the following: If, despite all this, the
+Prosecution wishes to look upon these violations of the Treaty of
+Versailles on the part of the Navy as evidence of an intention to wage a
+war of aggression, then the Social Democrat or Democrat governments of
+that time bear the responsibility. Thereby the Indictment on this point
+collapses, for to take the governments of that time to task for the
+intention of waging wars of aggression would lead the Prosecution on
+this point to an _ad absurdum_.
+
+(5) The treaty violations during the period from 1933 until the
+Anglo-German Naval Agreement of 1935 show the same factual and juridical
+picture. During these 2 years no important expansion of naval armament
+took place either. The only disputable accusation made by the
+Prosecution in this respect is contained in Document D-855, which was
+submitted during cross-examination. This is the report of
+Flottenintendant Thiele. According to this it was decided in March 1935,
+that is, a few months before the naval agreement, to prepare plans for
+the _Scharnhorst_ and the _Gneisenau_ with a displacement of 27,000
+tons, although the maximum of 10,000 tons fixed by the Treaty of
+Versailles was still formally in force at that time for another 3
+months, in contrast to a maximum displacement of 35,000 tons provided
+for in the Naval Agreement of 1935.
+
+Here it should be taken into consideration that in March 1935 Germany
+could already count on the speedy conclusion of an Anglo-German
+agreement, whereas the period between the planning and the completion of
+a battleship is a much longer one, which cannot be counted in months,
+but only in years. As a matter of fact, the _Scharnhorst_ and
+_Gneisenau_ were only commissioned in 1938 and 1939, 3 and 4 years
+respectively after the naval pact (see Exhibit Number Raeder-2, Lohmann
+Affidavit).
+
+The other matters submitted by the Prosecution are again trifles; for
+instance, the selection (not the construction, as the Prosecution says)
+of four or five merchantmen (see C-166), or the construction of 5
+E-boats of 40 tons each (see C-151), which for technical reasons were
+built in place of 12 torpedo boats of 200 tons each. The Prosecution
+cannot in all seriousness turn these facts into grave accusations,
+especially as the afore-mentioned deviations from the Versailles Treaty
+were known to foreign technical specialists or—as the witness
+Schulte-Mönting correctly put it—were an “open secret.”
+
+(6) And now I come to the decisive juridical aspect of all developments
+up to the summer of 1935. In the field of international law the same
+principle applies as in the field of internal commercial law: Breaches
+of agreement are considered adjusted and settled with the signing of a
+new agreement. In the present case the Anglo-German Naval Treaty of 18
+June 1935—Exhibit Number Raeder-11—represents the new agreement. This
+naval agreement deviates completely from the Versailles Treaty both with
+regard to high-tonnage vessels and with regard to U-boats. It is only on
+the basis of what is permitted Germany by this new agreement that the
+insignificance of earlier violations of the Versailles Treaty, not at
+the time covered by existing agreements, becomes apparent.
+
+10,000-ton cruisers were replaced by 35,000-ton battleships, and the ban
+on the construction of U-boats was replaced by the acknowledgement of
+equal rights with regard to U-boat tonnage. Germany’s demands were not
+unreasonable; on the contrary, in the document mentioned, His Majesty’s
+Government in the United Kingdom explicitly confirmed the German
+proposal to be “... an exceedingly important contribution to future
+limitation of naval armaments.”
+
+This agreement between Britain and Germany concluded the debate on the
+Versailles Treaty both factually and juridically, as far as the Navy is
+concerned. This naval agreement was generally welcomed in Britain and
+Germany at that time, and it was supplemented by a new agreement on 17
+June 1937 (see Exhibit Number Raeder-14). As proof of the fact that the
+Navy violated the naval agreement, too, with aggressive intentions, the
+Prosecution has raised two charges:
+
+(1) In the Agreement of 1937 both contracting governments were bound to
+a mutual exchange of information, which was to take place annually,
+within the first 4 months of every calendar year, and was to contain
+details of the building program. According to Document C-23, the Navy
+violated this obligation insofar as it gave lower figures for the
+displacement and the draught of the battleships _Bismarck_ and _Tirpitz_
+which were being built at the beginning of 1938, namely, as 35,000 tons
+instead of 41,700 tons. That this violation of the treaty did occur is
+openly admitted by Raeder, but again it is not such a serious violation
+as the Prosecution contends, that is, it is not a violation which shows
+proof of criminal intent. That is clear from the detailed evidence I
+have presented and from the testimonies of witnesses which I need not
+repeat here; it will be sufficient if I refer to the absolutely
+convincing expert testimony of the ship-building director, Dr. Süchting,
+which I have submitted as Exhibit Number Raeder-15. According to this,
+the increase in tonnage demanded by the Navy during the construction
+served a purely defensive idea, namely, that of increasing the armor
+plating of the battleships and of arranging the bulkheads in such a way
+that the battleships would be virtually unsinkable. This defensive idea,
+Dr. Süchting emphasizes, actually proved to be correct during the attack
+on and sinking of the battleship _Bismarck_. If it was only a question
+of a defensive idea, no aggressive intentions can be construed from this
+treaty violation.
+
+With regard to the juridical aspect, it must be added that in the Naval
+Agreement of 1937, Articles 24, 25, and 26 conceded to the contracting
+governments the right to deviate, under certain circumstances, from the
+contracted agreements and especially from the tonnage limitation of
+battleships, if any other sea powers should build or acquire larger
+battleships. This case, stated in Article 25, had actually arisen, and
+so the violation of the agreement consisted in the fact that the Navy,
+although now entitled to build larger battleships, neglected to inform
+Britain of her desire to make use of that right. It was, therefore, only
+a violation of the obligation to exchange information. How meaningless
+this measure was is proved by the alteration of the Anglo-German Naval
+Agreement by virtue of the London Protocol of 30 June 1938, which I have
+submitted as Exhibit Number Raeder-16.
+
+Already on 31 March 1938, that is, only 6 weeks after the date of
+Document C-23, Britain on her part had stated, according to the London
+Protocol of 30 June 1938, that she must make use of the afore-mentioned
+right granted by Article 25, and therefore proposed that the battleship
+tonnage be increased from 35,000 to 45,000. This agreement was then
+signed by both countries on 30 June 1938, and thus the violation of the
+treaty evident from Document C-23, became illusory.
+
+(2) The British prosecutor raised a second charge by submitting Document
+D-854 during cross-examination. It consists of notes made by Admiral
+Assmann for his historical writings; on Sheet 15 of these notes he
+writes that Germany abided by the terms of the Anglo-German Naval
+Agreement least of all in the sphere of U-boat building and that 55
+U-boats were allowed by the treaty up to 1938, but 118 were actually
+completed or begun. These statements by Assmann are actually incorrect,
+and in reality Germany strictly followed all the stipulations of the
+Anglo-German Naval Agreement with regard to U-boat building. Despite the
+assurance of equality of rights Germany by the Naval Agreement of 1935
+voluntarily limited herself to 45 percent; but the right to increase
+this percentage at any time by friendly agreement with Britain was
+reserved for her. The presentation of evidence has shown (see the
+testimony of Raeder and Schulte-Mönting) that in December 1938
+corresponding negotiations took place between the British Admiral Lord
+Cunningham and Grossadmiral Raeder, during which His Majesty’s
+Government approved the increase to 100 percent. It was not clear at the
+time when this evidence was presented, whether this approval had also
+been given in writing, as was to be assumed. Meanwhile I have been able
+to establish that such a document must have existed; I was able to
+gather this from the afore-mentioned Assmann Document D-854 in which on
+Page 169, in connection with Page 161, the letter in question dated 18
+January 1939 is mentioned. In conclusion it remains to be said that the
+figure of 55 U-boats mentioned by Assmann corresponds to 45 percent,
+whereas the figure of 118 U-boats corresponds to 100 percent;
+accordingly Assmann, and therefore the Prosecution as well, are wrong.
+Actually there was no violation at all of the naval agreement with
+regard to U-boats.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. SIEMERS: I now come to the allegation of the Prosecution that
+Grossadmiral Raeder took part in a conspiracy to wage wars of
+aggression, and in particular supported Hitler and National Socialism
+despite his alleged knowledge that Hitler from the beginning had the
+intention of waging wars of aggression.
+
+(1) How did Raeder establish contact with Hitler, and was he able, or
+even bound, at that time to realize an intention on the part of Hitler
+to wage wars of aggression?
+
+As I have said, it is a fact that Raeder before 1933 had nothing to do
+with National Socialism and knew neither Hitler nor his Party
+collaborators; he met Hitler on 2 February 1933, when he and the other
+commanders were introduced to Hitler by Baron von Hammerstein. As Chief
+of the Naval High Command Raeder had only one superior, Reich President
+Von Hindenburg, who, according to the Constitution and the Defense
+Law,[39] was the Supreme Commander of the whole Armed Forces.
+Hindenburg, as Reich President, had appointed Hitler Reich Chancellor,
+and thus a connection was of necessity created between Hitler and the
+Armed Forces. There was thus no question of any decision on the part of
+Raeder. As Hindenburg’s subordinate, he had as a soldier to submit to
+the political decision which Hindenburg had taken as President of the
+Reich. The constitutional basis with regard to the Armed Forces was in
+no way altered by the fact that Hitler came to power. As Chief of the
+Naval High Command Raeder took as little part in this political decision
+as he had done on previous occasions when Müller, who was a Social
+Democrat, or Brüning, who belonged to the Center Party, became Reich
+Chancellors.
+
+Nor was there any cause for Raeder to resign his post on account of this
+internal political decision, for Hitler had explained to him and the
+other high officers at the first conference on 2 February 1933, and
+particularly also on the occasion of the first naval report in the same
+month, that nothing in the Armed Forces would be changed and that the
+Armed Forces must remain aloof from politics, as laid down in the
+Constitution and the Defense Law.
+
+The testimony of Raeder and Schulte-Mönting proves that during the naval
+report Hitler explained his fundamental ideas in regard to a peaceful
+policy, in which connection, in spite of the amicable revision of the
+Versailles Treaty to which he aspired, it was essential to come to an
+understanding with England by means of a treaty providing for the
+development of the Navy within the general limitations of naval
+armament. During this conversation Hitler clearly indicated that he did
+not want a naval armament race and that the development of the Navy
+should take place only in friendly agreement with England. This
+principle was absolutely in line with the viewpoint of Raeder and the
+Navy, and it was therefore quite out of the question for Raeder to tell
+his superior, Hindenburg, that on account of Hitler he could no longer
+head the Navy.
+
+Now the Prosecution maintains that the leading personalities in Germany
+at that time already knew Hitler’s true intentions from his book _Mein
+Kampf_, and has cited as proof several quotations, partly torn from
+their context, from Hitler’s propaganda book of 1924. This argument of
+the Prosecution does not seem to hold good, because Hitler wrote this
+book as a private individual belonging to an opposition party. In this
+Trial it has several times been pointed out that the statements of
+foreign private individuals are irrelevant even when these foreigners
+are well known, and subsequently—as in Hitler’s case—received a
+position in the government. Raeder could assume, as could anyone else,
+that as Reich Chancellor Hitler would not uphold all the Party doctrines
+which years before he had defended as a member of the opposition,
+particularly since the statements of Hitler on military matters
+contradicted these former Party ideas. Moreover, the Navy relations with
+England were always of foremost importance and in this connection Hitler
+himself had said in his book _Mein Kampf_, Page 154: “But for such a
+policy there was only one possible partner in Europe: England.”
+(Document Book 2, Document Number Raeder-20, Page 119.)
+
+In rebuttal of the quotations submitted by the Prosecution it must also
+be said that they are all taken from the 1933 edition and that, in spite
+of great pains, the General Secretary’s office has been unable to
+procure an earlier edition, particularly the first edition of 1925 and
+1927. It is a known fact that in later years Hitler himself made changes
+on many points in numerous places in his book, consequently the
+quotations from the 1933 edition cannot be taken as a basis on their
+face value.
+
+Ought Raeder in the following years to have realized that Hitler desired
+to abandon the fundamental idea of an understanding with England, and is
+it possible to agree with the argument of the Prosecution that Raeder
+should have refused further collaboration at some time before 1939? I
+believe that this question must be answered in the negative for reasons
+which appear quite naturally from various facts which the Prosecution or
+the Defense submitted in evidence:
+
+Hindenburg died on 2 August 1934, and the Prosecution reproaches Raeder
+because he thereupon took an oath in which he named the Führer in the
+place of the fatherland. (Record of 15 January 1946, Volume V, Page
+262.) This point was sufficiently clarified in the presentation of
+evidence. Therefore I need only refer to the error which the Prosecution
+made in its assertion; the Prosecution itself produced Document D-481
+which shows the oath of allegiance taken by the soldiers of the Armed
+Forces on Hitler’s orders. The document is a law signed by Hitler,
+Frick, and Blomberg and it shows that it was not Raeder who replaced the
+word “Vaterland” by “Hitler,” but that Hitler himself demanded that all
+soldiers should take the oath to him as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed
+Forces. Before Hitler demanded this oath, which he had cleverly devised
+and which proved so fateful in the future, Raeder had neither been
+informed nor had his advice been asked on the wording. He was simply
+summoned to the Reich Chancellery without knowing the reason. The
+question as to what kind of oath is to be taken by a soldier is again a
+political one, a question of legislation, upon which Raeder as a soldier
+and Commander-in-Chief of the Navy had no influence.
+
+The Prosecution charges Raeder with having been informed of many
+political decisions and with having, as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy,
+made strategic plans and preparations on the occasions of such political
+measures. The Prosecution referred to the withdrawal from the League of
+Nations on 14 October 1933, the occupation of the Rhineland on 7 March
+1936, the Austrian Anschluss in March 1938, the incorporation of the
+Sudetenland in the autumn of 1938, and the establishment of the
+Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in March 1939.[40]
+
+The documents in question are in the main those marked in the footnote,
+and I can refer to them jointly in this connection. There is one fact
+common to all of these decisions, namely, that Raeder did not
+politically take part in any of them. Raeder was never consulted
+beforehand and as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy he had no authority to
+participate in such decisions. Raeder did nothing more than take note of
+these documents and reports, and then issue the orders necessary for
+precautionary military measures in case the country became involved in
+war. It seems quite incomprehensible that the commander-in-chief of a
+branch of the Armed Forces should be reproached for having made
+strategic preparations in the event of political complications. I
+imagine that it is customary all over the world that an admiral never
+takes part in political decisions, while at the same time he is obliged
+to make certain precautionary preparations depending upon such political
+decisions of the government. This is another example of the discrepancy
+I have already mentioned affecting the position of a military commander,
+which, although the Prosecution considers it to be a political one, is
+in reality purely military. There is hardly any doubt that the military
+commands of foreign countries involved in these political decisions or
+interested in them were also at the same time taking precautionary
+military measures.
+
+A military commander could not judge whether these political decisions
+of Hitler were crimes or even violations of international law, all the
+less since he was never summoned to the consultations. Neither the
+withdrawal from the League of Nations, as a result of the failure of all
+endeavors to induce the other countries to disarm in the spirit of the
+Versailles Treaty, nor the occupation of the Sudetenland or the
+establishment of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, can be
+regarded as criminal activities, in the sense of the Indictment, of a
+disinterested commander-in-chief. They were certainly deviations from
+the Versailles Treaty, but even the British Prosecutor, Sir Hartley
+Shawcross, declared on 4 December 1945 in this courtroom that “many
+objections against Versailles were possibly justified.”[41] And even
+Justice Jackson, as quoted above, said that the boldest measures would
+have been justified for the purpose of revising this treaty, but not a
+war.
+
+All these measures taken by Germany were in fact carried out without a
+war, and therefore come under the heading of measures which Justice
+Jackson considers justified, all the more so since they were all
+silently condoned by foreign countries, or even agreed upon by treaty,
+as for instance in the case of the incorporation of the Sudetenland by
+the Munich Agreement of September 1938, or, as in the case of Austria,
+by agreement with that country.
+
+In the cases of Austria and of the establishment of the Protectorate of
+Bohemia and Moravia, the Prosecution quite justifiably, looking at these
+cases objectively and retrospectively, points out that Hitler employed
+extremely dubious and possibly criminal means to achieve his aims;
+however, this can have no significance as far as the Commander-in-Chief
+of the Navy is concerned, since it has been firmly established that he
+was not informed of these activities, much less of the means employed
+therein. It has been established in particular that Raeder was neither
+informed of the details of the Austrian Anschluss nor of the kind of
+conference which ultimately led to an agreement with President Hacha. He
+was not told of the discussions with Hacha, nor of the threat of a
+bombardment of Prague, which was made in the course of these
+discussions; I refer in this connection to the testimony of the
+witnesses Raeder and Schulte-Mönting. In the eyes of Raeder, therefore,
+these constituted measures permissible under international law, or else
+agreements which gave him no cause to interfere or to question Hitler,
+quite apart from the fact that as a military commander he had no right
+whatsoever to do so.
+
+Moreover, had military complications arisen, land operations only would
+have been involved, as is quite obvious from the location of the
+countries concerned. It would have amounted to an impossible situation
+if the disinterested Commander-in-Chief of the Navy had seen fit to
+concern himself with these things although hardly any naval preparations
+were required. In the case of Czechoslovakia, for example, Document
+388-PS lays down, as far as the Navy was concerned, only that it was to
+participate in possible Army operations by commitment of the Danube
+flotilla which for this purpose was placed under the orders of the High
+Command of the Army; this flotilla consisted of very small ships, a few
+gunboats, if I remember correctly.
+
+In this connection I also quote Sir Hartley Shawcross when on 4 December
+1945 he spoke of the German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact of 1934: “By
+entering into it”—Hitler—“persuaded many people that his intentions
+were genuinely pacific ...”[42]
+
+Accordingly, Raeder too had reason to be convinced. It is true that
+Raeder belonged to the Secret Cabinet Council created in February 1938.
+But it is also true, and has been proved in the meantime, that the
+Secret Cabinet Council was just a farce. It is therefore unnecessary to
+deal with this point which the Prosecution originally considered so
+important.
+
+The claim of the Prosecution that Raeder was a member of the Government
+and a Reich minister has been refuted in the same way. This assertion of
+the Prosecution has from the outset been somewhat incomprehensible.
+Document 2098-PS, presented by the Prosecution, only states with
+absolute clarity that Von Brauchitsch, the Commander-in-Chief of the
+Army, and Raeder, the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, held—I quote—“a
+rank equivalent to that of a Reich minister.” This proves that he was
+not a minister, although for reasons of etiquette he held a rank equal
+to that of a Reich minister, and it follows that this decree of Hitler
+did not assign a political task to Raeder, as the Prosecution would like
+to have it.
+
+Moreover, this decree does not even give him the right to participate in
+Cabinet sessions at his own will, but only, as Hitler says in the
+above-mentioned document, “upon my order.” This simply means that Raeder
+might have been called upon by Hitler to participate in a Cabinet
+session when technical naval problems were being discussed. In reality
+this hypothetical and politically insignificant case never arose.
+
+Nor can membership in the Reich Defense Council—Document
+2194-PS[43]—be considered incriminating. In the first place the council
+was concerned, as the text says, only with “preparatory measures for the
+defense of the Reich,” that is, neither with political activities nor
+with activities connected in any political sense with aggressive war.
+Furthermore, according to Document 2018-PS, a later Führer decree of 13
+August 1939, and contrary to the claim of the Prosecution, Raeder never
+belonged to the Ministerial Council for the Defense of the Reich set up
+at that time, for the simple reason that he was not a minister. Actually
+other countries, too, possess institutions like a defense council or
+defense committee. I call attention to the fact that already long before
+the first World War the British Government had a defense committee which
+was of much greater importance[44] than the equivalent institution in
+Germany.
+
+As the final matter in this connection, I wish to point out that the
+claim of the Prosecution that Raeder was a Party member has also proved
+untenable. It is true that Raeder received the gold insignia of honor
+from Hitler; but this was only a decoration; it could not mean anything
+else, because a soldier could not be a member of the Party. That is
+clear beyond all doubt from Paragraph 36 of the Reich Defense Law, which
+forbids soldiers to engage in politics and to be members of a political
+organization.[45]
+
+I also refer to the evidence, which proved amply that Raeder never had
+connections with the Party, that indeed he more than once had arguments
+with Party circles and that he was unpopular with typical National
+Socialists because of his political and particularly his religious
+attitude. Goebbels, for instance, positively detested him, and this was
+not surprising, because on the one hand he always prevented the Party
+from gaining any sort of influence on the officers’ corps of the Navy,
+while on the other, in contrast to the Party, he supported the Church to
+the greatest extent, and saw to it that the morale of the Navy was
+founded on a Christian basis. I refer in this connection to the typical
+National Socialist phrase of Bormann:
+
+“National Socialist and Christian concepts are incompatible.”[46] In the
+same document Bormann, as he so often did, expressed views devoid of all
+civilized standards and attacked Christianity so strongly, and so
+violently advocated the elimination of all Christian ideas, that this
+attitude by the Party is sufficient proof that Raeder, as a devout
+Christian, could never have entertained relations with the Party.[47]
+
+I have already stated that in 1933 Hitler said that it would be one of
+the fundamentals of his policy to make Germany sound and strong by
+peaceful means, and that for such peaceful development it was absolutely
+necessary to acknowledge British hegemony and come to an agreement with
+Britain about the size of the German fleet—if possible, even to come to
+an alliance. These ideas coincided with Raeder’s fundamental attitude,
+which he explained in detail during his examination here. As far as my
+defense is concerned, it may remain an open question whether and when
+Hitler abandoned that basic thought. In any case, Hitler always
+emphasized this basic thought to Raeder and actually supported it with
+deeds; this ever-recurring thought can be traced through all the years
+up to the outbreak of war, and it was in the pursuit of this basic
+principle that the Anglo-German Naval Agreement was concluded in 1935
+and the second Anglo-German Naval Agreement in 1937, that an agreement
+on submarines was reached with Lord Cunningham in 1938, and that the
+London protocol on the subject of battleships was signed on 30 June
+1938. Thus, throughout the years of the reconstruction of the German
+Navy the same idea was always predominant, namely, of achieving
+agreement with Britain, of acknowledging Britain’s supremacy and of
+avoiding any difference which might lead to a break with Britain.
+
+Looking back now in cognizance of all the documents and all the facts
+proved during this Trial, Hitler may be assumed at some time, probably
+in 1938, to have become unfaithful to his own principles and thereby
+guilty of bringing about the tragic fate of Germany. However, in judging
+the accusations made against Raeder, the decisive issue is not what must
+subsequently, in the light of all known facts, be acknowledged as
+objectively true; the real issue is only whether Raeder realized, or was
+even able to realize, Hitler’s deviation from his own ideas, and the
+answer to that is “no.” Raeder could not have guessed, much less have
+known, that Hitler at some time became untrue to his own political ideas
+which he had repeatedly stressed and demonstrated, and thus guilty of
+kindling the frightful conflagration of World War II.
+
+Raeder could not have suspected or known that during the period
+immediately preceding the war Hitler spoke to him, too, in words which
+were at variance with his thoughts and also different from his actions.
+As far as the Navy in particular was concerned, the relatively slow
+rebuilding of the German fleet showed that Hitler proposed to remain
+faithful to the ideas which I described. There was no indication at all
+of a change of mind on Hitler’s part in this field, for a change of mind
+would surely have resulted in a naval rebuilding program bigger than the
+one which Hitler actually carried out. At the very least he would then
+have made full use of possibilities offered by the Anglo-German Naval
+Agreement. According to the Naval Agreement, the German fleet was
+allowed a total tonnage of 420,595 tons,[48] yet actually this maximum
+was never utilized. Even with regard to battleships, Germany remained
+short of the Naval Agreement, with the result that the battleships
+_Bismarck_ and _Tirpitz_ were not available in the first year of the
+war, and thus could not take part in the occupation of Norway; the
+_Bismarck_ was completed only in August 1940, and the _Tirpitz_ in 1941.
+
+According to the Naval Agreement, Germany was allowed the same tonnage
+in submarines as England. In reality, however, U-boat construction was
+so slow that at the beginning of the war in 1939, as the evidence has
+proved, Germany had only the small number of 26 U-boats available for
+Atlantic service. And further, according to Document L-79, known as the
+“Little Schmundt,” it was laid down as late as the end of May 1939
+that—I quote—“no change will be made in the ship-building program.”
+
+All this must have firmly convinced the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy
+from his personal point of view and his sphere of work that Hitler
+wanted to stand by his much-stressed basic principle of avoiding war.
+
+Raeder’s firm conviction in this respect—this seems to be an important
+consideration—was to a large extent confirmed by the attitude of
+foreign countries. Winston Churchill, in his book _Great
+Contemporaries_, wrote in 1935:
+
+ “It is not possible to form a just judgment of a public figure
+ who has attained the enormous dimensions of Adolf Hitler, until
+ his lifework as a whole is before us ... We cannot tell whether
+ Hitler will be the man who will once again let loose upon the
+ world another war in which civilization will irretrievably
+ succumb, or whether he will go down in history as the man who
+ has restored honor and peace of mind to the great Germanic
+ nation, and brought it back serene, helpful, and strong to the
+ forefront of the European family circle.”
+
+One year later, at the Olympic Games in Berlin in 1936, the
+representatives of the foreign countries appeared in a body and greeted
+Hitler in a manner which, in its approval bordering on enthusiasm,
+appeared incomprehensible to many skeptically inclined Germans.
+Subsequently, the foremost politicians and members of various
+governments visited Hitler and reached complete understanding with him,
+and finally, in the autumn of 1938, agreement was again reached under
+Chamberlain and Lord Halifax; an agreement which strengthened Hitler
+immeasurably, and by which he sought to prove to the Germans how
+expedient all his actions had been, since they were thus approved by
+foreign countries. The joint declaration, which Chamberlain and Hitler
+issued in Munich on 30 September 1938, can never be overestimated in its
+importance. I would, therefore, like to quote the first two decisive
+sentences from it:
+
+ “We have had a further discussion today, and are agreed that the
+ question of Anglo-German relations is of primary importance for
+ both countries and for Europe.
+
+ “We regard the agreement signed last night and the Anglo-German
+ Naval Treaty as symbolic of the desire of our two nations never
+ again to wage war against each other.”
+
+I think that these references are sufficient. Now, can one demand of a
+German admiral, who has never been a politician, but always only a
+soldier, that in judging Hitler he should have looked farther ahead than
+the great British statesmen, Chamberlain and Churchill? Surely the very
+question indicates that the answer is “no.”
+
+The Prosecution can seriously confront these numerous aspects only with
+a few documents which might indicate Raeder’s knowledge of Hitler’s
+aggressive plans. The Prosecution has indeed presented innumerable
+documents of which Raeder or the Naval Operations Staff or the High
+Command of the Navy were stated to have received copies, but in a
+considerable number of instances the Prosecution could not say anything
+beyond the fact that Raeder received a copy of the documents; for the
+most part no real connection existed, nor was it alleged by the
+Prosecution. Naturally, it is not surprising that for the sake of
+uniformity military documents went to all branches of the Armed Forces,
+even if in certain cases one branch of the Armed Forces was not at all,
+or only vaguely, concerned with them. Of all these documents which have
+been submitted in the case of Raeder, only the four documents which,
+because of their importance, the Prosecution described as key documents,
+could be really incriminating. These are Hitler’s four speeches to the
+Commanders-in-Chief of 5 November 1937, 23 May 1939, 22 August 1939, and
+23 November 1939.[49]
+
+The Prosecution claims that these speeches prove participation in the
+conspiracy, and that it is clearly evident from them that Hitler wanted
+to wage wars of aggression. I would therefore like to deal with these
+documents individually and in detail, and in doing so, show why they
+cannot modify the general picture I have presented.
+
+Undoubtedly these key documents are of the utmost importance for the
+subsequent historical findings on what trains of thought motivated
+Hitler; they are important because they are expressions of Hitler’s
+opinion and because, in spite of the tremendous amount of captured
+documentary material, there are hardly any written notes of Hitler. One
+is tempted, of course, to accept the conclusion that the contents of
+these documents must be true because they are statements made before a
+small circle, where Hitler would naturally express himself more openly
+than in his public speeches. Even though I by no means fail to recognize
+their value, I nevertheless believe that the Prosecution overestimates
+the importance of these four documents by far. Certainly, they are to
+some extent key documents, since they provide the key to an
+understanding of Hitler’s mind and methods, but they are not a key to
+the real intentions of Hitler, and more particularly they do not provide
+a scale for any conclusions which those who listened to the speeches
+must, in the opinion of the Prosecution, needs draw from them.
+
+Therefore, in order fully to explain the value of the documents, I would
+like first of all to mention several general points which apply
+generally to each of these four documents and limit their evidential
+value, which the Prosecution has overestimated. None of these speeches
+was taken down in shorthand, so that the actual text of the speeches is
+not available. Accordingly, in the record of the address of 5 November
+1937, Hossbach correctly chose the indirect form of speech, and
+Generaladmiral Böhm in his record of the speech of 22 August 1939[50]
+did the same. Surprisingly and not quite correctly, Schmundt chose the
+direct form of speech in his record of 23 May 1939, although it was not
+a verbatim record; however, he was at least careful to state at the
+beginning that Hitler’s words were being reproduced “in essence.”
+
+The feeblest documents, that is to say, the two versions of the speech
+of 22 August 1939 which the Prosecution has submitted, are written in
+the direct form of speech, and the authors of these documents, whose
+names are unknown, have not even deemed it necessary to add some sort of
+note as Schmundt did. However this may be, in considering the documents
+it must be kept in mind that they were not reproduced word by word and
+that therefore the reliability of the reproduction depends on the manner
+of work and attitude of the author of the document, especially on
+whether and to what extent he made notes during the speech, and when he
+prepared his record. In this connection it is important to note that, as
+Document 386-PS shows, Adjutant Hossbach wrote the record a full 5 days
+later, namely on 10 November, though the speech itself had already been
+made on 5 November. In the case of Schmundt, the date of the record is
+missing altogether, and in the two Prosecution documents on the speech
+of 22 August 1939 there is also no date. The last two documents also
+lack any signature, so that in this case it is not even possible to say
+who bears the responsibility for the record. The same applies to the
+document on the speech of 23 November 1939. All these formal
+deficiencies allow considerable doubt concerning evidential value and
+reliability of the documents to be entertained.
+
+It is different in the case of the Böhm document, who in his affidavit
+certifies that he wrote down Hitler’s speech as it was being made, that
+he noted down the exact text of particularly important passages, and
+that he edited the final draft, submitted here, on the same evening.
+Since in all these documents the true text is not available, it is
+obvious how important it is if one can at least establish that the
+record was made simultaneously with the speech, or at least on the same
+day and not, as in the case of Hossbach, 5 days later. Even with the
+best of memories the best adjutant, who has to handle many new matters
+every day, cannot possibly after 5 days give an absolutely reliable
+reproduction of a speech.
+
+The second point is just as important, namely, that unlike other
+military documents these are not official documents with a distribution
+list, that is, they are not documents which were subsequently sent to
+those concerned. That the documents were not sent to Raeder was
+established in the evidence by him and by the witness Schulte-Mönting,
+apart from the fact that it is already apparent from the lack of a
+distribution list on the document. This point, in particular, seems to
+me of great importance. Listening to a speech once—and it will be
+recalled that Hitler spoke extremely quickly—does not induce the
+listener to draw conclusions in a way which the reading of the record
+might, since the record allows for a check and recheck of the contents
+of the speech. We who have come to know these speeches in the
+proceedings in their written form and have again and again checked their
+wording, naturally invest certain words and phrases with more importance
+than we would have done if we had heard them as part of a quickly
+delivered address. In addition, all of us are readily inclined to lend
+more importance to the various phrases, because from our present
+standpoint and in view of our more extensive knowledge we can now survey
+everything much more easily; for we have not only one speech on which to
+base our opinions, but all of them and in addition all the many other
+documents showing the historical development. In discussing these
+documents it must always be borne in mind that listeners are inclined to
+react to the spoken word quite differently, and that often, even after
+only a few hours, the reports of various listeners differ from one
+another.
+
+The Prosecution considers these speeches of Hitler to be the basis of
+the conspiracy, and says that on these occasions Hitler consulted with
+the commanders, reached a certain decision, and concluded a certain plan
+of conspiracy with them. The Prosecution is bound to maintain this,
+because one can only speak of a conspiracy when something is being
+planned in common. In reality, the assertion of the Prosecution that an
+influential group of Nazis assembled to examine the situation and make
+decisions is incorrect; the occasion took the form of an address by
+Hitler alone, and no discussion and no consultation took place. Nor was
+any decision reached, either; Hitler just spoke quite generally about—I
+quote—“possibilities of development.”[51] If one can speak of decisions
+at all, it was a decision solely on the part of Hitler. All this
+contradicts the existence of a real conspiracy. Altogether I have the
+impression that, in its conception of a conspiracy to wage wars of
+aggression, the Prosecution has conceived an entirely false picture of
+the real distribution of power within the National Socialist State. In
+my opinion the Prosecution fails to recognize the characteristics of a
+dictatorship, and indeed it may be very difficult to understand the
+immeasurable dictatorial power of Hitler if one has not personally lived
+through all of those 12 years in Germany, in particular the growth of
+Hitler’s power from its first beginnings until it finally developed into
+a dictatorship wielding the most cruel and horrible terror. A dictator
+like Hitler, who moreover quite obviously exercised immense powers of
+suggestion and fascination, is not a president of a parliamentary
+government. I have the impression that in judging the situation as a
+whole the Prosecution has never completely relinquished the idea of a
+parliamentary government nor taken the uncompromising ways of a dictator
+into account.
+
+The idea of a conspiracy between him and the members of the Cabinet or
+between him and the commanders was quite contrary to Hitler’s own
+nature, as the testimony of several witnesses showed in the course of
+the Trial. This was proved with particular emphasis by the testimony of
+the Swedish industrialist, Dahlerus, who by reason of his excellent and
+extensive connections both with Britain and Germany was in the course of
+time able to obtain an objective picture of both countries, and who
+during his negotiations with Chamberlain and Halifax on the one hand,
+and Hitler and Göring on the other, was best able to recognize the
+difference between the parliamentary British Government and the German
+dictatorship of Hitler. The account of Dahlerus proves convincingly that
+the difference was irreconcilable. After he had spoken with Chamberlain
+and Halifax, a discussion with the Cabinet naturally took place before a
+final decision was taken. On the other hand, when in the night of 26 to
+27 August 1939[52] Dahlerus had a discussion of decisive importance with
+Hitler, at which only Göring was present, Hitler at once made six
+propositions, without saying a word to any of the Cabinet members or any
+of the military commanders, without even consulting Göring who sat by
+silently; proposals, moreover, which did not exactly tally with what he
+himself had told Sir Nevile Henderson a short time before. A stronger
+argument against a conspiracy with commanders or members of the Cabinet
+can hardly exist, unless it be the equally important fact which the
+witness Dahlerus added, namely, that during the entire 2½ hours Göring
+did not dare say a single word, and that it was humiliating to see the
+degree of servility which Hitler demanded even of Göring, his closest
+associate.[53]
+
+All these Hitler speeches are full of contradictions. Such
+contradictions naturally impair clarity of thought, and they rob
+individual ideas of their importance. When reading the documents in
+their entirety, the number of contradictions becomes evident, as the
+witness Admiral Schulte-Mönting correctly pointed out during his
+examination and cross-examination. It is just because of such
+contradictions and often illogical thinking that the evidential value of
+the documents is diminished. Naturally it is difficult for a military
+adjutant like Hossbach or Schmundt to record unclear and contradictory
+trains of thought; and it is also easy to understand that a military
+adjutant will be inclined to introduce as clear a line of thought as
+possible, and will in consequence be misled into applying to certain
+ideas which have become clear to him more stress than they were actually
+given in the speech itself. To this can be added a remark of Raeder, who
+not only points to the contradictions, but especially to Hitler’s
+overactive imagination, and very appropriately calls him a “master of
+bluff.”[54]
+
+Moreover, in every speech of that type Hitler followed a very definite
+tendency. He had a definite purpose in view, namely, to bring about the
+desired impression on all or some of his hearers, either by intentional
+exaggeration or by making things appear deliberately harmless. While he
+spoke, Hitler followed the intuition of the moment; as Schulte-Mönting
+termed it, he wandered from his notes. He thought aloud and wished to
+carry his hearers away, but he did not want to be taken at his word.[55]
+Everyone will agree with me that such practices and such purposefully
+designed speeches give no clear indication at all of Hitler’s true views
+at the time. In addition, there is this to be said about all these
+documents in general:
+
+Following his address of 23 May 1939—known as the “Little
+Schmundt”—Raeder had an interview with Hitler alone in which he called
+Hitler’s attention to contradictions in his address and also to the
+contradiction arising out of Hitler’s assurance to Raeder personally
+that he, Hitler, would under all circumstances settle the case of Poland
+equally peacefully. Hitler thereupon put Raeder’s mind completely at
+rest and told him that he had a firm hold on matters, politically. This
+was stated by the witness Schulte-Mönting[56] who added that Hitler
+allayed Raeder’s misgivings about the contradiction between the speech
+of 23 May 1939 and his other statements by telling him that for him,
+Hitler, there were three grades of keeping matters secret: Firstly, by
+private conversation with one partner; secondly, the thoughts he kept to
+himself; and thirdly, some ideas which he himself did not fully think
+out.
+
+I believe this way of thinking as explained by Hitler himself
+illustrates most strikingly how little reliance could ultimately be
+placed on statements which he made before a small or a large group of
+people. It seems to me quite plausible, therefore, that Raeder based his
+deliberations neither on Hitler’s general speeches nor on the address
+before the commanders which was discussed here, but went solely by what
+Hitler told him in private discussion. In this respect, the statements
+of Sehulte-Mönting, Böhm, and Albrecht[57] all prove that as late as
+1939 Hitler was still, in private conversation, repeatedly giving Raeder
+the explicit assurance that there would be no war; and he did this
+whenever for some reason or other Raeder was particularly anxious and
+drew Hitler’s attention to the dangers ahead.
+
+In conclusion, therefore, I believe it may be said that the so-called
+key documents are extremely interesting in assessing Hitler from a
+psychological point of view, but that their evidential value as regards
+Hitler’s real intentions is very limited and slight. One cannot reproach
+Raeder for not letting himself be guided by the tendentious and
+deliberate speeches which Hitler made before his commanders on the spur
+of the moment, and preferring to rely on assurances which Hitler himself
+gave him and on the fact that until the summer of 1939, until the very
+outbreak of the war, these assurances were in perfect accord with the
+facts and with Hitler’s actions, that is, with the four naval agreements
+and the Munich Pact.
+
+It is understandable that Raeder did not permit this basic attitude to
+be shaken by these speeches to the commanders-in-chief, though they were
+undoubtedly of a questionable nature, but that he held steadfastly to
+his belief that Hitler would not deceive him. The fact that we now
+subsequently realize that Hitler did after all deceive Raeder in his
+private conversations with him, and also by his special second and third
+grade of secrecy, does not indicate any guilt on Raeder’s part, but
+solely on Hitler’s. The vast amount of material in this connection does
+not indicate that in 1938 and 1939 Raeder planned a war of aggression in
+violation of international law, but reveals only that Hitler planned a
+war of aggression in violation of international law.
+
+This completes my general treatment of the key documents and I now ask
+the Tribunal’s permission to add a few points on each individual
+document, since the Prosecution again and again stressed these documents
+as the basis for the charge of conspiracy.
+
+Hossbach Document, discussion of 5 November 1937 in the Reich
+Chancellery:
+
+The crucial passages of this document are obvious, and the Prosecution
+has cited them often enough. But in dealing with this document it should
+be taken into consideration that both Göring and Raeder stated here that
+Hitler announced in advance his intention of following a certain trend
+or purpose in his speech. Hitler was dissatisfied with the measures
+taken by Field Marshal Von Blomberg, and especially by Generaloberst Von
+Fritsch, the Commander-in-Chief of the Army, and felt that progress in
+the rearmament of the Army was too slow. Hitler therefore intentionally
+exaggerated, and since this was known only to Göring and Raeder, it is
+natural that the impression which the speech made on Neurath, who had no
+idea of this intention, was entirely different and considerably
+alarming.
+
+It is interesting to note that apparently Hitler did not fully get what
+he wanted, because the last two paragraphs of the document indicate that
+to some extent Blomberg and Fritsch saw through Hitler’s scheme, and
+that his exaggerations did not deceive them. Though Hitler did not
+permit discussion on such occasions, Blomberg and Fritsch intervened in
+this instance and pointed to the need for preventing Britain and France
+from becoming Germany’s adversaries. Blomberg explained the reasons for
+his protest, and in the penultimate paragraph of the document Fritsch
+showed unmistakably that he was skeptical of Hitler’s words by remarking
+that under such circumstances he would not be able to take his planned
+vacation abroad scheduled to begin on 10 November. It is also
+significant that Hitler thereupon came round and, in contrast to his
+earlier statements, said that he was convinced of Britain’s
+nonparticipation, and that consequently he did not believe in military
+action against Germany on the part of France either.
+
+That Hitler’s ideas in this document are quite impossible is also
+evident from the fact that he based his statements on a truly fantastic
+notion, namely, an Italian-French-British war or, equally fantastic, a
+civil war in France. In contradictory terms Hitler spoke in his speech
+on the one hand of an application of force, on the other of an attack by
+Poland against East Prussia, which could only refer to a defensive
+aspect—and in regard to Czechoslovakia he said that in all probability
+Britain and France had already privately written that country off. This
+reference is an indication that Hitler was prepared to negotiate, which
+was borne out by actual developments. He said that Austria and
+Czechoslovakia would be brought to their knees, but nevertheless in the
+following year, in March and September 1938, he carried on negotiations
+and settled both questions without war. This fact in particular seems
+significant, because it proved to Raeder in the course of later events
+that he was right in not ascribing undue importance to Hitler’s strong
+words of 5 November 1937, for in spite of these words Hitler in reality
+did carry on negotiations at a later date.
+
+During his interrogation Raeder also rightly pointed out that the second
+extensive naval pact had been concluded with England only a few months
+earlier and that as a result he could not seriously expect Hitler to
+abandon a line of policy which he himself had initiated.
+
+And finally, there is this point: The whole document deals with
+political questions on the one hand, and with possible land operations
+on the other. Raeder had nothing to do with political questions because
+he is no politician, while Neurath as Foreign Minister naturally had
+reason to give Hitler’s political attitude more consideration. It is
+also significant that Neurath testified here that as a result of this
+speech he too asked Hitler about his personal attitude, and that he
+refused to remain Foreign Minister because Hitler told him that those
+were his true intentions. To me it seems typical of Hitler to tell one
+person, Neurath, that perhaps he would go to war, and to tell another,
+Raeder, that he would under no circumstances wage war. This divergence
+in explaining his position was obviously caused by the fact that at that
+time he no longer relished Neurath as Foreign Minister, because he
+realized that with regard to the foreign policy which he proposed to
+follow, Neurath would not be as submissive as the successor whom he had
+in view, Ribbentrop. On the other hand at that time he still wanted at
+all events to retain Raeder as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. This is
+another instance of how Hitler’s actions were determined by a certain
+ultimate purpose, and how he always and without the slightest inhibition
+followed the principle that the end justifies the means.
+
+Hitler’s speech of 23 May 1939, the so-called “Little Schmundt,” USA-27:
+Here again Hitler expressed himself in a highly questionable fashion; he
+speaks of a program of attack, of the preparation of a systematic
+attack, and of the decision to attack Poland. I fail in no way to
+recognize that there is good reason for the Prosecution to consider this
+document as particularly good evidence. I believe, however, that taking
+into account the numerous aspects which I pointed out, the value of this
+document as evidence in the case of Raeder is very much smaller than the
+Prosecution maintains, and very much smaller than a first glance at the
+wording of the Schmundt version might warrant. Schmundt obviously made
+an endeavor to formulate Hitler’s contradictory, fantastic, and
+incongruous statements in a clear way in accordance with his own precise
+military manner of thinking. This gives the document a clarity which
+does not correspond to Hitler’s speech. We do not know when Schmundt
+prepared the document, and he neglected to show the record he had made
+to the other participants.
+
+During his examination and cross-examination the witness Admiral
+Schulte-Mönting pointed to the contradictions in this particular
+document, which I need not repeat here. Paramount importance must
+however be given to the contradiction between these words and the words
+which Hitler at the same time again and again used in conversation with
+Raeder, and which always followed the same line, namely, that he did not
+intend to wage war and that he would not make excessive demands.
+
+Raeder was shocked by this speech, and was only calmed by the private
+conversation which he had with Hitler directly after the speech, when
+Hitler assured him that he would under all circumstances settle the case
+of Poland in a peaceful manner, too. Raeder believed him, and he had
+every right to assume that Hitler was telling him the truth in answer to
+his very precise question. I draw attention to the very exact statements
+made on this document during the examination of Raeder and the
+examination of the witness Schulte-Mönting.[58] I especially refer to
+the statement of Schulte-Mönting that Hitler used the comparison that
+nobody would go to court if he had received 99 pfennig when claiming one
+mark, and added that in the same way he had obtained what he had
+demanded politically, and that consequently there could be no question
+of war on account of this last political question, that of the Polish
+Corridor. That Raeder himself was absolutely opposed to a war of
+aggression, and that in this respect he relied on Hitler’s assurances,
+is proved by the statements of all witnesses, not least by the
+deposition by Dönitz that on the occasion of the U-boat maneuvers in the
+Baltic Sea in July 1939 Raeder, expressed his firm conviction that there
+would be no war. Raeder, furthermore, knew that the Navy was absolutely
+unfit for a war at sea against Britain; he had explained that to Hitler
+again and again. But he was confident that in the Polish question
+Hitler, as he had said, would again negotiate; the testimony of the
+witness Dahlerus shows that negotiations did in fact take place, and
+they were even successful at the beginning. The reason why nevertheless
+the attempt finally failed and the second World War began, was explained
+in detail by the witness Dahlerus who illustrated the terrible tragedy
+of this event.
+
+It seems to me important that up to August 1939 not only the witness
+Dahlerus, but also Chamberlain still believed in Hitler’s good will. It
+must be said again therefore that one cannot expect Raeder as a soldier
+to have been more farseeing and to have recognized Hitler’s dangerous
+ideas, if men like Chamberlain, Halifax, and Dahlerus did not even at
+that time see through Hitler.
+
+I have myself referred to the seriousness and the incriminating
+character of this document, but I ask the Tribunal to take into
+consideration that the incriminating material in this document, just as
+in the document of 5 November 1937, is of a political nature. As defense
+counsel for the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, I have to judge the
+facts not from a political but from a military point of view. From a
+military point of view, however, it is absolutely impossible to follow
+the arguments of the Prosecution, because military leaders are not
+authorized to take part in decisions about war and peace, but merely
+obliged to carry out such military preparations as the political leaders
+consider necessary. In no country of the world does an admiral have to
+give his opinion on whether some future war, for which he has to make
+plans, will be a war of aggression or a defensive war. In no country of
+the world does the decision of the question whether war will be waged
+rest with the military, but on the contrary it is always left to the
+political leaders, or to the legislative bodies.
+
+Accordingly, Article 45 of the German Constitution stipulates that the
+Reich President shall represent the Reich in international relations and
+continues: “The declaration of war and the conclusion of peace are
+decreed by a law of the State.”
+
+Therefore, the question whether a war was to be waged against Poland
+rested with the Reichstag, not with the military leaders. Professor
+Jahrreiss has already explained that in view of the constitutional
+development of the National Socialist State this decision rested in the
+last analysis exclusively with Hitler. For the case of Raeder it is of
+no consequence whether Hitler could be regarded as constitutionally
+authorized to start a war on his own decision, as he actually did in the
+autumn of 1939. The decisive factor is only that at all events the
+military leaders were not authorized, either in practice or
+constitutionally, to participate in this decision. The Prosecution
+cannot possibly maintain that every act of military planning on the part
+of Germany was a crime; for the military leaders, who merely receive the
+order to work out a certain plan, are neither authorized nor obliged to
+determine whether the execution of their plans will later on lead to an
+aggressive or a defensive war. It is well known that the Allied military
+leaders rightly hold the same view. No admiral or general of the Allied
+armed forces would understand a charge being brought against him on the
+basis of the military plans which were made on the Allied side, too, a
+long time before the war. I do not have to elaborate this point; I
+believe it will suffice if I refer to Document Number Ribbentrop-221.
+This is a secret document, which, according to the title, deals with the
+“Second Phase of the Anglo-French General Staff Conferences.” This
+document shows that exact plans, regarding the Allied forces, were
+worked out for a war embracing many countries; plans which, according to
+this document, include a war in Europe and a war in the Far East. The
+document expressly says that the French and British commanders-in-chief
+in the Far East—I quote—“worked out a joint plan of operations,” and
+it expressly speaks about the importance of possessing Belgian and Dutch
+territories as a starting point for the offensive against Germany. The
+decisive point about this parallel military case seems to me to be the
+fact that this document bears a date from the same month as Hitler’s
+much-discussed speech to his commanders-in-chief, namely, May 1939. The
+document bears the caption: “London, 5 May 1939.”
+
+I now come to the address of Hitler to the commanders-ih-chief on 22
+August 1939 at the Obersalzberg.[59] Regarding the evidential value of
+Documents 1014-PS and 798-PS submitted by the Prosecution, I should like
+first of all for the sake of brevity to refer to the statements which I
+made to this Tribunal in connection with the formal application to
+withdraw Document 1014-PS. Although the Tribunal denied this
+application, I still maintain that the evidential value attached to
+these documents, and particularly to Document 1014-PS, is infinitesimal.
+The American Prosecution, in presenting these documents pointed out at
+the time[60] that the Tribunal should take into consideration any more
+accurate version of this speech which the Defense might be able to
+submit. I therefore submitted Exhibit Number Raeder-27,[61] the version
+of the witness Generaladmiral Böhm, and I believe that when I submitted
+it, I showed convincingly that it is in fact a more accurate version
+than those provided by the Prosecution documents. Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe
+then put in two documents where Böhm’s version is very scrupulously
+compared with the versions 1014-PS and 798-PS; in this way he
+considerably facilitated the comparison of these documents for all of
+us. So as on my part to assist the Tribunal and the Prosecution in
+making this comparison, I requested Generaladmiral Böhm in the meantime
+to compare these versions himself and in doing so to use the compilation
+of the British Prosecution which I mentioned just now. The result is
+contained in Böhm’s affidavit.
+
+When surveying all this material, it becomes clear that Document 1014-PS
+is extremely incomplete and inaccurate, all the more so as, apart from
+its formal deficiencies, it covers only one and a half pages, and for
+this reason alone cannot be an adequate reproduction of a 2½ hour
+speech.
+
+Document 798-PS is no doubt more satisfactory, but it also contains
+numerous errors, as Böhm’s affidavit shows. Not every sentence may be of
+importance, but the point is that some of the most important passages
+from which a charge against the commanders-in-chief might at best be
+deduced were actually, according to Böhm’s sworn statement, never spoken
+at all. According to Böhm’s affidavit, it is not true that Hitler said
+that he had decided as early as the spring of 1939 to attack the West
+first and the East later. Nor did he use the words: “I only fear lest at
+the last moment some swine will come to me with an offer of mediation;
+our political aims reach further.” And, most important of all, the
+following words were never used either: “Annihilation of Poland ranks
+foremost; the aim is to liquidate the living forces, not to reach a
+certain line;” Hitler only spoke of the breaking-up of the military
+forces.
+
+These differences in individual words and phrases are very important,
+because they concern the sharp phrases to which the Prosecution has
+frequently drawn attention, and from which the intention of a war
+violating international law, and even the intention to murder civilians,
+can be derived. If these phrases had been spoken, one could justly
+accuse the commanders-in-chief who were present of having waged the war
+and carried out Hitler’s orders in spite of the criminal end in view.
+However, if these sentences were not used but, as Böhm testified under
+oath, other sentences referring merely to military aims, then the
+Prosecution cannot reproach any of the commanders-in-chief present for
+having remained at their posts. No one can in earnest demand of an
+admiral that he should resign his post a few days before the outbreak of
+a war, and thus shake the military power of his own country. I am quite
+aware of the fact that the most serious reproaches can be made against
+Hitler’s attitude following the time of the Munich Agreement until the
+outbreak of the war in Poland, although, and this is decisive for the
+Raeder case, not against the military command, but exclusively against
+the political leader. We know that Hitler himself realized this and for
+that reason evaded all responsibility by his suicide without, either
+during or at the end of the war, showing the slightest regard for the
+life and the welfare of the German people.
+
+I come now to Hitler’s speech to the commanders-in-chief on 23 November
+1939.[62] I shall deal with it quite briefly, and if you will permit me,
+Mr. President, I should like to do this now before the Tribunal
+adjourns, because the subject which follows is rather longer.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
+
+DR. SIEMERS: I think I can be relatively brief with regard to this last
+key document, which again fails to give the date on which the record was
+made and lacks a signature; we do not therefore know the author of this
+document. It is not an official transcript; and it again pursues a
+special objective. Early in November 1939 a serious difference had
+arisen between Hitler and the generals because Hitler wanted to start
+the offensive in the West immediately, whereas the generals were of a
+different opinion, and apparently hoped that the outbreak of a real
+World War might still be avoided. Hitler’s dissatisfaction and annoyance
+with his generals are clearly evident. In consequence, by repeating, as
+usual, his past deeds, he strives to show what he has accomplished, and
+also to show that he has always been right. It is an absolutely typical
+Hitler speech reminiscent of his public speeches, in which he also loved
+to boast and to glorify himself as a genius. Hitler, after all, belonged
+to those people who always believe themselves to be right, and avail
+themselves of every opportunity to prove it. He also took the
+opportunity of using threats in order to nip in the bud the resistance
+in high military circles which had become known to him, thus
+strengthening his dictatorship. It is absolutely typical when he says in
+this document, literally: “I shall not shrink from anything and I shall
+destroy anyone who is against me.” This was recognized by foreign
+military leaders, too. I draw attention for example to General
+Marshall’s official report,[63] which speaks about the “lack of
+far-reaching military planning” and about the fact that the German High
+Command did not have an all-embracing strategic plan, and points out in
+this connection that “Hitler’s prestige reached the stage at which one
+no longer dared to oppose his views.”
+
+Finally it remains to be mentioned that this last key document dates
+from a time when the war was already in progress, and that the military
+leaders cannot be blamed if in all their plannings during a war they
+strove to attain victory. The Allies too were planning at the same time.
+I refer to Documents Number Ribbentrop-222 and Exhibit Number Raeder-34;
+the former dates from 1 September 1939 and is a secret letter from
+General Gamelin to Daladier containing the basic idea that it was
+necessary to invade Belgium in order to wage the war outside the French
+frontier. The other document also deals with military plans; it is a
+secret letter from General Gamelin to General Lelong, Military Attaché
+to the French Embassy in London, dated 13 November 1939, and also
+concerns the operation which the Allies had planned in Holland and
+Belgium.
+
+ [_The Tribunal adjourned until 17 July 1946 at 1000 hours._]
+
+ NOTES
+
+-----
+
+[12] Vanselow, _Völkerrecht_, Berlin, 1931, Figure 226 i.
+
+[13] In 1935, the American Senator Ney demanded the prohibition of
+operational areas. In 1937 Charles Warren made a request for discussion
+of the subject in the Society for International Law. And also the
+afore-mentioned draft of a convention by American jurists of 1939 deals
+with this question.
+
+[14] Théories stratégiques IV, Page 323: “Même en zone de guerre
+n’aura-t-on pas contre sol le damné article 22 du traité de Londres?”
+
+[15] Bauer, Das U-Boot, 1931, Report on it by Captain G. P. Thomson,
+R.N. in _The Journal of the Royal News Instruction 1931_, Page 511.
+
+[16] Sperrgebiete im Seekrieg, Zeitschrift für ausländisches
+öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht, Volume VIII, 1938, Page 671.
+
+[17] French Yellow Book, La Conférence de Washington, Page 88.
+
+[18] Report of 8 October 1940, Page 3: “One thing is certain, namely,
+apart from vessels in declared war zones, destruction of a merchant
+vessel is envisaged if even only after capture.”
+
+[19] Commander Russel Grenfell, R.N., _The Art of the Admiral_, London,
+1937, Page 80. “The neutral merchants, however, are not likely to
+relinquish a highly lucrative trade without a struggle and thus there
+arises the acrimonious wrangle between belligerents and neutrals which
+is a regular feature of maritime warfare, the rules for which are
+dignified by the name of international law.”
+
+[20] _De jure pacis ac belli_, Book III, Chapter I, Paragraph 6,
+citation Augustin: “One may conceal the truth wisely,” and Cicero:
+“Dissimulation is absolutely necessary and unavoidable, especially for
+those to whom the care of the state is entrusted.”
+
+[21] Admiral King, _Report of the American High Command_.
+
+[22] John Chamberlain, “The man who pushed Pearl Harbor,” _Life_, of 1
+April 1946.
+
+[23] Manual for Courts Martial U.S. Army, 1928, Page 10.
+
+[24] In this connection I mention the extensive literature dealing with
+the right of self-preservation in cases of urgent necessity. The
+surprise attack on the Danish fleet, 1807, as well as the hunger
+blockade against Germany are based on that.
+
+[25] Freiherr von Freytagh-Loringhoven, _Völkerrechtliche Neubildungen
+im Kriege_, Hamburg 1941, Page 5.
+
+[26] Quoted from “_Neue Auslese_,” 1946, Number 1, Page 16.
+
+[27] Not always acknowledged by English authors. Compare for instance A.
+C. Bell, _A History of the Blockade of Germany_, et cetera, London,
+1937, Page 213: “The assertion that civilians and the Armed Forces have
+been treated only since 1914 as a uniform belligerent body is one of the
+most ridiculous ever made.”
+
+[28] Grenfell, _The Art of the Admiral_, London, 1937, Page 45: “By the
+early part of 1918, the civil population of Germany was in a state of
+semistarvation, and it has been calculated that, as a result of the
+blockade, over 700,000 Germans died of malnutrition.”
+
+[29] See also protest of the Soviet Government to the British Ambassador
+of 25 October 1939, printed as Number 44 in “_Urkunden zum
+Seekriegsrecht_,” Volume I, edited by the High Command of the Navy.
+
+[30] See for instance _Wheaton’s International Law_, 5th Edition, Page
+727, Liddell Hart, “The Revolution in Naval Warfare,” _Observer_ of 14
+April 1946.
+
+[31] Oppenheim, Die Stellung des Kauffahrteischiffes im Seekrieg,
+_Zeitschrift für Völkerrecht_, 1914, Page 165.
+
+[32] Concerning the execution of these orders in the first World War,
+Vidaud, in “_Les navires de commerce armés pour leur défense_,” Paris,
+1936, Pages 63-64 says as follows: “Les équipages eux-mêmes sont
+militarisés et soumis à la discipline militaire, ainsi que le capitaine
+Alfred Sheldon, appartenant à la réserve de la Marine Royale, a été
+condamné, le 8 Septembre 1915 par le conseil de guerre de Devonport,
+pour n’avoir pas attaqué un sousmarin allemand.”
+
+[33] Compare for instance “Submarines in the Atomic Era” in the _New
+York Herald Tribune_, European Edition, of 27 April 1946, Page 2.
+
+[34] A. C. Bell, Historical Section, Committee of Imperial Defense, _A
+History of the Blockade of Germany and of the Countries Associated with
+Her in the Great War 1914-1918_—The introduction contains the remark:
+“This history is confidential and for official use only.” (Quoted from
+the German edition by Böhmert, _Die englische Hunger-blockade im
+Weltkrieg_, Essen, 1943).
+
+[35] Hugo Grotius, _De jure pacis ac belli_, Book II, Chapter XXI.
+
+[36] Hugo Grotius, _De jure pacis ac belli_, Book II, Chapter XXVI.
+Paragraph 4, “He can believe that in a matter of doubt he must obey his
+superior.”
+
+[37] See _Wheaton’s International Law_, 5th Edition, Pages 543-5.
+
+[38] Claud Mullins, _The Leipzig Trials_, London, 1921.
+
+[39] See Document Book 1, Documents Numbers Raeder-3 and 4, Page 9 et
+sequentes.
+
+[40] Especially the following documents are concerned:
+
+C-140, USA-51 of 25 October 1933; C-159, USA-54 of 2 March 1936; C-194,
+USA-55 of 6 March 1936; C-175, USA-69 of 24 June 1937; 388-PS, USA-26 of
+20 May 1938; C-136, USA-104 of 21 October 1938.
+
+[41] Record of 4 December 1945, Volume III, Page 95.
+
+[42] Record of 4 December 1945, Volume III, Page 110.
+
+[43] Reich Defense Law of 4 September 1938.
+
+[44] For instance under Balfour and Churchill.
+
+[45] Document Book 1, Document Number Raeder-4, Page 12.
+
+[46] Document Book 6, Document Number Raeder-121, Page 524.
+
+[47] Refer also to Ronneberger Affidavit, Document Book 6, Document
+Number Raeder-126, Page 543 et sequentes which point to the same
+subjects, especially to the strong Christian belief of Raeder and to the
+pronounced opposition to Christianity and Church by Bormann.
+
+[48] Second Lohmann Affidavit, Document Number Raeder-8, Document Book
+1, Page 41.
+
+[49] Refer to Documents 386-PS, USA-25; L-79, USA-27; 798-PS, USA-29;
+1014-PS, USA-30; 769-PS, USA-23.
+
+[50] Document Book 2, Document Number Raeder-27, Page 144 et sequentes.
+
+[51] See Hossbach Document.
+
+[52] Record of 19 March 1946, Volume IX, Page 463.
+
+[53] Record of 19 March 1946, Volume IX, page 481.
+
+[54] Record of 16 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 35.
+
+[55] Record of 22 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 314.
+
+[56] Record of 22 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 306.
+
+[57] Record of 22 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 306.
+
+Affidavit Generaladmiral Böhm, Document Number Raeder-129.
+
+Affidavit Generaladmiral Albrecht, Document Number Raeder-128.
+
+[58] Record of 22 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 306.
+
+[59] See Documents Numbers 798-PS, USA-29; 1014-PS, USA-30, Document
+Book 2. Page 144, Document Number Raeder-77.
+
+[60] Record of 26 November 1945, Volume II, Page 292.
+
+[61] Raeder Document Book 2, Page 144.
+
+[62] See Document 789-PS, USA-93.
+
+[63] Document Book 2, Pages 116-117, Document Number Raeder-19.
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED
+ AND EIGHTIETH DAY
+ Wednesday, 17 July 1946
+
+
+ _Morning Session_
+
+DR. SIEMERS: Yesterday I dealt with the events before the outbreak of
+war. Now I shall turn to the events which occurred during the war.
+
+I think I have shown that the Navy had an extremely insignificant part
+in all events prior to the war, and that the transactions in which the
+Navy was authoritatively involved were carried out on a peace basis,
+namely, on the basis of the naval agreements with England. When the war
+nevertheless ultimately broke out, involving England, too, on 3
+September 1939, a regrettable incident occurred on the very first day,
+through the sinking of the _Athenia_, from which the Prosecution
+endeavors by the use of exaggerated terms to construe a grave moral
+charge against Raeder, not so much indeed on the basis of its actual
+military aspect, that is, the sinking, which my colleague Dr.
+Kranzbühler has already discussed, as on account of an article published
+in the _Völkischer Beobachter_ of 23 October 1939 entitled “Churchill
+Sinks the _Athenia_.” Were the facts as brought forward by the
+Prosecution correct, the moral accusations against Raeder and the Navy
+would be justified, even though, of course, an untruthful newspaper
+article is no crime. Consequently the accusation brought by the
+Prosecution is made for the sole purpose of vilifying Raeder’s
+personality in contrast to the lifelong esteem which Raeder has enjoyed
+in the whole world, in fact especially abroad.
+
+I think the evidence has sufficiently revealed that the statement of
+facts presented by the Prosecution is not correct. It is quite plausible
+that at first sight the Prosecution should have believed that the odious
+article in the _Völkischer Beobachter_ could not have appeared without
+the knowledge of the naval command. The Prosecution believed this
+because, in view of their conspiracy theory, they are inclined to assume
+in every case that there was constant discussion and close co-operation
+among the various departments. The course of the Trial has shown that
+this assumption is far from correct. The contrast between the various
+departments, and especially between the Navy and the Propaganda
+Ministry, or Raeder and Goebbels, was far greater than the contrast
+between departments in a democratic state. In addition, the testimonies
+of the witnesses Raeder, Schulte-Mönting, Weizsäcker, and Fritzsche,
+together with the documents, establish the following facts absolutely
+clearly:
+
+(1) In early September 1939 Raeder himself firmly believed that the
+sinking was not to be imputed to a German U-boat, because it was
+revealed by the reports that the nearest German U-boat was at least 75
+nautical miles away from the spot of the sinking.
+
+(2) Accordingly Raeder, as stated in Document D-912, published a _bona
+fide_ denial and gave statements to this effect to the American Naval
+Attaché and to the German State Secretary, Baron Weizsäcker.
+
+(3) Raeder did not realize the mistake until after the return of _U-30_
+on 27 September 1939.
+
+(4) Hitler insisted, as evidenced by witnesses Raeder and
+Schulte-Mönting, that no rectification of the facts should be made to
+any other German or foreign department, that is to say, that the sinking
+should not be acknowledged as caused by a German U-boat. He apparently
+let himself be guided by political considerations and wished to avoid
+complications with the U.S.A. over an incident which could not be
+remedied, however regrettable it was. Hitler’s order was so strict that
+the few officers who were informed were put under oath to keep it
+secret.
+
+(5) Fritzsche disclosed, that after the first investigation by the Navy
+in early September 1939, he made no further investigation and that the
+_Völkischer Beobachter_ article appeared as the result of an agreement
+between Hitler and Goebbels, without previous notice to Raeder. On this
+point the testimonies of Raeder and Schulte-Mönting coincide. It is
+consequently clear that Raeder—contrary to the claim of the
+Prosecution—was not the author of the article and, moreover, knew
+nothing about the article before its appearance. I regret the fact that
+in spite of this clarification the Prosecution are apparently intent
+upon persisting in their claim by the submission, on 3 July 1946, of a
+new document, D-912. This newly-submitted document only contains radio
+broadcasts by the propaganda Ministry, which are of the same nature as
+the _Völkischer Beobachter_ article. These radio broadcasts were a
+propaganda instrument of Goebbels and cannot, any more than the article,
+be brought up as a charge against Raeder, who in fact was at the time
+informed only of the article, not of the radio broadcasts. Even the fact
+that Raeder, after being informed of the article, did not attempt to
+obtain a rectification, cannot be made a moral charge against him, since
+he was bound by Hitler’s order and had no idea at the time that Hitler
+himself had had a hand in the article, which Weizsäcker aptly described
+as perverse fantasy.
+
+In this connection I would remind the Tribunal that it is a well-known
+fact that precisely at the beginning of the war inaccurate reports also
+appeared in the English press about alleged German atrocities, which,
+even after their clarification, were not rectified, as for instance, the
+false report about the murder of 10,000 Czechs in Prague by German
+elements in September 1939, although the matter had been cleared up by a
+commission of neutral journalists.
+
+The Prosecution professes to possess overwhelming material against all
+the defendants. If this presumption were correct with reference to
+Raeder, the Prosecution would scarcely have felt the need of bringing
+forward this _Athenia_ case, of all things, in such ponderous and
+injurious terms for the sole purpose of discrediting the former
+Commander-in-Chief of the Navy.
+
+Concerning Greece, the Prosecution accuses Raeder of violation of
+neutrality and breach of international law on two counts, namely:
+
+(1) On the basis of Document C-12, according to which Hitler decided,
+basing on a report by Raeder on 30 December 1939, that:
+
+ “Greek merchant ships in the zone around England which the
+ U.S.A. declared prohibited will be treated like enemy ships.”
+
+(2) According to Document C-176, on the occasion of the delivery of a
+report to Hitler on 18 March 1941, Raeder asked for confirmation that
+“all of Greece was to be occupied, even in case of peaceful settlement.”
+
+In the course of the Trial both accusations have turned out to be
+untenable; in both cases there is no action which violated international
+law.
+
+With reference to the first accusation it should be pointed out that
+Raeder and the German Naval Command learned in October or November 1939
+that quite a number of Greek merchant ships had been put at the disposal
+of England, either at the request or with the approval of the Greek
+Government (Documents Number Raeder-53, 54). This fact cannot be
+reconciled with strict neutrality, and according to the principles of
+international law that gave Germany the right to take an equivalent
+countermeasure. This justified countermeasure consisted in treating
+Greek ships heading for England as enemy ships from the moment they
+entered the zone around England which had been declared prohibited by
+the United States.
+
+With reference to the second accusation it must be noted that Germany,
+especially the High Command of the Navy, had received reports that
+certain Greek military and political circles had maintained very close
+connections with the Allied General Staff ever since 1939. As time went
+by more and more reports came in. What the Allies were planning in the
+Balkans is known; the intentions were to erect a Balkan front against
+Germany. For this purpose local conditions in Greece, as well as in
+Romania, were examined by Allied officers on behalf of the Allied
+General Staff in order to establish airplane bases there. Furthermore,
+preparations were made to land in Greece. As proof I have presented, as
+Exhibit Number Raeder-59, the minutes of the session of the French War
+Committee of 26 April 1940, which shows that the War Committee was at
+that time already examining the question of possible operations in the
+Caucasus area and in the Balkans and which further reveals the activity
+of General Jauneaud in Greece for the purpose of continuing
+investigations and preparations and shows how he endeavored to
+camouflage his trip by making it in civilian clothing (Document Number
+Raeder-63).
+
+This attitude of Greece, and especially her falling in with Allied
+plans, represents a violation of neutrality on the part of Greece; for
+Greece did not appear as England’s ally but formally continued to
+maintain her neutrality. Therefore, Greece could no longer expect that
+Germany would fully respect Greek neutrality. Germany nevertheless did
+do so for a long time. The occupation of Greece took place in April 1941
+only after British troops had already landed in southern Greece on 3
+March 1941.
+
+The fact that Greece agreed to the British landing is, according to
+generally recognized rules, without significance in international legal
+relations and with regard to the international legal decision between
+Germany and England and between Germany and Greece; it has importance
+only in the legal relations between England and Greece.
+
+The British Prosecution tried to justify the occupation of Greece by
+pointing to the fact that Greek neutrality was menaced by Germany,
+especially by the occupation of Bulgaria on 1 March 1941. In this
+connection the Prosecution is overlooking the fact that not only did the
+occupation of Greece by British forces start considerably earlier than
+the German planning, but also the planning of the Allies. But be that as
+it may, in any case, no accusation whatever can be made against Raeder,
+because the date of the document submitted by the Prosecution is 18
+March 1941, which means that it is 14 days later than the landing of the
+British in southern Greece. At that time Greece could certainly no
+longer demand that her alleged neutrality be respected. It is also an
+unjustified charge when the Prosecution points out that Raeder asks for
+confirmation that all of Greece will be occupied. This request by Raeder
+cannot be made responsible for the fact that all of Greece was occupied,
+for Hitler had already provided in his Directive Number 20 of 13
+December 1940 that the entire Greek mainland was to be occupied, in
+order to frustrate British intentions of creating a dangerous basis for
+air operations under the protection of a Balkan front, especially for
+the Romanian oil district. In addition to that, the inquiry of Raeder on
+18 March 1941 was justified on strategic grounds, because Greece offered
+many landing possibilities for the British and the only possible defense
+was for Greece to be firmly in the hands of Germany, as the witnesses
+Raeder and Schulte-Mönting have explained.
+
+This strategic conception of Raeder had nothing to do with plans of
+conquest or thirst for glory, as the Prosecution thinks, for the Navy
+won no glory whatsoever in Greece, since the occupation was a land
+operation. The occupation of an originally neutral country is simply the
+regrettable consequence of such a large-scale war; it cannot be charged
+to one belligerent if both belligerents had plans concerning the same
+state, and carried out these plans.
+
+I should like now to go on to the subject of Norway. On 9 April 1940
+troops of all three branches of the German Armed Forces occupied Norway
+and Denmark. From this and the preceding plans, the Prosecution have
+brought the gravest accusation against Grossadmiral Raeder, together
+with the collective charge of participation in a conspiracy.
+
+The British prosecutor pointed out that it was Raeder who first
+suggested the occupation of Norway to Hitler, and believes that Raeder
+did so out of a spirit of conquest and vainglory. I shall demonstrate
+that this argumentation is incorrect. One thing is true, that is that in
+this single instance Raeder took the initiative of first approaching
+Hitler on the subject of Norway, namely on 10 October 1939. However, I
+shall show that in fact in this connection he acted not as a politician
+but exclusively as a soldier. Raeder sensed purely strategic dangers and
+pointed out these strategic dangers to Hitler, because he assumed that
+the Allies were contemplating the establishment of a new front in
+Scandinavia and in Norway, in particular, and realized that an
+occupation of Norway by Britain might have militarily disastrous
+consequences for Germany. I shall show that Germany committed no
+violation of international law by the occupation of Norway. Before I
+state the legal foundation and connect the facts established by the
+appraisal of evidence with the principles of international law, I should
+like first to state an important fact:
+
+As Raeder’s examination shows and as disclosed by Schulte-Mönting’s
+interrogations, he very reluctantly advocated the Norwegian campaign as
+Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. Raeder had the natural feeling born of
+justice that a neutral state could not be drawn into the existing war
+without an absolutely imperative emergency. During the period between
+October 1939 and spring 1940, Raeder always upheld the theory that by
+far the best solution would be for Norway and all Scandinavia to remain
+absolutely neutral.
+
+Raeder and Schulte-Mönting were in agreement on this point during their
+interrogations; and it is, moreover, proved by documents. For this, I
+refer to Exhibit Number Raeder-69 where the conviction of Raeder is
+expressed that the most favorable solution would undoubtedly be the
+preservation of the strictest neutrality by Norway; this is entered in
+the War Diary on 13 January 1940. Raeder clearly saw that an occupation
+of Norway by Germany, for reasons of international law or strategy,
+could only be conceivable if Norway could not or would not maintain
+absolute neutrality.
+
+The Prosecution has referred to the treaties between Germany and Norway,
+in particular to Document TC-31, by which the Reich Government, on 2
+September 1939, expressly assures Norway of her inviolability and
+integrity. In this memorandum, however, the following legitimate remark
+is added:
+
+ “As the Reich Cabinet makes this declaration, it naturally also
+ expects that Norway in turn will observe irreproachable
+ neutrality toward the Reich and that it will not tolerate
+ breaches of Norwegian neutrality, should attempts along that
+ line be made by third parties.”
+
+If, despite this fundamental attitude, Germany decided to occupy Norway,
+this was done because the plans of the Allies made imminent the danger
+of an occupation of Norwegian bases by them. In his opening speech Sir
+Hartley Shawcross declared that Germany’s breach of neutrality and her
+war of aggression against Norway remained criminal in the sense of the
+Indictment even if Allied plans for the occupation had been correct, and
+he added that in reality such plans were not true. I believe that the
+argument advanced here by Sir Hartley Shawcross is contrary to accepted
+international law. If Allied plans for the occupation of Norwegian bases
+existed and there was a risk that Norway neither would nor could
+maintain strict neutrality, then accepted standards of international law
+did sanction Germany’s Norwegian campaign.
+
+I would first like to bring up the juridical viewpoints based on
+prevailing international law in order to create a foundation for my own
+statements, and thereby at the same time to set forth those legal
+viewpoints which contradict the Prosecution’s interpretation. In order
+to save time in this legal exposition and make the subject matter
+clearer I have submitted as Exhibit Number Raeder-66 an opinion on
+international law with regard to the Norway campaign by Dr. Hermann
+Mosler, professor of international law at the University of Bonn. The
+High Tribunal will remember that I was given permission to make use of
+this opinion for purposes of argumentation, and I would therefore refer
+at this point to this detailed scientific compilation and findings. For
+the purpose of final plea I shall confine myself to a summary of the
+essential concepts of the opinion.
+
+Articles 1 and 2 of the Hague Convention on Rights and Obligations of
+Neutrals in the event of warfare at sea stipulate that the parties at
+war are bound to respect the rights of sovereignty of neutral powers in
+the territory and coastal waters of the neutral power, and all hostile
+acts of warships of the belligerent parties within the coastal waters of
+a neutral power are strictly banned as violations of neutrality.
+Contrary to these stipulations Great Britain violated Norway’s
+neutrality through the laying of mines in Norwegian coastal waters for
+the purpose of obstructing the legitimate passage of German warships and
+merchantmen, especially in order to cut off shipments of iron ore from
+Narvik to Germany. In the letter from the British Foreign Office which I
+received in reply to my petition for authorization to submit files of
+the British Admiralty, confirmation as per Exhibit Number Raeder-130 was
+received to the effect that His Majesty’s forces laid mine fields in
+Norwegian waters, and in addition it was stated that this was a
+well-known fact (Documents Number Raeder-83, 84, 90).
+
+The fact is presumably uncontested that thereupon Germany was justified
+in restoring the equilibrium between the belligerent parties, in other
+words by setting her Armed Forces to wrest from the enemy the benefit he
+was deriving from a violation of neutrality. Reaction against such a
+violation of neutrality is directed primarily against the enemy, not
+against the neutral. The legal relationship to neutrality ...
+
+PRESIDENT [_Interposing_]: Dr. Siemers, the Tribunal would like to know
+what your contention is on this subject. Do you contend that any breach
+of neutrality of a warring state entitles one of the warring nations to
+enter that neutral state?
+
+DR. SIEMERS: Mr. President, in this general way one certainly could not
+say that. It is a principle of international law that a violation of
+international law committed by one state only entitles the other warring
+nation to a countermeasure in proportion to the breach of neutrality
+committed. Certainly an occupation of Norway on the part of Germany
+would not be justified because Britain mined the coastal waters. The
+fact does not justify an occupation.
+
+PRESIDENT: Would it be your contention that it made any difference on
+the rights of Germany if Germany were to be held to be an aggressor in
+the original war?
+
+I will repeat it. According to your contention, would it make any
+difference that Germany was held, if it were held, to be the aggressor
+in the original war out of which the occupation of the neutral country
+occurred?
+
+DR. SIEMERS: Mr. President, I beg to apologize, but I am afraid I cannot
+quite understand the sense as it comes through in translation.
+
+PRESIDENT: I will say it again more slowly. According to your
+contention, would it make any difference if the Tribunal were to think
+that Germany had been the aggressor in the war which led to the
+occupation of the neutral state?
+
+DR. SIEMERS: My apologies, Mr. President. Now, if I understood that
+correctly, you wish me to answer the question whether the fact that
+previously a war had been begun by Germany against Poland would
+influence juridical attitude toward the question of Norway.
+
+PRESIDENT: Assuming, I only say assuming that the war begun by Germany
+against Poland were to be held to be an aggressive war.
+
+DR. SIEMERS: Mr. President, I believe that I must answer in the
+negative, because the individual facts under international law must be
+dealt with separately. The fact that the Tribunal may possibly assume
+that an aggressive war was conducted against Poland cannot, from the
+point of view of international law, have any effect upon subsequent
+years.
+
+That, incidentally, is the point of view which, I believe, was adopted
+by the Prosecution, for Sir Hartley Shawcross also, dealt with the
+question of Greece and the question of landings entirely under the
+aspect of Greek events and did not contend that Britain could occupy
+Greece because Germany had occupied Poland. He said, just as I did, that
+from the legal standpoint of international law Britain could occupy
+Greece because Greece was threatened by a German occupation. That is
+what I am saying from the point of view of international law with
+reference to Norway; as my further remarks will show, I am not trying to
+draw any other parallels.
+
+PRESIDENT: Yes. There is one other question which I should like to ask
+you. Is it your contention that Germany was entitled under international
+law to use the territorial waters of Norway, either for her warships or
+for the transport of ore, or for the transport of prisoners of war?
+
+DR. SIEMERS: In my opinion, from the standpoint of international law,
+the situation is that Germany was entitled to use the coastal waters,
+observing at the same time the various international rules, such as for
+instance, only brief stays in ports and similar rulings like the
+obligation to submit to investigation by neutrals in the case of the
+_Altmark_. But basically, carrying on shipping operations from Narvik
+was justified according to international law as far as I know.
+
+PRESIDENT: Continue.
+
+DR. SIEMERS: Mr. President, with reference to the last point, may I add
+one thing? Should the view be adopted that Germany was not allowed to
+use these coastal waters, then the mining of these coastal waters would
+have been a justified breach of neutrality on Britain’s part, so that,
+as far as I am concerned, the mining operation as grounds for this would
+have to be left out of my plea, though not the other facts I am citing.
+Mining the waters is in equivalent proportion to the use of the coastal
+waters. I myself consider that the mining operation was not permissible,
+while passage through coastal waters was; but this does not affect the
+entire subject of the occupation of Norway. I hope I shall be understood
+as not meaning that Germany was justified in occupying Norway because
+Britain had mined the coastal waters.
+
+PRESIDENT: But you are saying, are you, that Germany was entitled to use
+the coastal waters, first of all, for the transport of ore; secondly,
+for her warships?
+
+DR. SIEMERS: Yes.
+
+PRESIDENT: And thirdly, for the transport of prisoners of war?
+
+DR. SIEMERS: Yes. It is my opinion, Mr. President, that as to ore
+shipments there is no prohibitive clause in international law, so that
+this shipping was permissible.
+
+With reference to prisoners of war, may I point out that only one case
+arose and that is the case of the _Altmark_. If Germany was not deemed
+authorized to use coastal waters for the transport of prisoners of war,
+then that could at most lead to Britain’s adopting an equivalent single
+countermeasure; but she would not be justified in mining the entire
+coastal waters. The mining of the entire coast, from the point of view
+of international law, is only justified if you adopt the point of view
+that Germany’s merchant shipping was prohibited from entering those
+coastal waters by international law. But that, in my opinion, is not the
+situation.
+
+PRESIDENT: You may continue.
+
+DR. SIEMERS: Reaction against such violation of neutrality is primarily
+directed against the adversary, not against the neutral party. Legal
+relationship deriving from neutrality exists not only between the
+neutral party and the two belligerent parties, but the neutrality of the
+state in question is at the same time a factor in direct relations
+existing between the belligerent parties. If the relationship of
+neutrality between one of the belligerent parties and the neutral power
+suffers disturbance, the neutral power can in no way file complaint if
+the other belligerent power takes appropriate action; at the same time
+it is entirely immaterial whether the neutral state is unable or
+unwilling to protect its neutrality (Document Number Raeder-66).
+
+The legal title under which the belligerent power thus placed at a
+disadvantage can proceed to take countermeasures is the “right of
+self-defense” (_das Recht der Selbsterhaltung; le droit de défense
+personelle_). As brought out in detail by this opinion, this right of
+self-defense is generally recognized by international law. It suffices
+to point out here that this basic law is not affected by the Kellogg
+Pact, which has so often been mentioned in this Court. In this
+connection I ask permission to offer the following brief quotation from
+the circular memorandum of the U.S. Secretary of State, Kellogg, dated
+23 June 1938:
+
+ “There is nothing in the American draft of an antiwar treaty
+ which restricts or prejudices the right of self-defense in any
+ manner. That right is inherent in every sovereign state and is
+ implied in every treaty.”
+
+Justice Jackson will permit me to mention that he himself, in his
+opening speech of 21 November 1945, referred to the “right of legitimate
+self-defense.”
+
+It is interesting that in his address before Parliament on 8 February
+1940, the Swedish Foreign Minister, Guenther, recognized this concept,
+although he represented the interests of a state whose neutrality was
+endangered at the time, and in addition was speaking before Germany
+proceeded to retaliatory measures in Norway (Document Number Raeder-66).
+In that address Guenther expressed his opinion with regard to the
+British declaration that Sweden’s neutrality would be respected only as
+long as it was respected by Britain’s enemies. Guenther recognized the
+fact that Sweden, in her relationship to England, would lose her
+neutrality should Germany violate Sweden’s neutrality and should Sweden
+be neither willing nor able to prevent such violation of her neutrality
+by Germany. Consequently, Guenther said, Great Britain would no longer
+be required to treat Sweden as a neutral country. It is obvious that the
+conclusions drawn by Guenther in the event of a breach of Sweden’s
+neutrality by Germany must also apply to the three-cornered legal
+relationship between Great Britain, Germany, and Norway. What was
+involved, however—and this I shall set forth in my presentation of
+evidence—was not Great Britain’s mine-laying activity in Norwegian
+coastal waters but a much more far-reaching Anglo-French scheme aiming
+at the occupation of Norwegian bases and of a portion of the Norwegian
+home territory. The mine-laying activity enters into the picture merely
+as a part of the total plan.
+
+According to Mosler’s opinion and in the light of the above remarks, it
+is absolutely clear that Germany was justified in occupying Norway had
+the Allies carried part of their plan into effect by landing at a
+Norwegian base before German troops made their appearance. This,
+however, was not the case. Rather, as I will show, was the situation
+such that Germany anticipated an Anglo-French landing; in other words,
+she decided on countermeasures in anticipation of the imminent danger
+which threatened.
+
+Another legal question arises therefrom: Assuming the same conditions,
+are countermeasures by a belligerent permitted only after the opposing
+belligerent has proceeded to violate neutrality, or is a reaction
+permitted beforehand in view of the imminently threatening violation of
+neutrality, in order to head off the enemy’s attack which can be
+expected at any moment?
+
+According to the well-founded opinion of Dr. Mosler preventive
+countermeasures are permissible; and an impending violation of
+neutrality, which can be expected with certainty, is considered equal to
+a completed violation of neutrality.
+
+The well-known English specialist on international law, Westlake, states
+with regard to the question of measures:
+
+ “Such a case in character resembles one where a belligerent has
+ certain knowledge that his opponent, in order to gain a
+ strategic advantage, is just about to have an army march through
+ the territory of a neutral who is clearly too weak to resist;
+ under the circumstances it would be impossible to refuse him the
+ right to anticipate the attack on the neutral territory.”
+
+The justification for such a preventive measure, according to Westlake,
+lies in the right of self-defense, which applies equally against a
+threatening violation of neutrality. Any other concept would fail to
+meet the facts of life and would not correspond to the character of the
+society of nations as an aggregation of sovereign states with an as yet
+incompletely developed common code of law. In the domestic law system of
+every civilized country the prevention of an immediately threatening
+attack is a permissible act of defense, although in such a contingency
+even the help of the state against the law-breaker is available. In the
+community of international law, where this is not the case—at any rate
+not at the beginning of and during the second World War—the viewpoint
+of self-defense must apply to an even greater extent. In keeping with
+this concept, the British Government during this war also considered the
+preventive measure justified when it occupied Iceland on 10 May 1940.
+The British Government justified this measure clearly and correctly in
+accordance with international law in an official announcement of the
+Foreign Office, as follows:
+
+ “After the German occupation of Denmark it has become necessary
+ to count on the possibility of a sudden German raid on Iceland.
+ It is clear that the Icelandic Government, in case of such an
+ attack, even if it were only carried out with very small forces,
+ would be unable to prevent the country from falling completely
+ into the hands of the Germans.”
+
+The preventive measure was carried out by Britain, although Iceland
+expressly protested by a note against the occupation. I also ask to note
+that the United States agreed with this standpoint of law, as is proved
+by the well-known message from the President of the United States to
+Congress of 7 July 1941, and the subsequent occupation of Iceland by
+armed forces of the American Navy.
+
+In accordance with these basic principles of law, the facts at hand must
+be examined. I have tried to clarify the facts in the presentation of
+evidence, and I would like to summarize the major factors which actually
+indicated a closely impending violation of neutrality on the part of the
+Allies by a partial occupation of Norway, and thereby justified the
+German campaign in Norway.
+
+At the end of September and early in October 1939, Admiral Raeder, as
+the evidence has shown, received various items of information through
+the regular reports of Admiral Canaris as chief of intelligence and
+through Admiral Carls, which gave reason to believe in the danger of the
+Allies’ proceeding to occupy bases in Norway, in accordance with their
+plans to encircle Germany in order to put a stop, in particular, to ore
+imports from Scandinavia.
+
+British flying personnel camouflaged in civilian clothing had been seen
+in Oslo; and survey work by Allied officers on Norwegian bridges,
+viaducts, and tunnels up to the Swedish border had been identified.
+Furthermore, the quiet mobilization of Swedish troops, owing to the
+danger to Swedish ore territories, had become known. Raeder was
+justified in considering himself obliged to report these facts to Hitler
+and to point out to him the danger which would arise for Germany if
+British and French armed forces were to gain a foothold in Scandinavia.
+The dangers were clear. They consisted of the cutting-off of all imports
+from the industrial areas of Scandinavia, in particular of the ore
+imports, as well as in the fact that the Allies would obtain a favorable
+base for air attacks, and last but not least, in the fact that the
+German Navy would be threatened on its flank and its operational
+potentialities would be limited.
+
+The blockade of the North Sea and Baltic would have had strategically
+disastrous consequences. As the information did not yet allow of a final
+over-all picture, Raeder did not suggest immediate occupation, but only
+pointed out the dangers, intending to await further developments for the
+time being. Neither did Hitler make a final decision during this
+discussion of 10 October 1939 but agreed to wait. Similar information
+was received during the months of October and November, this time also
+from the naval attaché, Korvettenkapitän Schreiber, who had in the
+meantime been sent to Oslo, whose affidavit (Document Raeder-107) I
+would like to cite. It shows that the Norwegian shipping association had
+made tanker tonnage of about one million tons available to Britain with
+the consent of the Norwegian Government (Document Number Raeder-68).
+
+In the winter of 1939-40, information took on a more definite form
+concerning espionage missions given by the British and French Secret
+Service to Norwegian agents and British harbor consulates for the
+purpose of reconnoitering landing facilities and examination of
+Norwegian railroads with regard to their capacity, particularly the
+Narvik line, and missions concerning information about land and sea
+airports in Norway. From the fact that the information from two
+different sources, namely, the naval attaché in Oslo and Admiral
+Canaris, checked and became more and more certain during the period from
+October to December 1939, the danger indicated appeared to keep
+increasing.
+
+In addition, in December 1939 Quisling and Hagelin sent to
+Rosenberg—entirely independently of the sources of information which
+had existed up to that time—the same and similar information concerning
+the landing intentions of the Allies. This did not go to Raeder for the
+sole reason that Raeder did not know either Quisling or Hagelin at that
+time. Since the question involved was a purely military-strategic one,
+Rosenberg asked Raeder to discuss things with Quisling so that Raeder
+could examine the military-technical possibilities in consideration of
+the fact the aggression by the Allies in Scandinavia must be expected
+according to the information received. This is evident from the letter
+from Rosenberg to Raeder of 13 December 1939, which I submitted as
+Exhibit Number Raeder-67. Raeder considered it his duty from the purely
+military point of view to inform Hitler, with whom he had not discussed
+this question in the meantime, that coinciding information had since
+been received from Canaris, the naval attaché in Oslo, and Quisling.
+Hitler asked to speak with Quisling personally, whereupon he decided, in
+order to meet the threat, to make the necessary preparations for an
+eventual preventive measure, namely, the occupation of Norway (Document
+C-64, Exhibit Number GB-86).
+
+The final decision was still deferred, and further information was
+awaited as to whether the danger appeared to increase. This caution and
+delay will readily be understood in the case of Raeder. As I have
+already observed, Raeder would have preferred to see the neutrality of
+Norway maintained, especially since he was against any conquest just for
+the sake of conquest. He knew, on the other hand, that an occupation
+required the commitment of the whole Navy, thus involving the fate of
+the entire Navy, and that the loss of at least a third of the whole
+fleet had to be reckoned with. It must surely be clear how difficult,
+from such political and strategic viewpoints, such a decision was for a
+responsible man and soldier.
+
+Unfortunately, during the first months of the year 1940, the reports
+multiplied and kept becoming more certain. In March 1940 uncommonly many
+English-speaking persons could be seen in Oslo, and Raeder received very
+serious and credible information about impending measures by the Allies
+against Norway and Sweden. As far as landing intentions were concerned,
+Narvik, Trondheim, and Stavanger were mentioned. In this manner the
+military planning actually was not undertaken until February and March
+1940, and final instructions were issued to the Wehrmacht only in March
+1940. In addition, numerous violations of neutrality occurred in March
+1940, which have been collected in the War Diary (Documents Raeder-81
+and 82), and also the mine-laying in Norwegian territorial waters at the
+beginning of April.
+
+The Prosecution has put in only a few documents against this
+comprehensive informative material, according to which the German
+Minister in Oslo, Breuer, did not look upon the danger as being so great
+but believed that British activities, which he also reported, tended
+merely to provoke Germany into opening war operations in Norwegian
+waters (Documents Number D-843, Exhibit GB-466; D-844, Exhibit GB-467;
+D-845, Exhibit GB-486).
+
+Baron Weizsäcker’s point of view in cross-examination was that at first
+he did not consider the danger so great either; but he admitted that
+later on the facts proved that he and Breuer were wrong, while Raeder
+had been right in his apprehension.
+
+This objective accuracy of the opinion of Admiral Raeder, and of the
+information on which he based his opinion, is shown in the various
+documents submitted by me and accepted by the Court.
+
+Since 16 January 1940, the French High Command had been working on a
+plan which had in view, among other things, the occupation of harbors
+and airfields on the west coast of Norway. The plan provided, in
+addition, for an eventual extension of operations to Sweden and
+occupation of the mines of Gallivare (Document Number Raeder-79).
+Efforts have been made to justify this plan by stating that it was
+elaborated solely to help Finland against the Soviet Union.
+
+To begin with, it might be argued in contradiction to this that an
+action in support of Finland does not justify any occupation of
+Norwegian territory. Moreover, the documents show that it was not only a
+question of altruistic measures in favor of Finland. During the
+inter-Allied military conferences on 31 January and 1 February, which
+preceded the meeting of the Supreme Council on 5 February, the question
+of direct help for Finland was relegated by the British to second place;
+they showed themselves to be determined supporters of an enterprise
+against the mines of northern Sweden. This is confirmed by General
+Gamelin in a note of 10 March 1940 (Document Raeder-79), and he adds
+that this opinion obtained the majority vote in the Supreme Council and
+that preparations for the Scandinavian expedition should be started
+immediately.
+
+And so it came about that the Franco-British fighting forces had been
+ready for transportation since the first days of March; according to
+Gamelin, the leadership of the proposed operations in Scandinavia was in
+the hands of the British High Command. Gamelin adds finally that the
+Scandinavian plans must be resolutely pursued further in order to save
+Finland—I quote, “or at least to lay hands on the Swedish ore and the
+northern harbors.”
+
+Lord Halifax informed the Norwegian Minister on 7 February that Britain
+wished to obtain certain bases on the Norwegian coast in order to stop
+German transports of ore from Narvik (Document Raeder-97). By
+mid-February, British and French General Staff officers were, in
+agreement with the Norwegian authorities, inspecting landing places
+(Document Raeder-97). According to a report by the German Legation in
+Stockholm, dated 16 February 1940, British intentions in this respect
+were to land troops simultaneously at Bergen, Trondheim, and Narvik. On
+21 February 1940 Daladier communicated to the French Ambassador in
+London, Corbin, that the occupation of the most important Norwegian
+ports and the landing of the first body of the Allied fighting forces
+would give Norway and Sweden a feeling of security; and he goes on to
+say that this operation must be planned and executed at shortest notice,
+“independently of Finland’s call for assistance.” In the event of this
+_démarche_ meeting with refusal by Norway, which was likely, the British
+Government was to take note of the Norwegian attitude and immediately
+seize control of the bases it needed for the safeguarding of its
+interests, doing so in the form of a “surprise operation.” Whether
+Sweden would refuse passage through to Finland did not appear important;
+what is being emphasized is rather—and I quote:
+
+ “... the advantage of having secured a dominating position
+ against Germany in the North, interrupted the sea transport of
+ Swedish ore, and brought the Swedish ore districts within range
+ of our aviation” (Documents Raeder-77 and 80).
+
+On 27 February 1940, Churchill declared in the House of Commons that he
+was “tired of considering the rights of neutrals” (Document Raeder-97).
+
+It is interesting to note that unanimity was achieved in the sixth
+session of the Supreme Council on 28 March 1940—I quote:
+
+ “Every endeavor on the part of the Soviet Government to obtain
+ from Norway a position on the Atlantic coast runs counter to the
+ vital interests of the Allies and results in appropriate
+ counteraction” (Document Raeder-83).
+
+The view thereby adopted by the Supreme Council with reference to the
+vital interests of the Allies coincides exactly with the legitimate
+notions of the “right of self-defense” as presented by me and is in
+complete contradiction to the interpretation of international law
+propounded by the Prosecution.
+
+The ultimate execution of the operation in Norway, that is, the landing
+and the construction of bases, was decided on 28 March 1940 between the
+authoritative British and French offices. This date was indicated at a
+session of the French War Council by the French Prime Minister (Document
+Raeder-59); and General Gamelin added that he had, on 29 March,
+impressed upon General Ironside the necessity of having everything ready
+for a swift occupation of the Norwegian ports. He said he had also
+informed Mr. Churchill to the same effect on the occasion of a visit to
+Paris.
+
+One day later, 30 March, Churchill declared on the radio—I quote, “It
+would not be just if, in a life-and-death struggle, the Western Powers
+adhered to legal agreements” (Document Raeder-97).
+
+On 2 April 1940 at 1912 hours, London notified Paris by telegram that
+the first transport was “to sail on J. 1. day,” and that J. 1. day was
+in principle 5 April (Document Raeder-85). On 5 April, Earl de la Warr
+stated that neither Germany nor the neutrals could be certain that
+“England would allow her hands to be tied behind her back in complying
+with the letter of the law” (Document Raeder-97).
+
+The British Minister of Labor, Ernest Brown, on 6 April 1940 declared
+that neither Germany nor the neutrals could count on “the Western
+Powers’ adhering to the letter of international law” (Document
+Raeder-97).
+
+On the same day—this was one day after the laying of mines by British
+combat forces in Norwegian territorial waters—a secret British
+operational order was given “concerning preparations for the occupation
+of the northern Swedish ore field from Narvik” (Document Raeder-88).
+
+In this order it was specified that the mission of the “Avon” Force
+consisted first of all in “securing the port of Narvik and the railway
+to the Swedish border.” It was added that it was the intention of the
+commander “to advance into Sweden and to occupy the Gallivare ore fields
+and important points of that territory as soon as an opportunity
+occurs,” a formulation strikingly reminiscent of the words in the
+Prosecution Document L-79, “to attack Poland at the first suitable
+opportunity.”
+
+The original plan of dispatching the first transport to Norway on 5
+April was changed; for on the evening of 5 April the British High
+Command informed the Commander-in-Chief of the French Navy that—I
+quote:
+
+ “... the first British convoy could not depart before 8 April
+ which with respect to the time schedule established would mean
+ that the first French contingent would leave its embarkation
+ port on 16 April” (Document Raeder-91).
+
+To complete the story it may be mentioned that the Norwegian operation
+was designated by the Allies by the camouflage name of “Stratford Plan,”
+while the German Norwegian operation was referred to by the camouflage
+name of “Weser Exercise” (Weserübung) (Document Raeder-98).
+
+All these facts go to show that, since the autumn of 1939, preparations
+for possible action in Norway were made by studying landing
+possibilities, _et cetera_. As from January and February 1940 the danger
+of an occupation of bases in Norway by the Allies was imminent. In March
+1940 the execution of the scheme was ultimately decided upon and the
+departure of the first convoy was scheduled for 5 April. Simultaneously,
+mine-laying was carried out in the Norwegian territorial waters and
+troops were at the same time concentrated in British and French ports
+for the Norwegian operation. Thus factual evidence of imminent
+neutrality violations existed from the point of view of international
+law; and neutrality violations had indeed been already committed to a
+certain extent, as by mine-laying. This was the point where Germany, in
+accordance with the international concept of the right of self-defense,
+was entitled to resort to equivalent countermeasures, that is, to occupy
+Norway in order to prevent the impending occupation by other belligerent
+states. It was, in fact, as was shown later, high time; for Germany
+forestalled the Allies only because the British High Command had
+postponed the departure of the first convoy, originally scheduled for 5
+April. The German operation in Norway must therefore be considered as
+legitimate according to the principles of international law.
+
+I have the firm conviction that the High Tribunal, in view of the
+circumstances just presented in connection with existing international
+law, will conclude that Admiral Raeder, with regard to the occupation of
+Norway, acted from purely strategic points of view and in due
+consideration of international legal standards, and accordingly will
+acquit him of the charge made by the Prosecution.
+
+With reference to Norway, the Prosecution has moreover charged against
+Raeder—and also against Dönitz—that a violation of international law
+is involved in the fact that, according to an order dated 30 March 1940,
+the Naval Forces were to fly the British ensign until the troops had
+been landed (Documents C-151, Exhibit GB-91; C-115, Exhibit GB-90).
+
+This too is an error of the Prosecution as regards international law in
+sea warfare. The Hague Regulations on Land Warfare do expressly forbid
+the misuse of flags. In sea warfare, on the other hand, the answer to
+this question according to prevailing international law is definitely
+that, until hostilities begin, ships may sail with their own or with
+enemy or neutral flags or with no flags at all. I take the liberty, in
+this respect, of availing myself of Dr. Mosler’s juridical treatment of
+the question in his opinion (Document Raeder-66), appearing under Item
+7, and in particular of his references to legal literature on the
+subject, according to which the use of a foreign flag is universally
+considered as a legitimate ruse of war and is allowed and especially
+condoned by British practice; this is in accordance with the historical
+precedent when Nelson, in the Napoleonic wars, flew the French flag off
+Barcelona to lure Spanish ships. This dispute is, however, superfluous
+in the present case, because actually these orders to fly the British
+flag were according to documentary evidence canceled on 8 April, that is
+to say, prior to the execution of the Norway operation (Document
+Raeder-89).
+
+In conclusion I wish to emphasize, with reference to the subject of
+Norway, that after the occupation of Norway Raeder and the German Navy
+did everything they could to give a friendly character to the relations
+with Norway, to treat the country and the people decently during the
+occupation, and to spare them every unnecessary burden. Raeder and the
+commanding admiral in Norway, Admiral Böhm, moreover endeavored to
+conclude a peace with Norway guaranteeing Norwegian national interests.
+Their efforts were frustrated through the creation by Hitler and Himmler
+of a so-called civil administration under Reich Commissioner Terboven
+which, unlike the Armed Forces, was linked with the Party, the SS, SD,
+and Gestapo (Documents Number Raeder-107 and 129). As confirmed by Böhm
+in his affidavit, Raeder repeatedly intervened with Hitler in favor of
+treating the Norwegian people well and for an early conclusion of peace
+and, together with Böhm, proceeded with the utmost vigor against
+Terboven. Here again, the tragic fact is that the Armed Forces, despite
+its utmost efforts, was neither able to oppose Hitler’s dictatorial
+methods nor the dictatorial methods employed, with Hitler’s knowledge,
+by such a mediocre Reich Commissioner as Terboven. The Norwegian people
+who had to suffer under the occupation know—and this is the only
+gratification for Raeder—that the Navy was not the cause of these
+sufferings. On the other hand, it is interesting to know that the
+differences which cropped up between Hitler and Raeder with reference to
+Norway are precisely among the chief motives which ultimately caused
+Raeder to insist upon his resignation in September 1942. Other motives
+were that Raeder also had differences with Hitler over France, because
+here again Raeder urged the conclusion of peace, while Hitler, with his
+extreme nature, was opposed to conciliatory steps of that kind in
+occupied territories. Raeder also had differences with Hitler regarding
+Russia, because he was in favor of observing the German-Russian treaty,
+and declared himself opposed to breaking the Treaty and going to war
+with Russia.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. SIEMERS: I now come to the charge of the Prosecution with regard to
+a war of aggression against Russia. The charge of the Prosecution on
+this subject cannot be very well understood. Land warfare only was
+concerned, so that the Navy did not have to make any preparations, with
+the exception of a few in the Baltic Sea. The Prosecution itself has
+furthermore stated that Raeder had been opposed to the war against
+Russia. The only thing which might be left of the charge of the
+Prosecution is its claim that Raeder had fundamentally been in favor of
+the war against Russia also and had only been opposed to Hitler with
+regard to the time factor. With reference to Document Number C-170 the
+Prosecution states that Raeder had only recommended the postponement of
+the war against Russia until after the victory over Britain. In the
+light of Document C-170 this actually might appear plausible. In
+reality, however, the case is different, and the true state of affairs
+has been cleared up by the detailed presentation of evidence. The
+witness Admiral Schulte-Mönting has clearly stated, without being
+contradicted in cross-examination, that Raeder not only raised
+objections with regard to the time but that he argued with Hitler about
+a campaign against Russia and did so for moral reasons and reasons of
+international law, because he was of the opinion that the Non-Aggression
+Pact with Russia as well as the trade agreement should be observed under
+all circumstances. The Navy was especially interested in deliveries from
+Russia and always tried to observe the treaties strictly. Besides this
+basic principle of observing treaties, that is, besides this general
+reason, Raeder was of the opinion that a war against Russia would also
+be wrong from the strategic standpoint. His own testimony and that of
+Schulte-Mönting show that in September, November, and December 1940
+Raeder tried again and again to dissuade Hitler from contemplating a war
+against Russia. It is correct that in Document C-170 only the strategic
+justification for his opposition has been recorded. However, this is not
+at all surprising because in the papers of the Naval Operations Staff
+naturally only justifications were recorded which were of
+naval-technical and strategic importance, but not political reasons.
+
+I have already shown that as a general principle Hitler did not permit
+Raeder, as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, to intervene in questions
+concerning foreign policy, that is to say, in things which did not
+belong in his department. If Raeder did on occasion undertake this
+contrary to the will of Hitler in cases of special importance, then he
+could do so only privately, and was then unable to record these
+conversations in the War Diary. However, he always told everything to
+his Chief of Staff as his closest confidant. As a result Schulte-Mönting
+could absolutely confirm that Raeder in this case opposed Hitler because
+of misgivings with regard to morality and international law, and
+furthermore also employed strategic reasons in the hope of thus being
+able to bring more influence to bear on Hitler. Schulte-Mönting even
+stated—just like Raeder—that in November the latter had gained the
+impression, after a discussion, that he had dissuaded Hitler from his
+plans. I believe that this has clarified the matter, and only the tragic
+fact remains that Hitler paid just as little attention to Raeder’s
+political objections with regard to Russia as with regard to Norway and
+France.
+
+A similar situation obtains with regard to the charge of the Prosecution
+referring to the war of aggression against the United States and the
+violation of the neutrality of Brazil. Both of these charges are
+sufficiently refuted within the framework of the evidence, so that I am
+only going to discuss them very briefly.
+
+According to the statement of the Prosecution, Raeder somehow
+collaborated in the plan to induce Japan to attack the United States. As
+a matter of fact no naval strategic conferences were held between Japan
+and Raeder. Raeder always held the conviction that a war against the
+United States must be avoided just as much as a war against Russia. This
+attitude is understandable seeing that he had always held the opinion
+that Hitler should under no circumstances wage a war against Britain.
+Since the war against Britain had now come about, it was Raeder’s duty
+as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy to use all his strength to fight
+successfully against Britain. Raeder knew the limitations of the
+fighting capacity of the Navy; and it was, therefore, quite out of the
+question that he should have collaborated in an extension of the naval
+war, considering, as he did, that the conduct of a war against Britain
+was already a too difficult task. Document C-152 submitted by the
+Prosecution therefore mentions only a proposition that Japan should
+attack Singapore and is based on the assumption that the United States
+should be kept out of the war. This suggestion made to Hitler that Japan
+should attack Singapore was correct in every respect. After all, we were
+at war with England, and Raeder was forced to try to concentrate all his
+forces against that country. He was thus justified in suggesting that
+Japan—as Germany’s ally—should attack England. Moreover this, the only
+discussion by Raeder, was not held until 18 March 1941, while Hitler had
+already in his Directive Number 24 of 5 March 1941 established the
+guiding principle that Japan must attack Singapore, which he considered
+a key position of Britain (Document C-175).
+
+I should like to interpose one sentence here. It can be seen from the
+report by General Marshall that no common plan had been found to exist
+between Germany and Japan.
+
+As Schulte-Mönting has affirmed, Raeder was just as surprised by the
+sudden attack by Japan on Pearl Harbor as every other German. The
+attempt of the Prosecution to discredit this statement during the
+cross-examination of Schulte-Mönting by introducing a telegram from the
+naval attaché in Tokyo to Berlin, dated 6 December 1941 (Document
+D-872), failed. In the first place Raeder probably only received this
+telegram after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December had
+already started; and besides, Pearl Harbor is not mentioned at all in
+the telegram.
+
+The charge of the Prosecution with regard to Brazil has been refuted
+just as effectively because, after my statements during the hearing of
+evidence, the Prosecution did not revert to this point in any of the
+cross-examinations of Raeder, Schulte-Mönting, and Wagner. The charge
+was that, according to Jodl’s diary, the Naval Operations Staff
+authorized and approved the use of arms against Brazilian warships and
+merchant vessels fully 2 months before the outbreak of war between
+Germany and Brazil (Document 1807-PS).
+
+Apart from the testimony of witnesses, this case is refuted by
+documents, namely, the complete excerpt from Jodl’s diary which I
+submitted as Exhibit Number Raeder-115, as well as by Documents Number
+Raeder-116 to 118. These documents reveal that Brazil had violated the
+rules of neutrality by permitting the United States to make use of
+Brazilian airfields as a base for attacks on German and Italian U-boats.
+The Brazilian Air Ministry had furthermore officially announced that
+attacks had been made by the Brazilian Air Force. Considering such
+conduct, which is against all the rules of neutrality, the demand of the
+Naval Operations Staff for armed action against Brazilian vessels is
+justified. So here again the Prosecution failed to prove Raeder to have
+committed a crime or even a violation of international law.
+
+The Prosecution has very painstakingly submitted an exceedingly large
+amount of material, and the wealth of detail called for great care in
+the submission of evidence for the Defense. I have endeavored to deal
+with all the charges in the submission of evidence or in my final plea,
+and have made efforts to show as clearly as possible that none of them,
+partly on factual, partly on legal grounds, comply with the requirements
+of a criminal case within the meaning of this Charter. Insofar as I have
+not, in spite of my desire for great exactitude, dealt with certain
+documents, it was because they seemed to me of small importance and in
+any case of no importance in criminal law; for instance, the many cases
+in which Raeder was only mentioned because—without officially taking
+any part—he received a copy of the documents for routine reasons. It
+would have been tedious to go into such recurrent cases, even if the
+Prosecution reiterated these formal indications, so that one was often
+tempted to recall the saying of Napoleon that repetition is that turn of
+speech which acts as the best evidence.
+
+I further believe that in my final plea for Admiral Raeder I may forego
+argumentation regarding genuine war crimes, the crimes against humanity,
+since I am unable to establish any connection between these and Raeder
+from the material submitted by the Prosecution. Also no particular
+charge is made against Raeder in this connection, with the exception of
+the two cases connected with the Commando Order, namely, the shooting of
+two soldiers in Bordeaux and the shooting of the British soldier Evans,
+who was made a prisoner by the SD on the Swedish border after he had
+previously participated in the midget submarine attack on the _Tirpitz_.
+Thus far the charge has been refuted by testimony insofar as it concerns
+the Navy. Both cases did not come, or came only later, to the knowledge
+of the Naval Operations Staff—just before Raeder’s departure. In both
+cases action was taken on the basis of the Commando Order by Hitler
+himself or by the SD without the knowledge and will of the Naval
+Operations Staff; and what is most important, in both cases the
+documents of the Prosecution showed that these soldiers were in civilian
+clothes and, therefore, were not entitled to the protection of the
+Geneva Convention (Document Number D-864, Exhibit GB-457 and Document
+UK-57, Exhibit GB-164).
+
+All the other criminal facts which the Prosecution submitted, especially
+applying to the East, I need not deal with, as Raeder did not
+participate in them. I hope that here also I shall have the approval of
+the Court in mentioning the handling of the Katyn case, in which the
+Court pointed out that Raeder was not involved and therefore refused to
+allow me to act as defense counsel in this connection; from this I draw
+the legal conclusion that Raeder cannot even by implication through the
+conspiracy be considered as burdened with these criminal facts, since he
+did not know of these events and had nothing to do with them.
+
+The case for the Prosecution is founded on a desire to see its basic
+theory accepted and acknowledged, namely, the conception that so many
+crimes cannot have emanated from the will of a single individual but
+rather that they result from a conspiracy, a plot, involving many
+persons. These conspirators could logically, in the first place, only
+have been Hitler’s own collaborators, that is to say, the real National
+Socialists. Since however, Hitler wished to achieve and did achieve
+concrete results of military and economic import, something peculiar
+transpired: There were no specialists among the National Socialists for
+these tasks. Most of the National Socialist collaborators had not
+previously followed a trade providing technical education. Hitler,
+therefore, despite his desire to have only National Socialists around
+him, took on as key people in particular fields specialists who were not
+National Socialists, such as for instance Neurath for politics, and
+Schacht for economics; and for military tasks, Fritsch for the Army and
+Raeder for the Navy. The Prosecution followed this process from the
+angle of its conspiracy theory, without paying attention to the fact
+that these people, not being National Socialists, could in no way be
+counted among the conspirators and without taking into account that
+Hitler used these non-National Socialists only as technicians in a
+well-defined field, and only as long as it seemed absolutely necessary
+to him; therefore he agreed to the departure of these men, who were
+essentially not in sympathy with him, as soon as the differences between
+them seemed unbridgeable, which was bound to happen sooner or later with
+each of them, depending on the particular field involved.
+
+By this all-embracing conception of the idea of conspiracy and by this
+extension of the Prosecution’s fight to non-National Socialists, the
+Prosecution abandoned the basic concept formerly propagated abroad,
+namely, that of fighting National Socialism but not against the whole of
+Germany—two ideas which at no time and in no place have been really
+identical, as the Prosecution now tries to make out. I do believe that
+thereby the Prosecution is also going back on President Roosevelt’s
+basic idea.
+
+Yet another factual and legal point of view has not been taken into
+consideration by the Prosecution. I mean the concept of the division of
+competence under state law, that is to say the subdivision into
+individual departments. This division of competence, founded on the idea
+of division of labor, is essentially separative in character; it divides
+the field of work according to local, functional, and technical points
+of view. Thereby it defines positively the limits within which each
+division is to become active, and at the same time it defines negatively
+the boundaries of such activity by specifying which problems no longer
+concern the agencies in question, that is to say, where they must not
+exercise any official activity.
+
+In a democracy additional contacts exist by virtue of general Cabinet
+meetings and through the Prime Minister, the Reich President, or the
+Reich Chancellor, as the case may be. In a dictatorship it is different,
+particularly if the dictator, as was the case with Hitler in the
+National Socialist State, exploits the segregation of the various
+departments with extreme skill and sees to it that they are kept as
+isolated as possible, with the result that all power of decision rests
+finally with him as the dictator, who may even play off one department
+against the other. The strict partitioning into governmental departments
+as carried out in the National Socialist State in itself refutes the
+concept of conspiracy and renders it extremely difficult for the
+individual to exceed the limits of his own department in any manner.
+
+This significance may be illustrated by the following example: The
+maintenance of political relations with other states, the contracting or
+cancellation of agreements or alliances with other states, the
+declaration of war and conclusion of peace, are matters within the
+jurisdiction of the authority directing foreign affairs; but they are
+not within the jurisdiction of the agencies concerned with domestic
+tasks, such as for instance the Reich Finance Administration, Justice,
+or the Military.
+
+Thus, since the decision concerning war and peace is not a matter for
+the military, the military has to accept the decisions made by the
+political leadership, decisions which have a binding material effect on
+the military authorities. The military commander must assume for his
+department the consequences resulting from the decision. As soon as war
+is declared, the military forces must fight. They do not bear any
+responsibility for the war, since they were not able to take part in the
+decision that war should be declared. Consequently, for an army the
+concept of war of aggression exists in the strategic sense only. Aside
+from that, any war it may be obliged to wage is, to the army, simply
+war, regardless of how it may be qualified legally (Article 45 of the
+Reich Constitution).
+
+Responsibility, from the point of view of state law and criminal law, is
+in proportion to the extent of jurisdiction. Therefore, if the
+commander-in-chief of a branch of the Armed Forces is responsible solely
+for the waging of war, though not for the causes leading to war, his
+responsibility in respect to a strategic plan must be confined to the
+plan as such, but not to the possible origin of the war for which the
+strategic plan was worked out.
+
+This officially and legally important segregation of governmental
+departments and the distribution of authority was, in the interest of
+strengthening his own power in a particularly emphatic manner, carried
+out by Hitler in many domains, such as for instance the creation of the
+“Delegate for the Four Year Plan,” whose field of work should have
+belonged to the Ministry of Economics; the creation of Reich
+Commissioners in the occupied territories, whose activity really should
+have come under military administration; and, finally, a fact of
+interest in the Raeder case, the very precise delimitation of the three
+branches of the Armed Forces and the elimination of the Reich Defense
+Minister or Minister of War who held the three branches of the Armed
+Forces together and unified them. The greater the number of governmental
+departments became, the stronger Hitler became as dictator, being the
+only person with authority over all the innumerable agencies. But along
+with this the official as well as the legal responsibility for strategic
+plans on the part of any one individual department decreased; in this
+instance, that of the Navy.
+
+Consequently, the commander-in-chief of a branch of the Armed Forces,
+for instance the Navy, can in case of strategic planning only be
+responsible for the planning of naval strategy; he is not afforded an
+over-all picture of the total plan. The total plan was discussed
+nowhere; politically and militarily it was in Hitler’s hands
+exclusively, because he alone was the center where all threads, all
+activities of the individual departments joined.
+
+May I add a sentence here and remind you that, for instance, in the case
+of the Norway action even Göring was not informed until March 1940,
+which is one proof of the extreme segregation of the individual
+departments within the Armed Forces. In addition, purely strategic
+planning as such cannot be criminal, because it is customary in every
+country and because in every country the military commander of a branch
+of the Armed Forces does not and cannot know to what end the political
+leadership will use the plan prepared by him, whether for a war of
+aggression or a defensive war.
+
+The documents submitted in my document books prove convincingly that the
+military agencies in Allied countries as well as in Germany worked out
+strategic plans in the same manner, for the same areas, and at the same
+times, namely, in regard to Norway, Belgium (Documents Number Raeder-33
+and 34), Holland, Greece, Romania; moreover, the Allied plans included
+the destruction of the Romanian oil fields and especially of the oil
+sources in the Caucasus (Document Number Ribbentrop-221 and Number
+Raeder-41). Particularly the plans concerning the Caucasus on the part
+of the Supreme Council, that is, the combined British and French General
+Staff, show the correctness of the statements. The Supreme Council would
+certainly refuse to be made politically responsible for these strategic
+plans, although the Soviet Union was still neutral at the time and the
+execution of the plans was to strike a blow not only at an enemy
+country, Germany, but also at a neutral, the Soviet Union, as the
+documents show.
+
+The similarity of the documents concerning such plans is absolutely
+convincing and shows a strong parallel trend. May I point in this
+connection to statements I made here on occasion of the comprehensive
+discussion regarding the relevance and admissibility of the documents
+submitted by me; may I point, in addition, to Document Number
+Raeder-130, the letter of the Foreign Office, in which submission of the
+British Admiralty files is refused but in which the plans in regard to
+Norway and the whole of Scandinavia are admitted, with the remark that
+the plan was not put into effect, which fact was due only to Germany’s
+having forestalled the execution of the plan.
+
+Anyone is entitled to be a pacifist and, therefore, basically opposed to
+the military. However, one must be consistent and take a stand not only
+against German military force but against any military force. One may
+condemn the fact that the military, as the operational authority,
+prepares military plans; and one may for the future insist that such
+planning shall be punishable. But in that case not only German military
+planning, but foreign military planning also must be punishable.
+
+These points show that the Prosecution misjudges both actual and legal
+conditions in desiring to make Raeder responsible for political
+decisions, although he had nothing to do with them but always worked
+simply as a soldier. Just as there could be no suggestion 130 years ago
+of bringing before a court an admiral of Napoleon, the dictator, it is
+impossible now to condemn an admiral of Hitler, the dictator. With
+dictators, in particular—and this the Prosecution overlooks—not only
+the power and the influence of a military commander diminishes, but his
+responsibility must also diminish to the same extent, for the dictator
+will have seized all power and with it all responsibility—especially if
+he is possessed of such an extraordinary will and such immense power as
+Hitler. The French prosecutor stated literally and very aptly on 7
+February 1946 before this Tribunal: “Hitler was actually the incarnation
+of all will.”
+
+The resulting strength and power has not been sufficiently appreciated
+by the Prosecution, and has certainly not been taken into consideration
+in the presentation of the facts and the legal conclusions. How great
+this power is, Gustave le Bon shows in his famous book _Psychology of
+the Masses_ (published by Alfred Kröner) in the chapter entitled, “The
+Leaders of the Masses.” I quote from it:
+
+ “Within the class of leaders quite a strict division can be
+ made. The energetic people with strong wills but without
+ perseverance belong to the one kind; the people with a strong,
+ persevering will belong to the other kind, which is much
+ rarer.... The second class, those with a persevering will,
+ exercise a much greater influence in spite of their less
+ brilliant appearance.”
+
+Hitler belongs to this second class of leaders, who, in accordance with
+this quotation, exercised an immense influence while, on the other hand,
+he was definitely unimpressive in his brown uniform.
+
+Gustave le Bon continues:
+
+ “The unyielding will which they possess is an exceedingly rare
+ and exceedingly powerful attribute which subdues everything. One
+ does not always realize what a strong and persistent will can
+ achieve. Nothing can resist it, neither nature, nor gods, nor
+ men.”
+
+These words make it clear enough that Raeder could not resist either.
+
+Accordingly, only the question remains: Is it ever a soldier’s duty to
+revolt—to resort to open mutiny? This question will be denied by every
+commander all over the world and likewise by every other person with a
+sole exception, namely, if it concerns the case of a dictator commanding
+the commission of a crime, the criminality of which is recognized by the
+military commander himself. Accordingly Raeder could be made responsible
+for a military crime only, but not for a political one, because for the
+political crime the dictator himself must answer. When the Prosecution
+came to the opposite conclusion regarding Raeder, this was due—as I
+have already emphasized in my introduction—only to their misconception
+of the actual and juridical facts; they regarded Raeder as politician
+and soldier. But he was a soldier only. He lived for the Navy alone, for
+the welfare of the Navy, for which he is now equally prepared to bear
+responsibility to the full extent. He led the Navy along uniform lines
+and, aided by his officer-corps, taught it those decent views and that
+form of chivalrous fighting which humanity expects of a soldier. It must
+not be allowed to happen that, as a result of the deeds of a Hitler and
+his National Socialism, the officers and soldiers of this Navy be
+defamed by hearing their highest-ranking officer declared a criminal.
+From a historical viewpoint Raeder may be guilty, because he, like many
+others within the country and abroad, did not recognize or see through
+Hitler and did not have the strength to resist the dynamic strength of a
+Hitler; but such an omission is no crime. What Raeder did or left undone
+in his life occurred in the belief that he was acting correctly and that
+as a dutiful soldier he had to act in such a way.
+
+Raeder is a highly esteemed officer who is no criminal; and he cannot be
+a criminal, since all his life he has lived honorably and as a
+Christian. A man who believes in God does not commit crimes, and a
+soldier who believes in God is not a war criminal.
+
+I therefore ask the High Tribunal to acquit Admiral Dr. Erich Raeder on
+all points of the Indictment.
+
+PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Sauter for the Defendant Von Schirach.
+
+DR. SAUTER: Gentlemen of the Tribunal, Baldur von Schirach, who at that
+time was Reich Youth Leader, in 1936 welcomed the guests to the Olympic
+Games in Berlin with the following words:
+
+ “Youth throws a bridge across all frontiers and seas! I call
+ upon the Youth of the World and through them, upon Peace!”
+
+And Baldur von Schirach, then Gauleiter of Vienna, said to Hitler in
+1940: “Vienna cannot be conquered with bayonets, but only with music.”
+
+Those two utterances are characteristic of the nature of this defendant.
+It is the task of the Defense to examine the evidence produced in this
+Trial for the purpose of ascertaining whether the same Baldur von
+Schirach, who expressed such thoughts, really committed those crimes
+against law and humanity with which he is charged by the Prosecution.
+
+Schirach is the youngest defendant here. He is also, of all the
+defendants, the one who was by far the youngest when joining the Party,
+which he did when he was not yet 18. Those facts in themselves are
+perhaps of some significance in judging his case. When still at school
+he came under the spell of rising National Socialism; he was
+particularly attracted by the Socialist idea, which had already in his
+country school recognized no difference between the sons of fathers of
+different classes and professions; those boys around Schirach saw in the
+popular movement of the twenties in Germany a promise of the resurgence
+of our fatherland from the aftermath of the lost Great War into a happy
+future; and fate willed it that as early as 1925, when he was seventeen,
+Schirach came into personal contact with Hitler in Weimar, Goethe’s
+home. Hitler’s personality made a fascinating impression on young
+Schirach, as he himself admitted; the program for the National Community
+(Volksgemeinschaft), which Hitler had evolved at that time, met with
+Schirach’s wholehearted enthusiasm, because he thought he saw reproduced
+therein on a full-size scale that which he had personally experienced in
+a small way in the comradeship of the country school and in his youth
+organization. To him and his comrades Hitler appeared as the man who
+would open for the younger generation the road into the future; of him
+this younger generation had hopes for its prospects of work, its
+prospects of a secure existence, its prospects of a happy life. Thus the
+young man became a convinced National Socialist; this fact was the
+result of the environment in which he had spent his youth and which
+formed a soil only too fertile for the growth of that ideology which
+young Schirach embraced because at that period he held it to be the
+right one. This environment of his childhood and a vast amount of
+one-sided political literature, which the young man devoured in his
+thirst for knowledge, made of him, while still an inexperienced youth,
+also an anti-Semite. He certainly did not become an anti-Semite in the
+sense of those fanatics who ultimately did not shrink even from acts of
+violence and pogroms, of those who finally created an Auschwitz and
+murdered millions of Jews; but an anti-Semite in the moderate sense, who
+would merely curb Jewish influence in the government of the state and in
+cultural life but for the rest would leave untouched the freedom and
+rights of Jewish fellow citizens and who never thought of exterminating
+the Jewish people. At least that is the conception of Hitler’s
+anti-Semitism which young Schirach evolved during those years.
+
+That this was really Schirach’s opinion is also substantiated by the
+statement which Schirach made here on the morning of 24 May 1946, when
+he described without reservation the crimes committed by Hitler as a
+shameful episode in German history, as a crime which fills every German
+with shame; that statement in which he openly states that Auschwitz must
+signify the end of any and every racial and anti-Semitic policy. That
+statement here in this courtroom came from the bottom of the heart of
+the Defendant Schirach; it was the result of the terrible disclosures
+which this Trial brought to him also, and Schirach made this statement
+here openly before the public in order to bring back German youth from a
+wrong path to the road of justice and tolerance.
+
+Gentlemen, I would now like to bring to your attention the more
+important accusations which have been raised against Schirach, and the
+major results which the evidence has produced in the various points. The
+Defendant Schirach is first of all accused of the fact that before the
+seizure of power, that is, before the year 1933, he actively promoted
+the National Socialist Party and the youth organization affiliated with
+it and that he thereby contributed to the rise of the Party to power. He
+had been, as stated in the trial brief, a close and abject follower of
+Hitler; he had stood in blind loyalty to Hitler and the latter’s
+National Socialist world of thinking; and he had, as leader of the
+student’s league, led the students ideologically and politically to
+National Socialism and won them over to it.
+
+All this, if Your Honors please, is not denied by Schirach in any
+manner. He has done what he is being accused of in this respect; this he
+confesses openly, and for this he naturally takes responsibility. The
+only thing which he denies with regard to this, and all the more
+emphatically with regard to the later period, is the accusation that he
+participated in a conspiracy. Schirach himself pointed out that the
+Leadership Principle and dictatorship in their character and their
+theory are absolutely incompatible with the idea of a conspiracy, and a
+conspiracy appears to him a logical impossibility if many millions of
+members are to be included and when its existence and aims lie exposed
+before the country concerned as well as before the world. We furthermore
+know from the results of this Trial that Hitler, aside from Bormann and
+Himmler, did not have a single friend or adviser with whom he discussed
+his plans and aims; on the contrary he carried the Leadership Principle
+to the furthest extreme. He dispensed with all advisory meetings or
+discussions which might have affected his decisions in any way, reaching
+his decisions all by himself without even listening to the opinion of
+those closest to him. For him it was a matter of orders on his own part,
+and unconditional obedience on that of the others. I wish to refrain
+from further statements about that chapter, but that is what the
+“conspiracy” really looked like; and all of us who have witnessed this
+Trial would never have felt this ultra-radical application of the
+Leadership Principle to be possible had not all the defendants and all
+the witnesses familiar with the facts, in complete agreement and without
+a single exception, presented the same picture to us over and over
+again.
+
+Now Schirach is not denying at all that already in his very early years
+he came completely under the influence of Hitler, that he placed himself
+with his whole young personality at the service of these ideas, and that
+at the time, as stated quite correctly in the Indictment, he was devoted
+to Hitler with unconditional loyalty.
+
+If this was a crime on the part of young Schirach, a crime which
+millions of older, more experienced, mature Germans have committed with
+him, then you, as his judges, may condemn him for this if our code of
+law furnishes a legal basis for it. That would be but a further
+disappointment in addition to the many others which he has been
+experiencing for years. Schirach knows today that he gave loyal support
+unto the end to a man who did not deserve it; and he also knows today
+that the ideas, about which he was enthusiastic in his young years and
+for which he sacrificed himself, led in practice to ends of which he
+himself had never dreamed.
+
+But even the Schirach of today, purged by many bitter experiences,
+cannot see any criminal act in the activity of his younger years which
+he carried out in good faith, together with millions of other Germans,
+for Hitler and his Party. For the Party at that time appeared quite
+legal to him; Schirach never had any doubt that it also came into power
+by legal means. The seizure of power by the Party, the appointment of
+Hitler as Reich Chancellor by Reich President Von Hindenburg, the
+winning of the majority of the people for the Party by repeated
+elections, all this confirmed to young Schirach again and again the
+legality of the movement he had joined. If today he were to be punished
+because he acknowledged as his Führer this same Hitler whom millions of
+Germans and all the countries of the world recognized as legal head of
+the State, Schirach would never be able to acknowledge such a decision
+as being just. In spite of the severe judgment which he himself has
+pronounced in this courtroom on Hitler according to his personal
+conviction, he would consider himself a victim of his political
+convictions if he were to be sentenced because, as a young enthusiastic
+man, he joined the National Socialist Party and collaborated in its
+construction and seizure of power. At the time he did not look upon that
+as a crime but from his standpoint considered it his patriotic duty.
+
+The second and by far more important accusation which has been raised
+against the Defendant Von Schirach is to the effect that he, as Reich
+Youth Leader in the years 1932 to 1940, to quote the Indictment
+literally, “poisoned the thought of youth with Nazi ideology and
+especially trained it for aggressive war.” Schirach has always contested
+this claim emphatically, and this claim has not been substantiated by
+the results of the evidence either.
+
+The law on the Hitler Youth of 1936 described Schirach’s task as Reich
+Youth Leader as being “to educate youth, outside the parental home and
+outside school, physically, intellectually, and morally for service to
+the people and to the national community in the spirit of National
+Socialism through the Hitler Youth movement and its leader,” that is,
+the Defendant Von Schirach. This was the program. This program is
+repeated word for word in the enactment decree of 1939, which was
+postponed for so long—3 years—because Schirach did not want to
+introduce compulsory membership until the movement already practically
+included the entire German youth on the basis of voluntary membership,
+so that future joining by compulsion would exist on paper only.
+
+The Hitler Youth program, as it was formulated by Schirach in his
+speeches and writings—and no other program of the Hitler Youth
+exists—does not contain a single word which would point toward military
+education of youth, much less an education in aggressive warfare; nor
+does in practice the education of youth, in Schirach’s opinion, in any
+way give evidence of a military education of German youth for such a
+purpose. In that respect the point was stressed by the Prosecution that
+the Hitler Youth movement was organized in various detachments and
+divisions. That is true, although the designations listed by the
+Prosecution are not correct and although they have not the slightest
+reference to military formations. But in the last analysis every youth
+movement the world over will show a classification into smaller or
+larger units; each of these units naturally will also need a name and
+some responsible leader. As in the other countries, so also in the
+German Hitler Youth the leader of the unit was discernible by some sign
+of his rank, be it a leader’s cord, stars, or other insignia of rank.
+This naturally has nothing to do with the military character of youth
+education.
+
+From personal familiarity with the practice in foreign countries
+Schirach knows that foreign youth organizations, in Switzerland as well
+as in France and other countries, have similar classifications and
+similar insignia, although it never occurred to us so far to make that a
+reason for considering such foreign youth organizations as military
+associations.
+
+It was furthermore stressed that formations of male youth in Germany
+were also given training in shooting. That is also correct but equally
+proves very little, in the opinion of Schirach, because the shooting
+instruction for the Hitler Youth organization took place, without
+exception, with small-bore rifles, in other words, with a type of short,
+light target rifle which is nowhere in the world considered as a
+military weapon and which is not even mentioned in the enumeration of
+military weapons in the Versailles Treaty. The Hitler Youth movement in
+Germany did not possess a single military weapon, no infantry rifle or
+machine gun, no power-driven airplane, no cannon or tank, throughout its
+whole existence. After all, when speaking of military training, then
+such training would primarily have had to take place with military
+weapons such as are used in modern warfare. To be sure, as has been
+established in the cross-examination of Schirach, in order to give added
+importance to his office, a certain Dr. Stellrecht, the technical
+adviser on shooting instruction in the leadership of the Reich Youth
+movement attempted to ascribe a certain special importance to this
+particular branch of youth training. Schirach, however, was able to show
+without being refuted that for this very reason differences of opinion
+arose between him and this technical adviser and that he therefore
+finally dismissed Dr. Stellrecht because he, Schirach, opposed any
+development which might have tended toward military training of youth.
+In any case, this very Dr. Stellrecht, who was produced by the
+Prosecution as a witness against Schirach, nevertheless for his part
+admitted that “not a single boy in Germany was trained in handling
+weapons of war” and that “not one boy was given a military weapon.” That
+is, word for word, the testimony of Stellrecht.
+
+Also of importance in considering these questions is the fact that
+Schirach, as a matter of principle, refused to permit young people to be
+trained by active officers or former officers because he considered
+these persons entirely unsuitable to educate young people in that spirit
+which he envisaged as the goal of his activity. Moreover, neither
+Schirach nor any of his closer associates were officers before the war;
+and the same holds true for the overwhelming majority of the high or low
+ranking HJ leaders subordinate to him.
+
+All these facts are firmly established by the testimony of the Defendant
+Schirach himself and through depositions made by the witnesses
+Lauterbacher, Gustav Hoepken, and Maria Hoepken during their
+examination. For many years these witnesses were Schirach’s closest
+collaborators; they are thoroughly familiar with his views and
+principles and they have unanimously confirmed that it is entirely
+incorrect to speak of a military or even premilitary training of the
+Hitler Youth.
+
+At this point, Gentlemen, I should like to add one thing. I have just
+mentioned, as a witness, the name Lauterbacher. The Prosecution, during
+their cross-examination, made an attempt to impugn the credibility of
+the witness Lauterbacher by asking him, during his interrogation on 27
+April 1946, how many people he had hanged publicly and furthermore by
+charging that he had ordered four or five hundred prisoners from the
+penitentiary in Hameln to be poisoned or shot. In this connection the
+American prosecutor had submitted seven affidavits under Exhibit
+USA-874, among them one by a certain Josef Krämer, who in fact made the
+assertion in his affidavit that the witness Lauterbacher, who appeared
+here for Schirach, in his function as Gauleiter of Hanover had given him
+orders for the murder of the prisoners.
+
+During the Court’s session of 27 May 1946, I protested against the use
+of that affidavit by Krämer and produced, Gentlemen, a newspaper article
+according to which the witness Krämer, on 2 May 1946, had been sentenced
+to 7 years’ imprisonment by a court of the 5th British Division. Several
+days ago I submitted as evidence a report from the _Rhein-Neckar
+Zeitung_ of 6 July 1946 which states that the witness Hartmann
+Lauterbacher in the meantime had been acquitted by the Supreme British
+Military Court in Hanover. From that it can be seen that the doubts
+which the Prosecution cast upon the credibility of the witness
+Lauterbacher and which they based on the affidavit of this Krämer were
+unfounded.
+
+May I now continue in my presentation on Page 8.
+
+With reference to the premilitary training of the HJ it has also been
+repeatedly emphasized in rebuttal that the Hitler Youth wore a uniform.
+That is correct, but proves nothing, for the youth organizations of
+other countries, too, are accustomed, as is generally known, to wear a
+common costume, some sort of uniform, without anybody for this reason
+terming them military or semimilitary organizations; and Schirach and
+several of his associates have informed me that in many democratic
+countries, which certainly do not contemplate war, much less a war of
+aggression, male youth is trained in handling proper military weapons
+and that every year contests are held in shooting with military rifles.
+
+Why was it that Schirach introduced a uniform for the Hitler Youth—and
+indeed not only for the boys but also for the girls? We have heard the
+answer to this from several witnesses. Schirach, I may quote here, saw
+in the uniform of the boys and in the uniform costume of the girls the
+“dress of socialism,” the “dress of comradeship.” Schirach wrote at that
+time already that the child of the rich industrialist was to wear the
+same clothes as the child of the miner, the son of the millionaire the
+same clothes as the son of an unemployed man. The uniform of the Hitler
+Youth was to be, as Schirach wrote in 1934 in his book _The Hitler
+Youth_, the expression of an attitude which did not consider class and
+property, but only effort and achievement. The uniform of the Hitler
+Youth was for Schirach, as expressed further in this same book, “not the
+sign of any militarism, but the symbol of the idea of the Hitler Youth,
+namely, classless society,” in the spirit of the election slogan which
+he gave the Hitler Youth in 1933: “Through Socialism to the Nation.”
+Schirach remained faithful to the principle expressed in these
+quotations as long as he was Youth Leader. Thus, in the official
+publication of the Hitler Youth in 1937, he wrote—I quote word for
+word:
+
+ “The uniform is not the expression of a martial attitude but the
+ dress of comradeship; it overcomes class difference and
+ re-establishes social equality for the child of the most
+ insignificant laborer; the young generation in our new Germany
+ must be united in an inseparable community.”
+
+Schirach had this comradeship and this socialism in mind when, in 1934,
+he describes in his book _The Hitler Youth_ how he conceived this
+socialism; and I quote again, word for word:
+
+ “Socialism does not mean taking the fruits of his work away from
+ one person in order to give everybody something produced by the
+ work of one individual. Everyone shall work, but everyone shall
+ also harvest the fruits of his work. Nor must one person be
+ allowed to get rich while thousands of others must suffer want
+ for his sake. Whoever exploits his workers and spoliates the
+ community in order to fill his cash box is an enemy of the
+ German people” (Document Schirach-55).
+
+That ends the quotation describing the attitude of Von Schirach at that
+time.
+
+Schirach has pointed out again and again in his numerous writings,
+articles, and speeches, which have been collected in the document book
+and have been submitted to the Tribunal, that, to use his expression, he
+did not desire any “pseudo-military drill,” which would only spoil the
+joy of the young people in their movement.
+
+The training of the young people in small-bore shooting was in line with
+the training in all sports activities and corresponded to the
+inclination of the boys, in all countries, who are particularly
+interested in the sport of shooting. But this training played a very
+minor role in volume and importance by comparison with the greater aims
+which Schirach pursued in the Hitler Youth movement, about which not
+only Schirach but the other witnesses examined give as clear a testimony
+as the writings and speeches of Von Schirach. These aims of the Hitler
+Youth education shall be listed here briefly as they have been
+demonstrated by the presentation of evidence; Schirach is naturally not
+accused in connection with these other aims of the Hitler Youth
+education, but one must nevertheless consider and evaluate them when
+desiring to obtain a total picture of his personality, his activity, and
+his plans.
+
+Apart from this education of youth in terms of comradeship and of
+socialism in the sense of overcoming class distinction, Schirach had, as
+he explained here, primarily four aims in mind:
+
+First the training of youth in the various types of sports, and in
+connection therewith juvenile health supervision; this branch of youth
+education took up a very large part of Hitler Youth activities, and the
+fact that German youth obtained such an unexpected success at the
+Olympic Games in 1936 was to a certain extent due to the activity of the
+Hitler Youth leadership in co-operation with the Reich Sports Leader Von
+Tschammer-Osten.
+
+Another aim was postgraduate training and advancement of working youth
+and the improvement of the position of adolescent wage earners through
+youth legislation, particularly by prohibiting night work, increasing
+spare time, granting paid vacations, prohibiting child labor, raising
+the protected age of adolescents, _et cetera_. Advanced vocational
+training was promoted so successfully that finally more than a million
+boys and girls entered for the annual occupational competitions, and
+from year to year the average performance in each branch rose very
+considerably.
+
+A third main aim of youth education was the promotion of love of nature,
+far away from the dens of iniquity of large cities, through hiking trips
+and in youth hostels. Thousands of youth homes and youth hostels were
+built in the course of these years on Schirach’s initiative out of the
+Hitler Youth movement’s own funds, in order to get the young people out
+of the large cities with their temptations and vices and return them to
+rural life to show them the beauties of the homeland and to afford a
+vacation to even the poorest child.
+
+But Schirach concentrated his chief attention on the fourth goal of
+youth education, namely, co-operation with the youth of other nations;
+and this activity is a particularly suitable test for the question as to
+whether one can accuse the Defendant Von Schirach of having taken part
+in the planning of wars of aggression and of having committed crimes
+against peace. Schirach has told us here on the witness stand that time
+and again, both in summer and winter of every year, foreign youth groups
+were the guests of German youth; and it is shown by the documents in Von
+Schirach’s document book that, for instance, already in the year 1936 no
+less than 200,000 foreign youths received overnight lodgings in German
+youth hostels, and correspondingly year after year German youth
+delegations went abroad, especially to England and France, in order to
+enable young people to get acquainted with and respect one another.
+Those very endeavors of Schirach’s, which would be absolutely
+incompatible with any intention to prepare wars of aggression, received
+unreserved recognition abroad before the war. In 1937 in one of the
+special numbers of the Hitler Youth magazine _Wille und Macht_ dedicated
+to this task of understanding, which was also published in French and
+circulated very widely in France and which is quoted here only as an
+example, the French Prime Minister Chautemps—I have the evidence in the
+document book—declared his willingness, as head of the French
+Government, to promote these peaceful meetings.
+
+ “I wish”—he wrote—“that the young men of both nations could
+ live every year side by side by the thousands and in this way
+ learn to know, to understand, and to respect each other.” And
+ further:
+
+ “Our two nations know that an understanding between them would
+ be one of the most valuable factors for world peace; therefore
+ it is the duty of all those on either side of the frontier who
+ have a clear view and human feeling to work for the
+ understanding and _rapprochement_ of both nations. But no one
+ could do it more sincerely and more enthusiastically than the
+ leaders of our wonderful youth, of French and German youth. If
+ they could manage to unite this youth, they would hold in their
+ hands the future of European and human culture” (Document
+ Schirach-110).
+
+The mayor of Versailles of that time wrote in the same spirit to
+Schirach, ending his appeal in the monthly organ of the Hitler Youth
+with the words:
+
+ “The education of youth in this spirit is one of the most
+ important tasks of the politicians of both our countries”
+ (Document Schirach-111).
+
+The French Ambassador, François Poncet, gave credit to Schirach’s
+efforts no less heartily in the same publication under the title “Youth
+as a Bridge” and concluded his lengthy article with the words:
+
+ “French participation enriches German soil. German influence
+ fertilizes the French spirit.... May this exchange develop
+ further. May also the generations which will at some time
+ benefit from it contribute to bringing the two halves of
+ Charlemagne’s empire closer and to create between them those
+ relations of mutual respect, harmony, and good comradeship for
+ which both nations are deeply longing, because their instinct
+ tells them that the welfare of European culture depends on it
+ and because they know for certain, when they look into
+ themselves, that they have many more reasons to respect and
+ admire than to hate each other” (Document Schirach-112).
+
+And Schirach himself answered in the next issue of his monthly
+publication, which also appeared in French, with an enthusiastic article
+under the title, “Salute to France!” In it he writes, for instance:
+
+ “The _rapprochement_ of our two peoples is a European task of
+ such urgent necessity that youth has no time to lose in order to
+ work for its achievement.”—He then continues—“Youth is the
+ best ambassador in the world; it is disinterested, frank, and
+ without the eternal distrust of which diplomats can frequently
+ not be cured because, to a certain extent, it is their
+ professional disease. However, there must be no propaganda
+ intentions hidden behind youth exchange.”—And he concludes—“I
+ consider it now my task to bring about an exchange of views
+ between German and French youth, which must not, on the German
+ side, consist of nice statements from me, but of many personal
+ conversations of thousands of young Germans with just as many
+ young Frenchmen. One must believe in youth because they, above
+ all, can achieve a true understanding.”
+
+At the end Schirach calls attention to the fact that all higher youth
+leaders of the German Hitler Youth movement had a short time previously
+expressed their respect in the name of the young generation of Germany
+to the French Unknown Warrior by placing a wreath under the Arc de
+Triomphe, and he concludes with the words:
+
+ “The dead of the Great War died while fulfilling their patriotic
+ duty and nobly devoting themselves to the ideal of liberty, and
+ Germans as well as French were always filled with respect for a
+ gallant foe. If the dead respected each other, then the living
+ should try to shake hands. If the returned combat veterans of
+ both nations could become comrades, why should the sons and
+ grandsons not become friends?” (Document Schirach-113.)
+
+These, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, are the words of the same Baldur von
+Schirach whom the Prosecution tries to brand as a deliberate partner in
+a Hitlerian conspiracy for war. The Prosecution wants to make a war
+criminal out of this untiring prophet for international understanding
+and peace, who is charged with having militarized youth and prepared it,
+bodily and psychologically, for wars of aggression and of having worked
+against peace. So far, the Prosecution has not been able to furnish
+evidence to this effect.
+
+Schirach has written various doctrinal books for youth, which were held
+against him in the trial brief; he has published a quantity of essays on
+a vast variety of problems of youth education; his innumerable speeches
+addressed to youth have been printed; his orders and instructions to
+youth are available to you and the Prosecution in collected form. Yet it
+must be concluded that among all these, which constitute his views
+during the whole of the time when he was active as Reich Youth Leader,
+not a single item is to be found in which he made inflammatory remarks
+in favor of war or preached attacks against other countries.
+
+The Prosecution has stated in this very connection that he referred to
+the “Lebensraum” in his book _The Hitler Youth_, which I have repeatedly
+mentioned, and by so doing adopted as his own a slogan of Hitlerite
+aggression policy. This claim is incorrect, for the whole book, _The
+Hitler Youth_, does not, any more than every other speech and writing of
+Schirach, contain this word at all. True, he has referred at two points
+to “Eastern space” in his book, _The Hitler Youth_, published in 1936;
+but he quite obviously did not in any way employ this term with
+reference to Polish or Soviet-Russian territories but to the eastern
+provinces of the former German Empire, that is to say, to territories
+which formerly belonged to. Germany; they were known to be very thinly
+populated and well suited for the settlement of excess German
+population.
+
+Nowhere has Schirach, I would like to state in conclusion with regard to
+this topic, at any time up to the outbreak of the second World War
+expressed the idea that he might wish Germany to conquer foreign
+territories; neither has he ever uttered the odious slogans of the
+German “Master Race” or the “Sub-humanity” of other nations; on the
+contrary, he was always in favor of preserving peace with the
+neighboring nations and always advocated the peaceful settlement of any
+conflicts that cropped up out of inevitable clashes of interests.
+Gentlemen of the Tribunal, had Hitler possessed but a fraction of the
+love of peace which his Youth Leader preached time and again, then
+perhaps this war would have been spared us Germans and the whole world.
+
+PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now.
+
+ [_The Tribunal adjourned until 18 July at 1000 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED
+ AND EIGHTY-FIRST DAY
+ Thursday, 18 July 1946
+
+
+ _Morning Session_
+
+MARSHAL: May it please the Tribunal, the Defendants Hess, Von
+Ribbentrop, and Fritzsche are absent.
+
+DR. SAUTER: May it please the Tribunal, yesterday at the end of my
+statement I dealt with the charge of the Prosecution that the Defendant
+Von Schirach had trained and educated the youth of the Third Reich in a
+military sense, that he had prepared them for the waging of aggressive
+wars and had participated in a conspiracy against peace. Now I turn to a
+further accusation which has been made by the Prosecution against
+Defendant Von Schirach.
+
+Since the Prosecution could not prove that the Defendant Von Schirach
+had ever promoted Hitler’s war policy before the war, he is being
+charged with having had various connections with the SS and SA, and
+especially with the fact that the SS, the SA, and the Leadership Corps
+of the Party obtained their recruits from the Hitler Youth. This last
+fact is quite correct, but it proves nothing as to Schirach’s attitude
+toward Hitler’s war policy and is equally pointless as regards the
+question of his participation in Hitler’s war conspiracy. For since 90
+or 95 percent or more of German youth belonged to the Hitler Youth
+movement it was only natural that the Party and its formations as the
+years went by should receive their young recruits in an ever-increasing
+measure from the Hitler Youth. Practically no other youth was available.
+
+The Prosecution has referred to the agreement between the Reich Youth
+Leadership and the Reichsführer SS, dated October 1938, concerning the
+patrol service of the Hitler Youth, which was submitted to Your Honors
+as Document 2396-PS; however, no inference can be drawn therefrom, for
+patrol service in the Hitler Youth was merely an institution designed to
+check up on and supervise the discipline of Hitler Youth members when
+they appeared in public. It was, therefore, a kind of organization
+police which was employed by the Hitler Youth movement entirely within
+its own ranks. In order, however, to guard against difficulties with the
+regular Police, an arrangement with the Reichsführer SS Himmler was
+necessary because as chief of the whole police organization in Germany
+he might have made trouble for the institution of the HJ patrol service.
+This was the only object of the agreement of October 1938, which in
+reality had just as little to do with providing recruits for the SS as
+with the conduct and preparation of war. Moreover, it can clearly be
+seen how resolutely Schirach strove against any influence on the part of
+the Party over the Hitler Youth from the fact that in 1938 he protested
+very sharply against having the education of the Hitler Youth during
+their last 2 years from 16 to 18 taken over by the SA. He emphatically
+opposed this plan and through personal intervention with Hitler
+prevented the Führer decree in question from being applied in practice.
+
+As for his attitude toward the SS, we know from the testimony of the
+witness Gustav Hoepken, who was heard here on 28 May 1946, and from the
+affidavit of the witness Maria Hoepken, Schirach Document Book Number 3,
+that Schirach always feared he was being shadowed and spied upon by the
+SS in Vienna. He always had an uncomfortable feeling because at the
+beginning of his activity in Vienna a permanent deputy had been
+appointed for him in his capacity as Reich Governor (Reichsstatthalter)
+and Reich Defense Commissioner in the person, of all things, of a higher
+SS leader, a certain Dr. Delbrügge; he was, as Schirach knew, closely
+associated with the Reichsführer SS who, as has been proved, proposed to
+Hitler in 1943 that Schirach should be imprisoned for defeatism and
+brought before the Peoples’ Court, which meant in practice that Himmler
+would have had Schirach hanged. These facts alone are already proof of
+the real relationship between the Defendant Von Schirach and the SS, and
+it will be understood why Schirach finally refused even the police
+protection squad assigned to him and preferred to entrust his personal
+protection to a unit of the Wehrmacht which was not subordinate to the
+order of Himmler. (See affidavit of Maria Hoepken in Schirach Document
+Book Number 3.)
+
+Another accusation which has been made against the Defendant Von
+Schirach concerns his attitude in the Church question. This attitude
+corresponds to the impression given by the present proceedings, and
+while this issue is not given any prominence in the Indictment, it is
+nevertheless of considerable importance as far as the appreciation of
+Schirach’s personality is concerned.
+
+Schirach himself, as well as his wife, always remained members of the
+Church. To the foreign critic this circumstance may perhaps appear an
+unimportant detail, but we Germans know what pressure was exerted upon
+high-ranking Party officials in these very matters, and how few in his
+position ventured to resist such pressure. Schirach was one of those
+few. He was the one high-ranking Party Leader who constantly and
+invariably punished with extreme severity any hostile interference and
+outrages against the Church on the part of the Hitler Youth. He has also
+been reproached for the fact that various songs were sung by the Hitler
+Youth which contained offensive remarks about religious institutions,
+but in this respect Schirach could with a clear conscience confirm on
+his oath that partly he was unaware of those songs, which is quite
+conceivable where an organization of 7 or 8 million members is involved;
+on the other hand, certain songs now considered objectionable date back
+to the Middle Ages and figured in the song book of the Wandervogel, a
+former youth organization which the Prosecution surely does not propose
+to condemn. Schirach has however especially pointed out that during the
+years 1933 to 1936 several million youths from an entirely different
+spiritual environment joined the Hitler Youth and that during the first
+revolutionary years, that is, in the period of storm and stress of the
+Movement, it was quite impossible to hear of and prevent all lapses of
+this sort. Whenever Schirach did hear of such things he intervened and
+remedied abuses of that kind, which after all represented offenses on
+the part of isolated elements incapable of compromising the youth
+organization as a whole.
+
+It is Schirach’s conviction that the examination of evidence leaves no
+doubt as to his conciliatory behavior in the matter of the Church, and
+that he strove to establish proper relations of mutual respect between
+the Church on the one hand and the Third Reich, and more especially the
+Reich Youth Leadership, on the other hand, and to observe their
+respective rights and competences. At his own request Schirach was
+permitted by the Reich Minister of the Interior to take part in
+conducting the Concordat negotiations with the Catholic Church in 1934,
+because he hoped to achieve an agreement with the Catholic Church more
+easily by his personal co-operation. He honestly endeavored to find a
+formula for the settlement of the youth question by which agreement with
+the Catholic Church could be possible. His moderation and good will in
+this respect were frankly acknowledged by the representative of the
+Catholic Church at that time. But everything was ultimately frustrated
+by Hitler’s opposition and the complications created for these
+negotiations by the events of 30 June 1934, the so-called Röhm Putsch.
+
+With the Protestant Church, on the other hand, Schirach achieved an
+agreement with the Reich Bishop, Dr. Müller, so that the incorporation
+of the Protestant youth groups into the Hitler Youth was not attained by
+constraint but by mutual agreement, not by breaking up these
+associations by the State or the Party, as the Prosecution assumes, but
+upon the initiative of the Protestant ecclesiastical head and in
+complete agreement with him. It must be pointed out here that it was
+always Schirach’s policy that no restrictions were to be imposed on
+church services by the Youth Leadership, neither then nor later. On the
+contrary, as he himself has testified and as was confirmed by the
+witness Lauterbacher, Schirach emphatically stated in 1937 that he would
+leave it to the churches to educate the younger generation according to
+the spirit of their faith, and at the same time he ordered that, as a
+principle, no Hitler Youth service was to be scheduled on Sundays during
+the time of church services. He gave strict orders to the unit leaders
+of the Hitler Youth not to schedule duties which might disturb church
+services. If, however, in individual cases such interference did occur
+and some religious authorities lodged complaints as the
+cross-examination revealed, then the Defendant Schirach cannot be blamed
+for this, nor does it alter the fact that he had every good intention.
+
+During the Trial not a single case could be proved in which he stirred
+up feeling against the Church or made antireligious statements; on the
+contrary, at numerous rallies as submitted to the Tribunal in the
+Schirach document book, he not only repeatedly opposed the allegation
+that the Hitler Youth were enemies of the Church or atheists, but he
+always positively impressed upon the leaders and members of the Hitler
+Youth the necessity of fulfilling their obligation toward God; he would
+not tolerate anyone in the Hitler Youth who did not believe in God;
+every true teacher, he told them, must imbue youth with religious
+feeling, since it was the basis of all educational activities; Hitler
+Youth service and religious convictions could very well be associated
+with each other and exist side by side; no Hitler Youth leader was to
+engender conflicts of conscience whatsoever in his boys. Leave of
+absence was to be granted to Hitler Youth members for religious
+services, rites, _et cetera_. Such was Von Schirach’s point of view.
+
+Whoever gives such instructions to his subleaders, and continues to do
+so over and over again, can demand that he should not be judged an enemy
+of the Church and an enemy of religious life. Incidentally, it is
+interesting in this connection to note what such a reliable judge as
+Nevile Henderson wrote in his oft-quoted book _Failure of a Mission_
+about a speech which he heard Schirach deliver at the 1937 Reich Party
+Rally, parts of which have been submitted in Schirach’s document book.
+Henderson, who as Ambassador in Berlin knew German conditions
+intimately, evidently expected that Baldur Schirach would speak against
+the Church at the Reich Party Rally and would influence the young people
+in the spirit of enmity to the Church, as was often done by other
+leaders of the Party. Henderson writes, and I quote two sentences:
+
+ “That day, however, it was Von Schirach’s speech which ...
+ impressed me most, although it was quite short.... One part of
+ this speech surprised me when, addressing the boys, he said, ‘I
+ do not know if you are Protestants or Catholics, but that you
+ believe in God, that I do know.’”
+
+And Henderson added:
+
+ “I had been under the impression that all references to religion
+ were discouraged among the Hitler Youth, and this seemed to me
+ to refute that imputation.”
+
+What Schirach really thought with regard to religion, and in what sense
+he influenced youth, is indicated not only by a statement he made on the
+occasion of a speech before the teachers of the Adolf Hitler Schools at
+Sonthofen, to the effect that Christ was the greatest leader in the
+history of the world, but likewise by the small book, submitted to you
+in evidence, entitled, _Christmas Gift of the War Welfare Service_. This
+book, which was sent out in large numbers, was dedicated by Schirach to
+the front-line soldiers who joined from the ranks of the Hitler Youth
+movement in 1944, at a time when radicalism in all spheres of German
+life could hardly become more pronounced.
+
+Here also Schirach was an exception: You will find no swastika, no
+picture of Hitler, no SA song in the book of Reichsleiter Von Schirach,
+but among other things a distinctly Christian poem from Schirach’s own
+pen, then a picture of a Madonna, and next to it a reproduction of a
+painting by Van Gogh who, as is generally known, was strictly banned in
+the Third Reich. Instead of inflammatory words, we find an exhortation
+to a Christian way of thinking and the “Wessobrunner Gebet,” familiar as
+the earliest Christian prayer in the German language. Bormann stormed
+when he saw the pamphlet, but Schirach remained firm and refused to
+withdraw the little book or alter it in any way.
+
+The Defendant Von Schirach has been charged with having once undertaken
+a hostile act against the Church, and with having thereby taken part in
+the persecution of the Church. From a letter by Minister Lammers of 14
+March 1941 (Document R-146), it appears that Schirach had proposed to
+keep confiscated property at the disposal of the Gaue, and not to hand
+it over to the Reich, but this case is no justification at all for
+connecting the Defendant Von Schirach in some way or other with the
+persecution of the Church. The case mentioned by the Prosecution does
+not concern church property at all, but confiscated property of a Prince
+Schwarzenberg in his Vienna palace. This affair therefore never had
+anything to do with the Church. This is also confirmed unequivocally by
+Minister Lammers’ letter of 14 March 1941 (R-146), which mentions only,
+I quote, “a confiscation of the property (of persons) hostile to the
+people and the State,” whereas Bormann’s far-reaching personal intention
+becomes apparent and betrays his hostile attitude toward the Church when
+he writes about “church properties (monastic possessions, and so forth)”
+in his accompanying letter of 20 March 1941 referring to this case.
+Moreover, the confiscation of Prince Schwarzenberg’s property was not
+caused, pronounced, or carried out by Schirach. Schirach had nothing to
+do with the confiscation as such; Schirach, however, in agreement with
+the other Gauleiter of the Austrian NSDAP, and at their request,
+personally applied to Hitler and asked that such confiscated property
+should not be taken to the Reich and not be used on behalf of the Reich,
+but that it should remain in Vienna. This suggestion met with approval.
+Hitler complied with his request, the result of Schirach’s efforts being
+that, when the confiscation was rescinded later on, the property could
+be returned to the legitimate owner, whereas it would otherwise have
+been lost by him. By acting thus, Schirach no doubt rendered a service
+to the Gau of Vienna and to the owner of the property seized. This
+instance surely cannot be construed as a charge against the Defendant
+Von Schirach; on the contrary, it speaks in his favor just as the other
+case where, disregarding Bormann, he intervened on behalf of Austrian
+nuns and as a result brought about, by a direct order from Hitler, the
+discontinuance from one day to the other of the whole project of
+confiscating church and monastic property in the whole Reich.
+
+If the Prosecution further undertakes to charge the Defendant Von
+Schirach with the fact that the Vienna authorities subordinate to him
+proposed to establish an Adolf Hitler School in the monastery of
+Klosterneuburg in 1941, I must point out that even prior to the
+requisitioning of this monastery, and entirely independently of
+Schirach, the Vienna police and several Vienna courts had uncovered a
+considerable number of criminal offenses in this monastery, furthermore
+that the confiscation of part of the monastery seemed entirely justified
+to the Defendant Von Schirach, since the very spacious rooms of this
+religious establishment were not required for monastery purposes.
+
+It should also be noted that the monastery, as can be seen from
+documents submitted, did not file any protest with the Reich Minister of
+the Interior against the decision to confiscate, and thereby recognized
+the confiscation as legal, although it had been expressly informed in
+the confiscation decree of the possibility of lodging a complaint.
+Moreover, the confiscated quarters were afterward not used for the
+establishment of an Adolf Hitler School, but for the Museum of
+Historical Art (thus not for a Party establishment), which again
+testifies to the fact that the confiscation decree had in no way been
+issued because of a hostile attitude on the part of Schirach toward the
+Church. Had it been Schirach’s object to attack the monastery because it
+was an ecclesiastical institution, he would have included in the
+confiscation the rooms used for religious ceremonies. These, however, he
+strictly excluded.
+
+Moreover, when appraising this case, attention should be paid to the
+fact that the justification of the confiscation decree of 22 February
+1941 displays remarkable reticence. The decree restricts itself to
+justifying the confiscation by the fact that on the one hand Vienna
+badly needed room and that on the other hand the premises confiscated
+were not required for the purposes of the monastery. Not a single word
+mentions or even suggests that criminal offenses had taken place in the
+monastery, as recorded in a police report of 23 January 1941, which is
+submitted to the Court. If this confiscation had been the result of a
+hostile attitude of Schirach toward the Church, we could have been sure
+that somehow or other reference would have been made to these criminal
+offenses to justify the confiscation. At Schirach’s wish a monthly
+indemnification was paid to the clergy who had occupied some of the
+confiscated rooms, for which payment there existed no official
+obligation whatever.
+
+Defendant Von Schirach’s further behavior does not reveal any hostile
+attitude toward the Church, particularly if one considers, when judging
+this behavior, that during these years even a Reichsleiter was under
+strong pressure by the Reich Chancellery and by Bormann, and that at
+that time a considerable amount of courage was necessary to resist this
+pressure and carry on a policy in opposition to the official Berlin
+policy.
+
+The witness Wieshofer of Vienna, who had the opportunity of watching
+Schirach’s activities, confirmed before the Court that in Vienna
+Schirach likewise strove to establish correct relations with the Church,
+that he was always willing to listen to any complaints of the Cardinal
+of Vienna and took severe measures against the excesses of individual
+members of the Hitler Youth or Hitler Youth leaders. In Vienna he thus
+displayed a policy toward the Church quite different from that which his
+radical predecessor Bürckel had favored, and it is beyond doubt that
+ecclesiastical circles in Vienna and the whole of the Viennese
+population appreciated Schirach’s attitude toward the Church. This is
+also confirmed by the witness Gustav Hoepken who was examined here and
+who, by order of Schirach, held regular conferences with a Vienna
+theologian, Professor Ens, in order to be able to inform the Defendant
+Schirach of the wishes of the Church and the differences which had
+arisen with ecclesiastical authorities. Unless he wished to expose
+himself to the most serious danger, Schirach could do no more under the
+prevailing political circumstances, which are described in the affidavit
+of Maria Hoepken, Document Book Schirach Number 3.
+
+I now turn to another point of the Indictment, to the question of the
+concentration camps. The Prosecution has connected the defendant with
+concentration camps, although not in the Indictment but during the
+presentation of evidence; and the witness Alois Höllriegel, who was
+questioned here, was asked in the witness box whether Schirach had ever
+been inside the Mauthausen Concentration Camp. To this I should like to
+remark that the Defendant Von Schirach mentioned his visit to Mauthausen
+at his interrogation by the American Prosecution before the beginning of
+the Trial; it would, therefore, not have been necessary to have this
+visit confirmed again by the witness Höllriegel. He visited the
+Mauthausen Concentration Camp in the year 1942, not in 1944, as the
+witness Marsalek erroneously stated; the correct year, 1942, has been
+confirmed by the witness Höllriegel and also by the witnesses Hoepken
+and Wieshofer, from whom we heard that neither after 1942 nor at any
+other time did Schirach visit other concentration camps. The visit to
+Mauthausen in 1942 cannot implicate the defendant Schirach in the sense
+of his having known, approved, and supported all the conditions and
+atrocities in concentration camps. In 1942 he saw nothing in Mauthausen
+which might have indicated such crimes. There were no gas chambers and
+the like in 1942. At that time mass executions did not take place at
+Mauthausen. The statements of the Defendant Von Schirach concerning his
+impression of this camp appear quite plausible, because the testimony of
+numerous witnesses who have been heard during the course of this Trial
+has confirmed again and again that on the occasion of such official
+visits, which had been announced previously, everything was carefully
+prepared in order to show to the visitors only that which need not fear
+the light of day. Maltreatment and torture were concealed during such
+official visits in the same manner as arbitrary executions or cruel
+experiments. This was the case at Mauthausen in 1942 and certainly also
+at Dachau in 1935, where Schirach and the other visitors were shown only
+orderly conditions, which at a superficial glance appeared to be better
+than in some ordinary prisons.
+
+As a result, Schirach only knew that since 1933 there were several
+concentration camps in Germany where, as far as he knew, incorrigible
+habitual criminals and political prisoners were confined. However, even
+today Schirach is unable to believe that the mere knowledge of the
+existence of concentration camps is in itself a punishable crime, since
+he at no time did anything whatsoever to promote concentration camps,
+never expressed his approval of this institution, never sent anybody to
+a concentration camp, and would in any case never have been able to make
+any changes in this institution or to prevent the existence of
+concentration camps. Schirach’s influence was always too small for that.
+As Reich Youth Leader, of course, he had nothing to do with
+concentration camps in the first place, and it was lucky for Schirach
+that in his entire Vienna Gau district there was not a single
+concentration camp. His relations with concentration camps were
+therefore limited to repeated attempts to have people released from
+them, and it is after all significant that his sole visit to the
+Concentration Camp Mauthausen resulted in his exerting his influence to
+obtain the ultimate release of inhabitants of Vienna who were imprisoned
+there.
+
+May it please the Tribunal, I do not want to go again into many details
+which have played a larger or smaller part in the presentation of
+evidence for the case of Schirach. In the interest of saving time I
+shall not deal more specifically with his alleged connection with
+Rosenberg or Streicher, nor with his alleged collaboration in the slave
+labor program, in which connection not even the slightest participation
+of the Defendant Schirach could be proved, nor with a telephone
+conversation which has been used by the Prosecution and which allegedly
+took place between one of the Viennese officials and an SS
+Standartenführer regarding the compulsory labor of the Jews, about which
+Von Schirach knew nothing at all.
+
+But I should like to insert a short remark about one subject which arose
+particularly in connection with the case of Rosenberg, that is, a brief
+explanation concerning the Hay Action by which thousands of children in
+the Eastern combat zone were collected and brought partly to Poland and
+partly to Germany. The apparent aim of this operation, as far as
+Schirach could see from the documents presented here, was to collect
+children who were in the zone of operations, that is, immediately behind
+the front and wandering around without their parents, with a view to
+giving them professional training and work so that they should be saved
+from physical and moral neglect.
+
+The Defendant Von Schirach doubts whether this can be looked upon as a
+crime against humanity, or as a war crime; but one thing is certain,
+that the Defendant Von Schirach did not know anything of that affair at
+the time. He was not the competent authority. That entire affair was
+handled by Army Group Center in collaboration with the Ministry for the
+Eastern Occupied Territories, and, of course, it is quite plausible that
+neither the Eastern Ministry nor the Army Group Center saw fit to
+approach the Gauleiter of Vienna in order to get his approval of that
+action, or even to notify him about it.
+
+The only thing which, a considerable time later, came to the attention
+of the Defendant Von Schirach and may have some bearing on that, the Hay
+Action, was an incidental report by Reich Youth Leader Axmann that so
+and so many thousand youths had been brought to the Junkers works at
+Dessau as apprentices.
+
+The Defendant Von Schirach was anxious to clear up this matter in view
+of his former office as Reich Youth Leader, and he wishes to make it
+quite clear that even after leaving that office he would of course never
+have undertaken anything against the interests of youth.
+
+May I add another remark here concerning the letter which the Defendant
+Von Schirach sent to Reichsleiter Bormann after the murder of Heydrich,
+in which he suggested reprisal measures to Bormann in the form of a
+terror attack upon an English center of culture? That letter was
+actually sent by the defendant to Bormann. He acknowledges it. I have to
+point out at the very beginning that fortunately the suggestion remained
+a suggestion, and it was never carried out. The defendant, however, has
+told us that at that time he was very upset by the assassination of
+Heydrich, and it was clear to him that a revolt of the population in
+Bohemia would necessarily lead to a catastrophe for the German armies in
+Russia, and in his capacity as Gauleiter of Vienna he had considered it
+his duty to undertake something to protect the rear of the German army
+fighting in Russia. And that explains that teletype to Bormann in 1942
+(Document 3877) which, as I have already pointed out, fortunately was
+not acted upon.
+
+May it please the Tribunal, I shall proceed with my statement, the
+middle of Page 26.
+
+I shall not deal in detail with the Adolf Hitler Schools which were
+founded by Schirach, nor with the Fifth Column which was somehow, quite
+wrongly, connected with the Hitler Youth, although nothing definite
+could be charged to the defendant. I shall not go into either the
+repeated efforts on behalf of peace undertaken by the Defendant Schirach
+and his friend Dr. Colin Ross, nor shall I discuss the merits of the
+defendant with reference to the evacuation of children to the rural
+areas, which took millions of children from bomb-endangered districts
+during the war into more quiet zones and thus saved their lives and
+health.
+
+The Defendant Von Schirach has already talked about all these affairs in
+detail himself, and I should therefore like to refer to his own
+statements, which you will consider in your judgment.
+
+As counsel for the Defendant Von Schirach, I shall discuss only one more
+problem here, namely Schirach’s opinion and attitude concerning the
+Jewish question. Schirach has admitted here on the witness stand that he
+has been a convinced National Socialist, and thus also an anti-Semite
+from his earliest youth. He has also made clear to us what he understood
+by anti-Semitism during those years. He thought of the exclusion of the
+Jews from civil service and of the limitation of Jewish influence in
+cultural life and perhaps also in economic life, to a certain extent.
+But that was all which in his opinion should be undertaken against the
+Jews, and this was in accordance with the suggestion which he had
+already made as leader of the students’ organization for the
+introduction of a quota system for students. The defendant’s decree
+concerning the treatment of Jewish youth is, for example, also important
+in establishing his attitude (Schirach Document Number 136). This is a
+decree in which he expressly orders that Jewish youth organizations
+should have the right and the opportunity to practice freely within the
+limitations imposed upon them. It says that they were not to be
+disturbed in their own life.
+
+ “In its youth the Jewish community shall already today take up
+ that secluded but internally unrestrained special position which
+ at some future time the entire Jewish community will be given in
+ the German State and in German economy.”
+
+Those are the very words of that decree. Obviously Schirach was not at
+all thinking about pogroms, bloody persecutions of the Jews, and the
+like; rather did he believe at that time that the anti-Semitic movement
+had already achieved its aim by the anti-Jewish legislative measures of
+the years 1933-34, thereby eliminating Jewish influence as far as it
+seemed unhealthy to him. He was therefore surprised and very alarmed
+when the Nuremberg Laws were promulgated in 1935, which formulated a
+policy of complete exclusion of the Jewish population and carried it out
+with barbaric severity. Schirach in no way took part in the planning of
+these laws; he has nothing whatsoever to do with their content and their
+formulation. That has been proved here.
+
+When on 10 November 1938 he heard about the pogrom against the Jews and
+about the brutal excesses which were staged by Goebbels and his fanatic
+clique his indignation became known throughout the entire youth
+movement. The evidence proved this also. We have heard from the witness
+Lauterbacher how Schirach reacted to the report of these excesses: He
+immediately called his assistants together and gave them the strictest
+orders that the Hitler Youth must be kept out of such actions under all
+circumstances. He at once had the leaders of the Hitler Youth in all
+German cities notified by telephone to the same effect and warned every
+subordinate that he would hold him personally responsible if any
+excesses should occur in the Hitler Youth.
+
+But even after November 1938 Schirach never considered the possibility
+that Hitler was contemplating the extermination of the Jews. On the
+contrary, he only heard it mentioned that the Jews were to be evacuated
+from Germany into other states, that they should be transported to
+Poland and settled there, at worst in ghettos, but more probably in a
+closed settlement area. When Schirach in July 1940 received Hitler’s
+order to take over the Gau of Vienna, Hitler himself also talked to him
+along the same lines, namely, that he, Hitler, would have the Jews
+brought from Vienna into the Government General; and even today Schirach
+has no doubt that Hitler himself was not thinking about the so-called
+“final solution” of the Jewish question at that time, 1940, in terms of
+the extermination of the Jews. We learn from the Hossbach minutes and
+other evidence of this Trial that Hitler was planning the evacuation of
+Poland already in 1937, but that he decided on the extermination of the
+Jewish people only in 1941 or 1942.
+
+Schirach had nothing at all to do with the evacuation of the Jews from
+Vienna, as is alleged by the Prosecution; the execution of this measure
+was exclusively in the hands of the Reich Security Main Office and the
+Vienna branch of that office, and it is known that SS Gruppenführer
+Brunner of Vienna has in the meantime been sentenced to death for that
+very reason. The only order which Schirach received and carried out
+concerning the Viennese Jews was to report to Hitler in 1940 how many
+Jews there were still left in Vienna, and he made this report in a
+letter of December 1940 where he gave the figure of the Viennese Jews
+for 1940 as 60,000. It will be remembered that Minister Lammers answered
+this letter from the Defendant Schirach by a letter dated 3 December
+1940 (1950-PS), which shows with all clarity that it was not Schirach
+who ordered the evacuation of the Viennese Jews to the Government
+General but Hitler himself, and that again it was not Schirach who
+carried out this measure but the Reichsführer SS Himmler, who delegated
+this task to his Vienna office. It must therefore be stated here
+categorically that Schirach is in no way responsible for the deportation
+of the Jews from Vienna; he did not carry out this program and he did
+not initiate it; when he came to Vienna in the summer of 1940 as
+Gauleiter, the majority of the Viennese Jews had already voluntarily
+emigrated or had been forcibly evacuated from Vienna, a fact which was
+confirmed by the Defendant Seyss-Inquart. The remaining 60,000 Jews who
+were still there at the beginning of Schirach’s time in Vienna were
+deported from there by the SS without his participation and without his
+responsibility.
+
+Schirach did make the well-known speech in Vienna in September 1942,
+where he stated that every Jew working in Europe was a danger to
+European culture. Schirach furthermore said in this speech that if it
+was desired to reproach him with the fact that he had deported tens of
+thousands of Jews into the Eastern ghetto from this city, which had once
+been the metropolis of Judaism, he would but answer that he considered
+this an active contribution to European culture. That is how this
+passage reads. Schirach has openly and courageously admitted that he
+actually expressed himself in this manner at that time, and expressed
+his regret by stating:
+
+ “I cannot take back this wicked statement; I must take the
+ responsibility for it. I spoke these words, which I sincerely
+ regret.”
+
+Should the Tribunal see in these words a legally punishable crime
+against humanity, Schirach will have to make atonement for this single
+anti-Semitic remark which can be attributed to him, though it was merely
+a spoken word and did not have any harmful result. Schirach’s attitude
+in this respect does not exempt the Tribunal from its duty to verify
+carefully what Schirach actually did; furthermore, under what
+circumstances he made this isolated remark, and finally whether Schirach
+also made any other spiteful remarks against the Jews or committed any
+malicious acts against the Jewish race as a whole.
+
+The foremost question is: What did Schirach really do? The reply to
+this, emerging from the revelations of this Trial, can only be: Apart
+from the fact that he made this isolated anti-Semitic remark in his
+speech in Vienna in September 1942, he has not committed any crime
+against the Jews. He had no competence in the question of the
+deportation of the Vienna Jews, he did not participate in it at all, and
+having too little power he could not have prevented it in any case. It
+is just as the Prosecution incidentally stated: He boastfully attributed
+to himself an action which in reality he had never committed and, in
+view of his entire attitude, he never could have committed.
+
+What, however prompted Schirach to make this remark in his Vienna
+speech? How did he come to attribute to himself a deed and charge
+himself with an action which he had obviously never committed? Here too
+the answer is given by the results of the evidence in the Trial: It
+demonstrates what a very difficult position Schirach had in Vienna.
+Without giving any reason, Hitler dismissed him as Reich Youth Leader,
+presumably because he no longer trusted him. From year to year Hitler’s
+fear was growing lest the young people might stand behind Schirach and
+become alienated from him, Hitler, to the same degree that the black
+wall of his SS was isolating him from the people. Hitler possibly saw in
+his Youth Leader the personification of the coming generation which
+thought in world-wide terms, whose feelings were human and who felt
+themselves more and more bound to those precepts of true morality which
+Hitler had long ago jettisoned for himself and his national leadership,
+because they had long since ceased to be concepts of true morality for
+him but mere slogans of a meaningless propaganda. This feeling of
+Hitler’s may have been the deeper reason why he dismissed Schirach as
+Youth Leader suddenly in the summer of 1940, without word of
+explanation, and put him in the especially difficult position of
+Gauleiter in Vienna, the city which he, Hitler, hated from the bottom of
+his heart, even while he spoke of his “Austrian fatherland.”
+
+In Vienna Schirach’s position was extremely complicated. Wherever he
+went he was shadowed and spied upon, his administrative activity there
+was sharply criticized, he was reproached for neglecting the interests
+of the Party in Vienna, for almost never being seen at Party meetings,
+and for not making any political speeches. I refer in this connection to
+the affidavit of Maria Hoepken, Schirach Document Book Number 3. The
+Berlin Party Chancellery accepted any complaints the Vienna Party
+members made about their new Gauleiter with satisfaction, and this fact
+alone can explain the unfortunate speech Schirach made in September
+1942, which was diametrically opposed to the attitude he had always
+maintained concerning the Jewish question. After the interrogation of
+the witness Gustav Hoepken here in this courtroom there can be no doubt
+as to how the Vienna speech came about, for it reveals that Schirach had
+expressly charged his press officer Günther Kaufmann to emphasize this
+particular point when telephoning his report of the Vienna speech to the
+German News Agency in Berlin, because he, Schirach—I quote—“had to
+make a concession to Bormann in this respect.” Schirach himself stressed
+this point in the course of his interrogation with the statement that
+out of false loyalty he had morally identified himself with these acts
+of Hitler and Himmler. This ugly speech which Schirach made in September
+1942 is, however, in another sense a very valuable point in favor of
+Schirach: He speaks of a “transfer of the Jews to the ghettos of the
+East.” Had Schirach known at that time that the Viennese Jews were to be
+sent away in order to be murdered in an extermination camp, he would in
+view of the purpose of this speech doubtless not have spoken of an
+Eastern ghetto to which the Jews had been sent, and would have reported
+the extermination of the Viennese Jews; but even at this time, in the
+autumn of 1942, he never had the slightest suspicion that Hitler
+proposed to murder the Jews. That he would never have approved and never
+accepted; his anti-Semitism at no time went so far.
+
+Schirach also frankly stated here that at that time he approved of
+Hitler’s plan to settle the Jews in Poland, not because he was inspired
+by anti-Semitism or hatred of the Jews, but by the reasonable
+consideration that in view of existing conditions it was in the Jews’
+own interest to leave Vienna and be taken to Poland, because the Jews
+would not in the long run have been able to stay in Vienna under the
+Hitler regime without being exposed to increasingly serious persecution.
+As Schirach declared on 24 May 1946, considering Goebbels’ temperament
+it always seemed possible that incidents like those of November 1938
+might be repeated from one day to the other, and under such conditions
+of legal insecurity he could not visualize the existence of the Jewish
+population in Germany. He thought that the Jews would be safer in a
+restricted settlement area of the Government General than in Germany and
+Austria, where they were exposed to the whims of the Propaganda Minister
+who, indeed, had been the main supporter of radical anti-Semitism in
+Germany. Schirach was well aware of this fact. He could not shut his
+eyes to the realization that the drive against the Jews in Germany
+obviously became more drastic, more fanatic, and more violent every day.
+This conception of the Vienna speech of September 1942 and the true
+cause of its genesis coincide with the statements of the Defendant
+Schirach at the meeting of the city councillors of Vienna on 6 June 1942
+(Document Number 3886-PS), to the effect that in the late summer and
+autumn of that year all Jews would be expelled from the city, and
+likewise with the file note of Reichsleiter Bormann of 2 October 1940
+(USSR-142), according to which, at a social meeting at Hitler’s home,
+Schirach had remarked that he still had more than 50,000 Jews left in
+Vienna which the Governor General of Poland must take over from him.
+This remark was caused by Schirach’s embarrassing situation at that
+time. Hitler, on the one hand, kept insisting on the expulsion of the
+Jews from Vienna, while on the other hand Governor General Frank was
+reluctant to receive them in the Government General. This disagreement
+was evidently the reason for Schirach’s discussing this fact at the
+above-mentioned meeting on 2 October 1940, in order to avoid renewed
+reproaches by Hitler. Personally he was in no way interested in the
+removal of the Viennese Jews, as was proved by the testimony of the
+witness Gustav Hoepken regarding the conference between Schirach and
+Himmler in November 1943.
+
+I should like to add a word here concerning that discussion. During that
+conference with Himmler, Schirach presented the point of view that the
+Jews might be left in Vienna, especially since they were wearing the
+Star of David anyway. That has been testified to by the witness Hoepken
+as being a statement made by Schirach during the conversation. However,
+Hitler demanded the expulsion of the Jews from Vienna and Himmler
+insisted on having it carried out.
+
+The Prosecution thought it possible to charge Schirach with having made
+another malicious anti-Semitic remark in connection with a speech which
+he supposedly made in late December 1938, certainly before the spring of
+1939, at a students’ meeting at Heidelberg. Across the Neckar River he
+pointed to the old university town of Heidelberg where several
+burned-out synagogues were the silent witnesses to the anti-Semitic
+activities of the students of Heidelberg. I refer to the affidavit of
+Ziemer, in which “the stout little Reich Student Leader”—as it is
+stated literally—is said to have approved and commended the pogroms of
+9 November 1938 as a heroic act. This charge, as already mentioned, is
+supported by the declaration under oath of a certain Gregor Ziemer.
+However, there can be no doubt that this statement of Ziemer’s is false.
+Ziemer never belonged to the German student movement or the Hitler
+Youth, and obviously was not personally present at the student assembly
+in question. The affidavit does not state from what source he is
+supposed to have obtained his knowledge. However, that his claim is
+false is already proved by his description of physical appearance when
+he speaks of a “stout little student leader”; for this does not at all
+resemble Schirach. Perhaps it would to some extent apply to his
+successor, who was Reich Student Leader at the end of 1938, but it
+certainly was not Schirach. As is known, he had already in 1934 given
+the office of Reich Student Leader back into the hands of the Führer’s
+deputy, after he himself had in the meantime been appointed Reich Youth
+Leader. Schirach did not make a speech at the end of 1938 or at any
+other time before Heidelberg students, and by the affidavit of the
+witness Maria Hoepken (Schirach Document Book Number 3) it has been
+clearly proved that at the time stated Schirach was not in Heidelberg at
+all. Schirach has also confirmed this under oath and his own statement
+can lay claim to credibility because he has not whitewashed anything for
+which he was responsible, and he has not falsely denied anything, but on
+the contrary has accounted for all his actions with courage and
+truthfulness during his entire examination.
+
+Still another fact decisively confirms the claim that the Ziemer
+affidavit is untrue, at any rate in regard to the person of Schirach. In
+the presentation of evidence it happened to be stated by chance how
+Schirach reacted to the November pogroms of the year 1938. The witness
+Lauterbacher has informed us here, as already mentioned at another
+point, that Schirach on 10 November 1938 condemned most vehemently the
+events of 9 November 1938 in the presence of his co-workers, and
+declared that he felt ashamed for the others and for the whole Party.
+The 9th of November 1938, Schirach said, would go down in Germany
+history as a unique disgrace of German culture of which we would never
+be able to cleanse ourselves. Such a thing might have happened among an
+uncivilized people, but it should never have occurred among us Germans
+who consider ourselves to be a highly civilized people. The youth
+leaders, Schirach explained at that time, had to prevent such excesses
+under all circumstances. He did not wish to hear anything like this
+about his own organization, either now or in the future. The Hitler
+Youth must be kept outside such things under all circumstances. These
+are sworn statements by the witness Hoepken. By a telephone message from
+Berlin, Schirach had all the offices of the Hitler Youth informed in the
+same terms. If Schirach in November 1938 condemned and criticized in
+such an extremely sharp manner the events of 9 November 1938, it is
+impossible for him to have praised at about the same time the bloody
+acts which had been committed and thus to have incited the Heidelberg
+students, and the question therefore arises as to why not a single
+participant at that student meeting in Heidelberg was brought here as a
+witness instead of one who could only testify from hearsay.
+Incidentally, the Prosecution did not revert to this alleged Heidelberg
+speech during cross-examination, thereby acknowledging Schirach’s own
+presentation of the facts to be correct.
+
+It is also a very significant fact that the Hitler Youth did not
+participate in the excesses of 9 November 1938, nor did they commit any
+excesses of this sort either before or afterward. The Hitler Youth at
+that time was the strongest Party organization. It comprised some seven
+or eight million members, and in spite of that not one single case has
+been proved where the Hitler Youth participated in such crimes against
+humanity, although its members were mainly of an age which, according to
+experience, is only too easily tempted to participate in excesses and
+acts of brutality. The only exception which has been claimed so far
+concerns the testimony of the French woman Ida Vasseau, who is said to
+be the manager of an Old People’s Home in Lemberg and is supposed to
+have claimed, according to the report of the Commission, Document Number
+USSR-6, that the Hitler Youth had been given children from the ghetto in
+Lemberg whom they used as living targets for their shooting practice.
+This single exception, however, which so far has been claimed but not
+proved, could not be cleared up in any way, particularly not in respect
+of whether members of the Hitler Youth had really been involved. But
+even if there had been such a single case among the eight million
+members during 10 or 15 long years, this could not in any way prove that
+Baldur von Schirach had exercised an inciting influence, and that, if I
+may add this here, at a time when he was no longer Reich Youth Leader.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now.
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. SAUTER: If the Tribunal please, I shall proceed from Page 36 of my
+statement. Let us just examine all the speeches and articles which Von
+Schirach wrote as Reich Youth Leader, and which are in the possession of
+the Tribunal in the Schirach document book. They extend over a long
+period of years, yet they do not contain a single word inciting to race
+hatred, preaching hatred of Jews, exhorting youth to commit acts of
+violence, or defending such acts. If it has been possible to keep the
+members of the Hitler Youth, who numbered millions, clear of such
+excesses, this fact also goes to prove that the leaders endeavored to
+imbue the younger generation with a spirit of tolerance, love of one’s
+neighbors, and respect of human dignity.
+
+Just what Von Schirach thought about the treatment of the Jewish
+question is clearly evident from the scene with occurred in the spring
+of 1943 at Obersalzberg, which is also described in the affidavit of the
+witness Maria Hoepken (Document Book Schirach Number 3). In this case I
+refer to the scene where Schirach had an eyewitness describe to Hitler
+at his home at Obersalzberg how he had witnessed with his own eyes at
+night from a hotel window in Amsterdam the manner in which the Gestapo
+deported hundreds of Dutch Jewesses. Schirach himself could not dare at
+the time to bring such matters to Hitler’s attention; a decree by
+Bormann had expressly prohibited the Gauleiter from doing this. Schirach
+therefore tried through the mediation of a third person, who had been a
+witness himself, to gain Hitler’s approval of a mitigation in the
+treatment of the Jewish question. No success was achieved; Hitler
+dismissed it all bluntly with the remark that this was all
+sentimentality. Because of this intervention on behalf of the Dutch Jews
+the situation of the Defendant Von Schirach had become so critical that
+he preferred to leave Obersalzberg immediately, early in the morning of
+the following day, and from that time on, Hitler was in principle no
+longer accessible to Schirach.
+
+This intervention of Schirach for a milder treatment of the Jewish
+question perhaps also contributed to the fact that Hitler, a few months
+later, in the summer of 1943, seriously considered having Schirach
+arrested and brought before the Peoples’ Court, for the sole reason that
+Schirach had dared, in a letter to Reichsleiter Bormann, to describe the
+war as a national disaster for Germany.
+
+In any case all this shows that Schirach, as much as he was able,
+advocated moderation in the Jewish question in a manner which endangered
+his own position and existence. In spite of the fact that he was an
+anti-Semite—and just because of this it deserves attention—he
+withstood all pressure from Berlin and refused to have an anti-Semitic
+special edition published in the official journal of the Hitler Youth,
+while he had published his own special editions for an understanding
+with England and France and for a more humane treatment of the Eastern
+nations. It is no less worthy of consideration that Schirach, in
+conjunction with his friend Dr. Colin Ross, endeavored to attain the
+emigration of the Jews into neutral foreign countries in order to save
+them from being deported to a Polish ghetto.
+
+The Prosecution has endeavored to substantiate its allegation that the
+Defendant Von Schirach bears a certain share of the responsibility for
+the pogroms against Jews which occurred in Poland and Russia, by trying
+to use against him the so-called “Reports on Experiences and Situation,”
+which were regularly sent by the SS to the Commissioner for Defense of
+the Reich in the Military Administrative District XVII. In fact it must
+be said that if—and I emphasize, if—Schirach had at that time had
+cognizance of these regular “Reports on Experiences and Situation by the
+Operational Groups (Einsatzgruppen) of the Security Police and the
+Security Service in the East,” then this fact would indeed constitute
+for him a grave moral and political charge. Then he could not be spared
+the accusation that he must have been aware of the fact that, apart from
+the military operations in the East, extremely horrible mass murders of
+Communists and Jews had also taken place. The picture of Von Schirach’s
+character which we have so far, who was described even by the
+Prosecution as a “cultured man,” would be tainted very materially if Von
+Schirach had actually seen and read these reports. For then he would
+have known that in Latvia and Lithuania, in White Ruthenia and in Kiev,
+mass murders had taken place, quite obviously without any legal
+proceedings of any kind and without sentence having been passed.
+
+What has, however, actually been proved by the evidence? The reports
+referred to were sent, among dozens of other offices, also to that of
+the “Reich Commissioner for Defense in Military Administrative District
+XVII” and, moreover, with the specific address “attention of Government
+Councillor Dr. Hoffmann” or “attention of Government Councillor Dr.
+Fischer.” From this style of address and from the way in which these
+reports were initialed at the office of the “Commissioner for Defense of
+the Reich,” it can be established beyond question that Schirach did not
+have an opportunity of seeing these reports and that he obtained no
+knowledge of them in any other way either.
+
+Schirach, it will be remembered, held three extensive offices in Vienna:
+as Reich Governor (Reichsstatthalter) and Reich Defense Commissioner he
+was the chief of the whole State administration; as Lord Mayor he was
+the head of the municipal administration; and as Gauleiter of Vienna he
+was the head of the local Party machinery. It is only natural that
+Schirach could not fulfill all these three tasks by himself, especially
+since in 1940 he had come from a completely different set of tasks, and
+first had to make himself acquainted with the scope of work in State
+administration and in municipal administration. He therefore had a
+permanent deputy for each of his three tasks, and for the affairs of the
+State administration, which interests us here, this was the
+Regierungspräsident of Vienna. This official, Dr. Delbrügge, was to
+handle the current affairs of the State administration completely on his
+own initiative. Schirach occupied himself only with such matters of
+State administration as were forwarded to him by his permanent deputy,
+the Regierungspräsident, in written form, or about which his deputy
+reported to him orally.
+
+Now, if this had been the case with regard to the afore-mentioned
+“Experience and Situation Reports,” then this would have somehow been
+noted on the documents in question. However, on the “Experience and
+Situation Reports of the SS” submitted here there is not a single note
+which indicates that these reports were shown to the Defendant Von
+Schirach or that he was informed about them. This will readily be
+understood without further explanation because, after all, the
+experiences which the Police and the SD had accumulated in the partisan
+struggles in Poland and Russia were completely inconsequential for the
+Vienna administration; therefore there was not the least cause to inform
+the Defendant Baldur von Schirach of these reports in any way, since he
+was very much overburdened anyhow with administrative matters of all
+kinds.
+
+This conclusion, Gentlemen, rests primarily not only on the testimony
+under oath of the defendant here in Court, but also on that of the two
+witnesses Hoepken and Wieshofer, who, one as chief of the Central Office
+and the other as adjutant of the defendant, were able to give the most
+exact information about conditions in Vienna. It is certain that these
+“Experience and Situation Reports” never came into the distribution
+center of the Central Office in Vienna, but only into the distribution
+center of the Regierungspräsident, and that Hoepken, as chief of the
+Central Office, as well as Wieshofer, as adjutant of the defendant,
+likewise had no previous knowledge of these reports but saw them for the
+first time here in the courtroom during their questioning. And I would
+like to insert here that the two officials of the Defendant Von Schirach
+who were mentioned by name, Dr. Fischer and the other one, were entirely
+unaware of them. In any case the result, as has been proved by the file
+notes which are on the documents, is that Schirach did not have any
+knowledge whatsoever of these reports, and that he is not coresponsible
+for the atrocities described therein, and therefore cannot be criminally
+charged on the basis of these activity reports.
+
+May it please the Tribunal, in judging the personality of Schirach, his
+behavior during the last weeks in Vienna is also not without importance.
+For Schirach it was a matter of course not to carry out the various
+insane orders which came from Berlin at that time. He absolutely
+condemned the lynching of enemy aviators which was ordered by Bormann,
+and likewise the order to hang defeatists without mercy, regardless of
+whether they were men or women. His summary court was never even in
+session, and did not pronounce a single death sentence. No blood is on
+his hands. On the other hand, for example, he did everything in order to
+protect from the excited mob enemy aviators who had made an emergency
+landing and again, as we have heard from the witness Wieshofer, he
+immediately sent out his own car in order to bring to safety American
+aviators who had parachuted. Thereby he again placed himself in
+deliberate opposition to an order of Bormann that such aviators were not
+to be protected against lynching by the civilian population. Nor did he
+pay any attention to the order that Vienna was to be defended to the
+last man, or that in Vienna bridges and churches and residential
+sections were to be destroyed, and he emphatically refused compliance
+with the order to form partisan units in civilian clothing or to
+continue the hopeless struggle in a criminal manner with the aid of the
+Werewolf organization. He turned down such demands out of his sense of
+duty, all the more since this would have caused him to violate
+international law.
+
+The characterization of the Defendant Von Schirach would be incomplete
+if we were not also to recall at this moment the declaration which he
+deposed here on the morning of 24 May 1946. I am speaking of that
+declaration in which he described Hitler as an unmitigated murderer,
+here before the whole German people and before the entire world public.
+Already last year Schirach made declarations which show his feeling of
+responsibility and his preparedness to answer fully for his actions and
+those of his subordinates. This was the case on 5 June 1945, for
+example, when he was hiding in the Tyrol and heard over the radio that
+all Party leaders were to be brought before an Allied court. Schirach
+thereupon gave himself up immediately, and in his letter to the American
+local commander stated he was doing so in order to protect other people,
+who had only executed his orders, from being called to account for his
+actions. He surrendered voluntarily, although the British radio had
+already announced the news of his death, and although Schirach could
+have hoped to remain undiscovered in his hiding place. This behavior
+deserves consideration in judging the personality of a defendant.
+
+The same feeling of responsibility was then shown by Schirach in the
+autumn of 1945 when he was heard by the Prosecution. He believed at that
+time that his successor Axmann had been killed, as he had been reported
+to be dead. In spite of this, Schirach did not attempt to put the
+responsibility on his successor; on the contrary, he expressly stated
+that he was assuming full responsibility also for the time his successor
+was in office, as well as for what had been done under his successor in
+the Reich Youth Leadership. The keystone in this line of conduct is
+furnished by the statement which Schirach made here on 24 May 1946,
+which went out from this courtroom to the whole world, to all the German
+lands, down to the last farm, down to the last workman’s hut.
+
+May it please the Tribunal: Any man may err, he may even make mistakes
+that he later may not understand himself. Schirach also has erred; he
+brought up the younger generation for a man whom he for many years held
+to be unimpeachable and whom he must now brand as a diabolical criminal.
+In his idealism and out of loyalty he remained faithful and true to his
+oath to a man who deceived and cheated him and the youth of Germany and
+who, as we learned here from Speer, up to his last breath placed his own
+interests higher than the existence and the happiness of 80 million
+people.
+
+Schirach is perhaps the one defendant who not only clearly realized his
+mistakes, however they may be regarded, but who confessed to them most
+honestly and who through his plain speaking prevented the creation of a
+Hitler legend in the future. Such a defendant must be given
+consideration for trying to repair as far as he can the damage which he
+caused in good faith.
+
+Schirach had tried to do that; he took pains to open the eyes of our
+people about the “Führer” in whom, together with millions of Germans, he
+saw for many years the deliverer of the fatherland and the guarantor of
+its future. He publicly rendered an account which the German people are
+entitled to ask of every subleader since Hitler committed suicide. He
+did this so that foreign countries could see how the conditions of the
+last six years had come about in Germany and just who was responsible
+for them.
+
+But above all, the former Youth Leader, in making his statement on 24
+May 1946, desired to tell the youth of Germany openly that so far, quite
+unknowingly and with the best of intentions, he had led them astray and
+that now they must take another path if the German people and German
+culture are not to perish. In doing so Schirach did not think of himself
+nor of his life’s work which had been destroyed; he was thinking of the
+youth of today, which not only faces the ruins of our cities and
+dwellings, but also wanders about among the wreckage of its former
+ideals; he was thinking of German youth, which is in dire need of new
+guidance and which must base its future existence on another foundation.
+
+Schirach hopes that the entire youth of Germany has heard his words.
+What was particularly valuable in his confession of 24 May 1946 was his
+assurance that he alone takes the guilt for youth, just as he formerly
+assumed command. If this point of view is acknowledged as being right,
+and if the necessary conclusions are drawn therefrom, this would be a
+valuable result of this Trial for our German youth.
+
+May it please the Tribunal, I am now coming to the end of my survey of
+the case of Von Schirach. In the treatment of this case I desisted from
+making general statements, and especially those of a political nature.
+Rather, I confined myself to the appreciation of the personality of the
+defendant, his actions and his motives.
+
+In this connection I should like to add, to complete the picture, that
+these considerations and this appreciation by the Defense have shown
+that the Defendant Von Schirach is not guilty in the sense of the
+Indictment and cannot be punished, for he did not commit a punishable
+act, since you as judges will not judge political guilt but rather
+criminal guilt in the sense of the penal code.
+
+At the end of my remarks in the case of Von Schirach I should like to
+have the privilege of making a few general statements, not immediately
+connected with the personality of Schirach, but suggesting themselves to
+a German defense counsel at the end of this Trial.
+
+May it please the Tribunal, you are the highest tribunal of our times;
+the power of the whole world stands behind you; you represent the four
+mightiest nations on earth; hundreds of millions of men, not only in the
+defeated countries, but also in the victorious nations listen to your
+opinions and anxiously await your judgment, ready to be taught by you
+and to follow your advice.
+
+This high authority affords you, Gentlemen, an opportunity of doing much
+good through your verdict and particularly through the statement of the
+basis for the judgment, in order that out of today’s disaster the way to
+a better future may be found for the benefit of your own people and for
+the good of the German people.
+
+Today, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, Germany lies beaten to the ground, a
+poor people, the poorest of all. The German cities are destroyed; German
+industry is smashed to pieces; on the shoulders of the German people
+rests a national debt representing many times the entire national wealth
+and spelling want and poverty, hunger and slavery, for many generations
+for the German people if your peoples do not help us. The findings
+supporting your verdict will in many respects point the way and give the
+help needed to emerge from this desperate plight.
+
+To be sure, for reasons of sentiment it may be hard for you to consider
+this point of view and to take it into account when you think of the
+misfortune which the past six years also brought to your own countries.
+It becomes doubly hard, because for months this Trial has revealed
+nothing but crimes, crimes committed for a great number of years by a
+German tyrant misusing Germans and the name of this same German people
+of whose future you as judges are now asked to think benevolently and
+whom you are now required to help.
+
+May it please the Tribunal: Hitler is dead—with him his tools who in
+these years committed crimes without number tyrannizing Germany and
+nearly all of Europe and disgracing the German name for generations to
+come. The German people on the other hand live, and must be allowed to
+live if half a universe is not to fall into ruins.
+
+With this Trial and during this epoch, the German people are undergoing
+a very serious operation. It must not bring death; it must bring
+recovery. Your verdict can and must make a contribution in that
+direction, so that in the future the world may not see in every German a
+criminal, but revert again to the concept of Professor Arnold Nash of
+the University of Chicago, who a few days ago, when questioned about the
+purpose of his present trip to Europe, replied: “Every scientist has two
+fatherlands, his own and Germany.” These words ought to be a warning
+also for all of those irresponsible critics who even today see it as
+their task, with propaganda means of every sort, to stir up feeling
+against everything German and to tell the world that at least every
+other person in Germany is a criminal.
+
+You, as impartial judges, will not wish to forget one thing: There
+always was and there still is today another Germany, a Germany that
+knows industriousness and economy; a Germany of Goethe and Beethoven, a
+Germany that knows loyalty and honesty and other good qualities which in
+past centuries were proverbial for the German character. Believe me,
+Gentlemen of the Tribunal, in this epoch, when Germany is regaining
+consciousness as after a severe illness, as she proceeds to rebuild a
+better future from the ruins of an evil past, a future for her youth
+which has no part in the crimes committed, at this time some 70 or 80
+million German people are looking to you and are awaiting from you a
+verdict which will open the way for the reconstruction of German
+economy, the German spirit, and true freedom.
+
+You are, Gentlemen, truly sovereign judges, not bound by any written
+law, not bound to any paragraph, pledged to serve your conscience only,
+and called by destiny to give to the world simultaneously a legal order
+which will preserve for future generations that peace which the past was
+unable to preserve for them. A well-known democrat of the old Germany,
+the former Minister Dr. Diltz, said in a recent article on the Nuremberg
+Trial: In a monarchist state justice would be administered in the name
+of the king; in republics courts would pronounce their rulings in the
+name of the people; but you, the Nuremberg Tribunal, should administer
+justice in the name of humanity.
+
+It is, indeed, a wonderful thought for the Court, an ideal aim, if it
+could believe that its verdict could in fact make real the precepts of
+humanity, and that it could prevent Crimes against Humanity for all
+time. But in certain respects this would still remain an unsteady
+foundation for a verdict of such magnitude as confronts you, because
+ideas on what humanity demands or prohibits in individual cases may
+vary, depending upon the epoch, the people, the party concepts according
+to which one judges.
+
+I believe you may find a reliable foundation for your verdict when you
+revert to a maxim which has endured throughout the centuries and which
+certainly will remain valid in ages to come: _Justitia est fundamentum
+regnorum_.
+
+Thus the German people, and with them the entire world, await from you a
+judgment which will not just be hailed today by the victor nations as
+the final victory over Germany, but which history will recognize as
+proper; a verdict in the name of justice.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Servatius for the Defendant Sauckel.
+
+DR. SERVATIUS: Mr. President, may it please the Tribunal:
+
+The Defense of the Defendant Sauckel has, in the first place, to deal
+with the charge of “slave labor.” What is slave labor?
+
+One cannot accept this as an established term comprising all the
+occurrences which, in bewildering abundance, are charged against the
+Defendant Sauckel under the heading “slave labor.” Particularly, those
+actions ought first to be examined from a legal point of view. The legal
+basis for this examination is the Charter. However, this Charter does
+not say what is to be understood by “slave labor” or by “deportation.”
+Therefore, these concepts must be clarified by interpretation. Article 6
+of the Charter deals in two passages and from two different points of
+view with deportation and slave labor. Deportation is designated both a
+war crime and a crime against humanity, and forced labor appears as
+“slave labor” under the heading of War Crimes, and as “enslavement”
+under the heading of Crimes against Humanity.
+
+The question of under what heading the mobilization of labor by the
+Defendant Sauckel should fall is of decisive importance; if it is a war
+crime, then it should be judged exclusively under martial law. If it is
+a crime against humanity, then the latter presupposes the commission of
+a war crime or of a crime against peace.
+
+It follows therefrom that the deportation mentioned in Article 6(b)
+cannot be the same thing as deportation according to Article 6(c), nor
+can forced labor according to Article 6(b) be identical with forced
+labor under Article 6(c). The difference between the two kinds must be
+found in ...
+
+THE PRESIDENT [_Interposing_]: That paragraph of your speech which is in
+English on Page 2, the second paragraph:
+
+“It follows therefrom that deportation mentioned in Article 6(b) cannot
+be the same as deportation according to Article 6(c) ...” is not
+altogether clear to the Tribunal. Could you make it clearer?
+
+DR. SERVATIUS: In Article 6(c) we deal with Crimes against Humanity,
+whereas in Article 6(b) we deal with War Crimes. In both articles the
+expressions deportation and forced labor are used, but there must be
+some differentiation, and my examination is directed at establishing
+this difference more exactly. I believe, Mr. President, that my further
+statements will make this clearer than it has heretofore been.
+
+I turn now to the terminology used in the Charter. I was talking of the
+difference between the two kinds of slave labor and deportation. The
+difference between the two kinds is to be found in the fact that
+something has to be added to the war crimes which violates the rules of
+humanity.
+
+The correctness of this interpretation may also be recognized in the
+terminology of the Charter, however fluctuating it may be. For instance,
+the Russian text for deportation as a war crime chooses the word _uvod_,
+which means only removal from a place, whereas, on the other hand, it
+uses for crimes against humanity of the same nature the technical
+expression _ssylka_, by which penal deportation under the rule of the
+czars is understood as denoting deportation in the sense of penal
+deportation.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: The French is not coming through. Will you just wait a
+minute, there is some difficulty with the French translation, Dr.
+Servatius. The Tribunal must adjourn.
+
+MARSHAL: The Court will remain adjourned until a quarter to two.
+
+ [_The Tribunal recessed until 1345 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ _Afternoon Session_
+
+DR. SERVATIUS: I was speaking of the terminology of “deportation” in the
+Russian text. I pointed out the distinction between the word _uvod_
+meaning only transportation, and _ssylka_ meaning a deportation as a
+form of punishment. From that one may conclude that deportation from the
+occupied territories for the purpose of work can only be regarded as a
+war crime, while it becomes a crime against humanity when assuming the
+penal character of a transportation of prisoners.
+
+However, the question arises whether, beyond this, according to the
+Charter any removal of the population is punishable as a war crime,
+regardless of whether it occurs for allocation of labor or for other
+reasons. According to the text of the Charter, the latter seems at first
+sight to be the case, since it renders punishable “removal for slave
+labor, or for any other purposes.” Upon closer examination, however, it
+becomes evident that this rule cannot be meant in such a sense, as there
+are cases in which a removal is not only consistent with international
+law but even becomes imperative.
+
+Accordingly, the Charter could only be understood to mean that the
+punishable act does not consist of plain “removal” but comprises the
+composite concept “removal for slave labor” and “removal for any other
+purpose.” The clause, “or for any other purpose,” should be understood
+so as to mean only that an illegal purpose equivalent to slave labor
+exists. If removal of any kind was to have been made punishable, then
+the qualifying addition “for slave labor or for any other purpose” would
+be contradictory to common sense. This definition is important for the
+Defendant Sauckel, as otherwise proof of deportation classified as a war
+crime would be evident from the acts admitted by him.
+
+Just as for the various kinds of deportation, the difference between the
+kinds of slave labor, according to the Charter, must be clarified. Here,
+too, a clue to the interpretation is provided by the terminology of the
+different languages, though not because of their clarity and consistency
+but by the very opposite:
+
+The English version speaks of “slave labor” as a war crime and of
+“enslavement” as a crime against humanity; the French version states
+_travaux forcés_ and _réduction en esclavage_, the Russian version
+accordingly _rabstvo_ (slavery) and _poraboshtshenie_ (enslavement). It
+is not discernible how the terms chosen differentiate _in re_. Basing
+upon the fact that labor inconsistent with laws of humanity must be
+carried out under more severe conditions than other labor and assuming
+“slave labor” to be the severest forms of labor, it will be seen that no
+definition can be derived from this terminology of the Charter and that
+more of an ethical discrimination and stigmatization is intended.
+
+Accordingly an objective division of the kinds of labor should be
+carried out independent of the terminology by considering exclusively
+the degree of severity of labor conditions. If one tries to analyze the
+terminology used, one finds the designation “enslavement,” _esclavage_,
+and _poraboshtshenie_ for the inhuman form of labor, whereas the labor
+not inconsistent with laws of humanity is called “forced labor,”
+_travaux forcés_, and _prinudidjenaja rabota_. Slave labor (“slave
+labor,” _travaux forcés_, and _rabstvo_) consequently is the general
+term comprising both kinds.
+
+What does this definition mean for the defense of the Defendant Sauckel?
+He admits having negotiated “compulsory labor” in the form of obligatory
+labor which, as stated before, has been termed “slave labor” in general.
+He denies, however, having demanded “slave labor,” which might be looked
+upon as inhuman labor, in other words, enslavement. A different standard
+applies, just as for deportation, to these two categories; “obligatory
+labor” is only a war crime and must be judged according to the rules of
+war; crimes against humanity, as I already stated above in connection
+with deportation as a crime against humanity, bear the additional
+characteristics of being connected with war crimes or crimes against
+peace. If it can be proven that the mobilization of manpower as ordered
+by the Defendant Sauckel was permitted by the rules of war, then the
+same act cannot be held to be a crime against humanity.
+
+The Indictment, too, has made a difference as to the kinds of labor. It
+has treated, under Paragraph 3, Section VIII (H), as a separate war
+crime under the title of “Conscription of Civilian Labor,” the
+mobilization of manpower as directed by the Defendant Sauckel, which I
+shall call “regulated labor mobilization,” and mentions only “forced
+labor.” The French version speaks here of _travaux forcés_ and uses
+terms such as _les obligèrent à travailler_ and _mis en obligation_; the
+Russian version follows this and also speaks only of “compulsory labor”
+as _prinuditjelnaja rabota_ but does not refer to this as being slave
+labor.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel does not deny the facts taken here as a basis, but
+I shall submit the legal reasons which justify this mobilization of
+labor, and I shall prove that it does not involve any war crime that
+would break international law.
+
+The rules of international law are authoritative in determining the
+question whether “regulated labor mobilization” is a war crime. The
+Charter cannot prohibit what international law permits in wartime. Such
+precepts of international law are laid down in the agreements on the
+rules of war and in the general legal principles and usages as applied
+by all states.
+
+The Prosecution bases its opinion that labor mobilization is a war crime
+on the definitions of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare, as well as
+on the agreements and rules of war and the criminal codes of the
+countries concerned. If it is shown that labor mobilization is permitted
+by international law, then a judicial inquiry into the penal regulations
+is, of course, not necessary.
+
+The Hague Convention on Land Warfare can be considered as a basis for
+the laws of warfare with which we are concerned here. Whether it was
+recognized by all the states involved here is, from a practical point of
+view, of little importance, for inasmuch as it was not recognized or
+cannot be directly applied, it is a case of a shortcoming in
+international law which is filled as a matter of course according to the
+principles of the belligerent’s needs and his duty to respect the laws
+of humanity. The principles of international law as established in the
+Hague Convention on Land Warfare are in all cases an important guide.
+
+The Prosecution quotes, in the first place, Article 46 of the Hague
+Convention on Land Warfare, which is designed to safeguard the
+fundamental rights of the population. It is typical for labor
+mobilization that it does restrict liberty, whereas this particular
+basic right is not protected by this article.
+
+If the Hague Convention on Land Warfare is examined for a definite rule
+concerning deportation and forced labor, it will be realized that no
+such regulation exists. Just as in the sphere of air warfare and the use
+of new weapons, the Hague Convention on Land Warfare could not deal with
+questions which, at the time of its drafting, were far from the mind of
+the contracting parties. The first World War was still fought between
+two armies with already prepared material, and after it was used up the
+fight would be ended. The idea of a long war consuming huge amounts of
+material and requiring a continuous production with all available labor
+was for the Hague Convention on Land Warfare not yet a problem ripe for
+discussion.
+
+Article 52 of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare, which deals with the
+right to requisition, touches on the matter; but it can be seen that the
+rules deal only with purely local requirements of an army which appears
+fully equipped and has only supplementary local requirements. It is
+characteristic for the purely local meaning that the requisitioning
+authority is entrusted to the local commanders, in contrast to Article
+51 of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare which permits only an
+independent commanding general to impose compulsory contributions. The
+literature about the right to requisition in international law
+accordingly quotes only examples of local significance.
+
+Although Article 52 of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare can
+accordingly not be directly applied, its basic principles are
+nevertheless binding on the belligerents. The basic idea is that an army
+can demand practically everything necessary for the satisfaction of its
+requirements. There are only two limitations: It may not take more than
+it needs and not more than is compatible with the resources of the
+country.
+
+The idea of a local obligation to furnish services will have to be
+adapted to modern warfare. The Hague Convention on Land Warfare
+envisaged the employment of smiths and wheelwrights necessary for the
+maintenance of the equipment of the army; work within the home country
+of the occupying power was, in view of undeveloped transportation
+conditions, impracticable and remained unconsidered.
+
+Today the necessary work will no longer be done in the vicinity of the
+front-lines but must be carried out in the belligerents’ own countries,
+so that it must be possible to demand that labor should be available at
+the only place where it can be done and where it is necessary. It must
+also be possible to demand such labor for modern war requirements of
+mass production for current replacements. What is necessary at any given
+time can be asked for, the amount depending on prevailing conditions. If
+in earlier times, according to the principle “the war feeds the war,” an
+army far removed from its homeland was even to a large extent equipped
+in occupied territory, it must surely be possible today to supply the
+army by moving the workers to the factories in the belligerent’s own
+country. The evolution of the laws of warfare is influenced by the
+requirements which these laws have to serve.
+
+With the basic idea of the obligation to furnish services the basic idea
+on limitations will have to be accepted, too. These limitations must
+also be interpreted to apply to the changed conditions. While the
+obligation to furnish services is justified, no more work may be
+demanded than the occupying power requires of its own people at home.
+The intensity of the war as total war must be taken into consideration.
+The obligation to work may thereby assume considerable proportions.
+
+The meaning and the purpose of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare is
+certainly not to place the nationals of a defeated state in a better
+position than those of the victorious state which occupied the country.
+This, however, would be the result if the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare were interpreted according to its original wording. If this is
+maintained, then France, which had surrendered unconditionally together
+with all the other occupied countries, would have been able to look on
+in security while Germany, strangled by the blockade, was exhausting
+herself in an indefatigable struggle by sacrifices of life and property.
+Can one really demand that the prisoner in a besieged fortress should
+live more comfortably than the defender of the fortress? If Germany
+today could live according to the romantic concepts of the Hague
+Convention on Land Warfare, this would certainly be preferable to the
+burden of the peace treaty to be expected.
+
+Actually, the Hague Convention on Land Warfare has not been adhered to
+even in its original interpretation, if it is true that already before
+the conclusion of the armistice the Soviet Union as occupying power
+transferred the population on a large scale from the eastern parts of
+Germany for the purpose of performing labor outside Germany. The
+Tribunal could obtain official information about this through an inquiry
+with the Control Council. I also have information that German civilian
+internees are used for work in France today. Here too the Tribunal could
+obtain official information.
+
+The second limitation of the obligation to work is embodied in the rule
+that no participation in war operations against the home country of the
+worker may be demanded. Any work done for the occupying power indirectly
+benefits its war effort; the prohibition is therefore restricted to
+direct participation in operations of the fighting force. The literature
+on international law contrasts the participation in military operations
+with the permissible participation in preparations. Participation in war
+operations in this sense was not asked of any worker; on the contrary,
+the purpose was to employ workers away from these operations and without
+disturbance by the war.
+
+Consequently only such activity as is directed against the workers’ own
+country is forbidden, thus taking the feelings of the individual into
+consideration. No protection of the enemy state is thereby intended.
+Wherever, therefore, the individual renounces his country and in a
+struggle of ideologies opposes the government of his country, such a
+restriction no longer applies. In connection with this I wish to point
+to the vast number of foreigners who adopted such an attitude and who,
+in part, still live in Germany today.
+
+The same applies when the state to which the worker belongs has ceased
+fighting. This question is of special importance with regard to the
+obligation to work in the armament industry. The rules of the Geneva
+Convention with regard to the work to be done by prisoners of war are
+known. The basic notion, that no one may be forced to make weapons
+against his own brothers, must apply to civilian workers also.
+
+The fact, however, that one’s country is no longer in a legal state of
+war is one of the reasons that nullify this restriction. The need for
+protection also ceases to exist when a country, though legally still
+participating in war, to all intents and purposes no longer possesses
+any fighting forces and has thus ceased to exist as a military object of
+attack. The fact, that this country may have allies who fight for it
+cannot arbitrarily extend this limitation beyond the terms of the Geneva
+Convention; nor is it the duty of a subject of a given state to protect
+allies fighting for it and to participate in the policies of his
+government.
+
+Puppet governments cannot change reality. Recognition cannot be granted
+to them unless they reappear as independent combatants under a command
+of their own and are recognized as such. This applies to all states
+defeated by Germany.
+
+At the time of the mobilization of labor only Britain, the United
+States, and the Soviet Union were active combatants against Germany.
+British and American subjects were not affected by this mobilization,
+although citizens of the Soviet Union were in part used in armament
+production.
+
+The legal position of citizens of the Soviet Union is however
+fundamentally different. Under Document Number EC-338, USSR-356, the
+Prosecution has submitted a decree by the People’s Commissars dated 1
+July 1941. This decree deals with the utilization of prisoners of war
+for labor purposes; but it also, however, refers to the employment of
+interned civilians. According to the wording, armament production is not
+forbidden for either category of workers; and only two limitations are
+specified in the decree, namely, work in the combat zone and services
+required of an orderly.
+
+Thus, from the point of view of reciprocity, no objection can be raised
+against the employment of Soviet citizens in armament production. In his
+examination before the Tribunal the witness General Paulus stated that
+prisoners of war were employed in factories of the Soviet Union, which
+means that in a state with a directed economy they were employed during
+the war in the armament industry. According to the decree it must be
+assumed then that these workers were also employed in the production of
+weapons.
+
+The significance of such a violation of the principle that armament
+production shall be forbidden lies in the serious consequence that no
+formation of a generally recognized rule of international law in this
+new field of utilization of manpower can thereby be proven. Under these
+circumstances therefore Germany was likewise free to employ workers of
+the Soviet Union and workers of all other states in armament production.
+
+The Hague Convention on Land Warfare thus does not forbid the regulated
+utilization of manpower, but there are also further international
+aspects permitting such a utilization of manpower. The assent of the
+government of the occupied state is of primary consideration. This
+assent was given by France. The objection that Marshal Pétain’s
+Government was not a constitutional government is invalid, for it was
+the legitimate successor to the provisional armistice Government. That
+it represented the French State with foreign governments is of decisive
+consideration in international relations. This authority of
+representation was confirmed by the United States by its keeping an
+ambassador in Vichy even after its own entry into the war. Great Britain
+also negotiated the terms of an armistice with a general of the Vichy
+Government in Syria in 1941.
+
+This Government once recognized could not be deprived of its legality by
+the simple declaration of an oppositional government, even though the
+latter might have been recognized by the Allies. A government loses its
+international position only if it is forced to transfer its actual power
+to the oppositional government. Up to that moment it retains authority
+within its sphere of influence.
+
+The other objection that the Government of Marshal Pétain was not free
+to act as it wished and that consequently agreements with Germany in the
+field of utilization of manpower were reached by coercive measures and
+are therefore invalid, is not justified from the point of view of
+international law. Armistice and peace treaties are always concluded
+under great pressure. That this does not curtail the validity of such
+treaties is an obvious point of international law. This has constantly
+been emphasized when refusing German demands for a revision of the
+Treaty of Versailles.
+
+Agreements which are reached in periods between the armistice and the
+peace treaty are subject to the same conditions. This also applies to
+the agreement with France with respect to the utilization of manpower.
+Thus, if—contrary to the statement of the Defendant
+Sauckel—negotiations about the utilization of manpower were conducted
+in the form of an ultimatum, there could from the point of view of
+international law still be no reason for an objection. Besides,
+Sauckel’s influence surely cannot have been so great that he could have
+exerted an excessive amount of pressure.
+
+The validity of such agreements is open to doubt only under very special
+conditions, such as would mean that excessive obligations were to be
+assumed which obviously violate principles of humanity; for instance, if
+the agreements contain a clause stating that work must be performed
+under slave-like conditions.
+
+The motive for these agreements was, however, to offer, especially to
+the French workers, favorable working conditions and salaries for their
+obligatory labor in Germany, thus to attract the workers.
+
+Military reasons too can command the evacuation of an occupied territory
+by part of the population and thereby cause a displacement of manpower.
+This may happen when the population participates in partisan warfare or
+is active in resistance groups and thus endangers security instead of
+behaving obediently and peacefully. It even suffices for the population
+in the so-called partisan territories to be drawn upon even against its
+will for the support of the partisans. That such conditions were
+organized by Germany’s enemies as combat measures in an increasing
+degree, first in the East and later in the West, is today looked upon as
+a patriotic achievement. In view of this one must not forget that the
+resulting displacement of workers was precisely the consequence of their
+activities and that such action was permitted by international law.
+Evacuation had to be carried out in the interest of security, and
+assignment of labor elsewhere was necessary if only to maintain order.
+It is the privilege of the occupying power to utilize this labor within
+a regulated state economy in the manner deemed most appropriate under
+the prevailing conditions. Similar measures might also be imposed in
+areas of retreat after it had been ascertained that the male population
+illegally took part in hostilities during the retreat, as it had been
+called upon to do by the enemy, sometimes even being supplied with
+weapons.
+
+Evacuation measures for the security of combat troops are equally
+permissible under international law. To engage persons evacuated from
+the combat zone in new work is not only legal but is actually the duty
+of the occupation administration. The state which calls upon its
+subjects to fight and thereby intensifies combat, bears the guilt for
+such evacuation. The necessary retaliatory measures therefore must be
+legal.
+
+Whenever such evacuations become necessary, they must be carried out
+without undue suffering for the population. For this preparatory
+measures, which alone can avoid unnecessary hardships, are necessary.
+That is the duty of administration as laid down in Article 43 of the
+Hague Convention on Land Warfare. Thereto appertain the proposals made
+by Sauckel for the evacuation of territories of retreat in France in the
+event of invasion (Document 1289-PS). These proposals did not
+materialize and cannot therefore incriminate the Defendant Sauckel.
+
+This administrative duty may also call for a displacement of labor in
+order to avoid unemployment and famine. This, for example, occurred when
+the industrial areas of the Soviet Union were occupied, where there were
+no more working possibilities after the population became unemployed
+following the scorched earth policy adopted by the Soviet Union, and
+supplies failed to arrive because of transport difficulties.
+
+These military and administrative points of view of international law
+can invalidate a number of reproaches; but they do not answer the basic
+question, namely, whether the enlistment of workers is also permitted
+outside the Hague Convention on Land Warfare for the very purpose of
+intensified labor to enable the state to carry on the war through
+increase of production and to allow it to release its own workers for
+service at the front.
+
+A purely military emergency would provide no excuse for disregarding
+international law. Victory jeopardized must not be sought by breaking
+the law when in distress, because the laws of warfare are intended to
+govern that very combat, which is of necessity connected with distress.
+International law inclines differently where it is a case of a measure
+to be taken to safeguard the existence of the state. That is a law of
+self-preservation which every state is entitled to because higher
+institutions are lacking which could protect it from destruction.
+
+It has repeatedly been stressed by all concerned that in this war our
+existence was at stake. This became evident for Germany after the fatal
+battles on the Eastern Front in the winter 1941-42. Whereas up to that
+time no wholesale employment of foreign labor had been necessary, new
+equipment now had to be produced immediately. The German labor reserves,
+were depleted due to the drafting of 2 million workers for service at
+the front. The employment of unskilled women and young people could not
+immediately relieve the situation. During the later stages of the war,
+especially through aerial warfare, armament demands increased to such an
+extent that, in spite of the increased employment of women and young
+people, the level could no longer be maintained. The means were
+exhausted.
+
+The official figures which the Defendant Sauckel made public in his
+speech in Posen in February 1943 (see Document 1739-PS) proved that
+already in 1939, at the beginning of the second World War, more than
+twice as many women were being employed than at the end of the first
+World War and that their number at the end of the second World War had
+increased by another 2 million to a total of over 10 million. This
+figure exceeds the entire number of male and female workers in the
+armament industry at the end of the first World War. Yet in spite of
+that there was a shortage of labor. This has been confirmed by the
+witness Rohland for Codefendant Speer in Document Speer-56, according to
+which Speer also declared that foreign labor was needed under all
+circumstances.
+
+The crux of the matter did not concern the problem of female labor,
+where by introducing additional home labor the limit was attained, but
+that of procuring specialists and men for heavy labor. Among the 10
+million German women who were at work, there were also the wives of
+front-line officers and others from similar classes of society.
+
+The notion that in Britain the women were conscripted for work in a
+higher degree than in Germany is wrong. In Germany the women had to work
+up to 45 and later 50 years of age, and they actually worked in
+factories and did not have fake jobs of a social kind. Even
+schoolchildren beginning with the age of 10 were required to work, and
+from 16 years onward they were switched to regular labor or occupied in
+other services. Families were disrupted; schools and universities were
+closed; pupils and students worked in the armament industry, and even
+the wounded could not continue their studies. A grim fight was waged
+over every person capable of work. Speer’s reserve of workers did not
+exist. What efforts were made in this sector is shown among others by
+Enclosure 2 of the Wartburg Document RF-810.
+
+Another point of view illustrating the necessity of employing additional
+labor is the fact that the powers in possession of colonies brought
+labor from their colonies; France (see Document RF-22, Page 17), for
+instance, took in about 50,000 workers from North Africa and Indo-China,
+which were under the command and supervision of officers and
+noncommissioned officers. Since Germany, having been refused colonies
+and on account of the blockade, was unable to draw upon such reserves,
+she was entitled to some means, in her fight for existence, of procuring
+labor where it could be found inactive in occupied territories.
+
+This is in outline the basis, with regard to international law, for
+judging the regulated mobilization of labor as a war crime. One may,
+with regard to certain points, differ in opinion; and it will generally
+be found that in international law a uniform interpretation will not be
+readily arrived at. The interests of individual members in the community
+of international law play an important part and are not always
+identical; legal principles are often not recognized because some state
+does not wish to place itself officially in contradiction with its
+former actions, or because it prefers to remain unbound for the future.
+
+As counsel for the Defense, I am in a position to present my
+interpretation of law without such inhibitions. The significance of my
+statement for the Defense, apart from the objective side, lies in the
+fact that the Defendant Sauckel, subjectively, was for good reasons
+entitled to believe in the lawfulness of a regulated mobilization of
+labor and that to him his actions were not discernible as being in
+contradiction with international law. This was supported by the
+impression which the Defendant Sauckel could not but gain of the
+permissibility of a regulated mobilization of labor, as shown by the
+attitude of other superior offices. When Sauckel entered upon his
+office, foreign workers had already been enlisted by individual action;
+and he could take it for granted that the State would equally proceed in
+a legal manner. None of the highest offices has ever raised legal
+objections before Sauckel. These offices, both the competent Foreign
+Office and the highest civil and military offices in the occupied
+territories, accepted his orders as a matter of course; and no questions
+of doubt on international law were raised.
+
+For the opinion of the Defendant Sauckel the attitude of the foreign
+agencies concerned was necessarily of special importance, notably the
+consent of the French and the Belgians, who came to Berlin personally
+for discussions. From this resulted the good co-operation with the local
+authorities in the occupied territories, as was the case before enemy
+propaganda intervened.
+
+Whether cognizance of breaking a law is indispensable when committing a
+crime against international law may be a moot point; but to establish
+guilt leading to a conviction, cognizance of the realization of all the
+criminal facts is essential. This includes cognizance of the fact that
+the action performed was contrary to international law. The subjective
+aspect of the facts, involving criminal guilt of the Defendant Sauckel,
+cannot be proved in respect to application of the regulated mobilization
+of labor. It would be impossible to commit the Defendant Sauckel for yet
+another legal reason, even if the regulated mobilization of manpower
+really were a violation of international law. According to the Hague
+Convention on Land Warfare, no individual responsibility exists. The
+Hague Convention on Land Warfare differentiates between two kinds of war
+crimes; those which can be committed by an individual, such as murder
+and ill-treatment, and those which can be committed only by parties in a
+war. The regulated utilization of manpower is a proceeding which can
+only be initiated by the state. While the individual action is punished
+according to the penal code of the different states, a special
+regulation was laid down for offenses committed by parties in a war in
+Article 3 of the introductory agreement to the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare. This specifies only a liability for damages on the part of the
+state. This passage of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare still
+applies today, since it cannot be rescinded by agreement among the
+Allies alone. The Charter, which specifies the immediate criminal
+responsibility of the state organs or its executors, is void insofar as
+it is contradictory to the Hague Convention on Land Warfare.
+
+I do not have to refer to the fact that Germany, as one of the parties
+to the agreement, would have had to agree to the suspension of Article
+3; there are other reasons which speak for a continuation of this
+stipulation. A modification of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare in
+the sense of the Charter might have resulted from the law of usage or
+general custom due to changing legal conceptions. The presupposition for
+this assumption would be, however, that the contracting powers
+relinquish their sovereignty, since only then would the punishment of
+the state organs be possible. However, such a renunciation of the rights
+of sovereignty has not, as far as I am aware, taken place to such an
+extent as would generally render such punishment permissible. With
+regard to this point, I refer to the general statements made by
+Professor Jahrreiss before the Tribunal.
+
+I shall now deal with the utilization of manpower as a crime against
+humanity. If a regulated utilization of manpower appears permissible
+according to international law, there remains the problem of the method
+of its execution, namely, the question of up to what point this
+utilization of manpower can still be regarded as in order and when it
+will exceed the permissible limit.
+
+The Charter fails to define the concept of humanity. As far as
+international law is concerned, the term can only be transposed from the
+practice of the nations. In endeavoring to establish the limit for
+actions permissible under international law, we must, for the sake of
+comparison, mention the bombing of large cities and the use of the
+atomic bomb, as well as deportations and evacuations as still in
+progress today. These are all incidents which have occurred before the
+eyes of the world and were regarded as permissible by the executing
+countries.
+
+Once again we are confronted with the conception of necessity and find
+that it is being interpreted in a very flexible manner. This should be
+kept in mind when examining the mobilization of labor as to any
+violation of the principle of humanity involved. Its aim is not the
+sudden killing of hundreds of thousands; however, it naturally entails
+hardships and is certainly also subject to mistakes which arise
+unintentionally or are due to the shortcoming of individuals. An answer
+will be required to the question of whether deliberate killing does not
+always weigh heavier than the temporary infliction of other sufferings.
+Also, the Charter does not prescribe punishment for every violation of
+the principles of humanity but only when inhuman treatment occurred in
+the execution of, or in connection with, a crime for which the Tribunal
+is competent. However, the Tribunal is competent only for Crimes against
+Peace and for War Crimes. As for Crimes against Peace, inhuman treatment
+may be admissible in self-defense, while it is punishable when committed
+by an aggressor; or alternatively, it must be a case of a war crime.
+
+This does not apply when compatriots are ill-treated, for they are not
+protected by the laws of warfare. Prosecution for an act against
+humanity committed toward them can only take place if a crime against
+peace is involved at the same time.
+
+From an objective point of view labor commitment furthered the waging of
+the war which has been designated by the Prosecution as a war of
+aggression or as a war violating treaties. If this is established and if
+it is proved moreover that the mobilization of labor was carried out in
+an inhuman way, then the requirements of the Charter will have been met
+and a crime against humanity committed, regardless of whether the
+mobilization of labor was allowed or not allowed by the rules of war,
+since it was committed in connection with a crime against peace. But
+punishment can be inflicted only if the culprit himself knows that an
+unlawful war is being waged and that he is furthering it by his action.
+Since the Defendant Sauckel denies any such knowledge, it must be
+proved.
+
+The other possibility of meeting the factual requirement occurs when the
+inhuman act serves to carry out a war crime or is connected with it. Of
+the examples given by the Charter for violation of the rules of war, the
+following in the main can be taken to apply to the mobilization of
+labor: murder, ill-treatment, and deportation of the civilian
+population. As shown by this enumeration, these war crimes are not,
+however serious they may be, in themselves crimes against humanity. Some
+aggravating circumstance making the act inhuman must be added. As shown
+by the examples of inhuman “extermination” and “enslavement,” the acts
+in question must be objectively of particular scope or cruelty.
+Subjectively, however, an inhuman disposition of the culprit and the
+knowledge of the inhuman character of the act, that is to say, knowledge
+of the scope of the measure or of the cruelty of its execution, is
+additionally required. How far these conditions apply to the Defendant
+Sauckel must be investigated later on. A “regulated mobilization of
+labor,” as allowed by international law can never in itself be a crime
+against humanity; but its execution may be carried out in such a way
+that it involves killings and ill-treatment, which for their part might
+be war crimes.
+
+Such ill-treatment could result from regulations issued by the highest
+authority involved, who thereby would bear the responsibility. It may,
+however, also be committed by subordinate agencies acting on their own
+authority without the knowledge or intention of their superior
+authorities. In that case the head of the agency acting on its own
+accord bears the responsibility. Lastly, it may be a case of a purely
+individual act committed against the regulations in force. For such an
+act the individual is solely responsible.
+
+It follows that the Defendant Sauckel is responsible, to begin with,
+only for such general orders and instructions which he has given, not
+however for independent acts by superior authorities in the occupied
+territories or by supreme Reich authorities, such as the Chief of SS and
+Police, which were not under his jurisdiction. The orders and directives
+of the Defendant Sauckel have been submitted, and they must show whether
+the mobilization of labor as ordered by him was in fact a regulated one
+or was tantamount to an “ill-treatment” of the population. Apart from
+the call for volunteers, mobilization of labor took place on the basis
+of a compulsory service decree, signed as a legal measure in accordance
+with Hitler’s instructions by the territorial commanders. The authority
+to issue such laws exceeded the powers of the Defendant Sauckel, nor
+could he ask that any such laws be issued. He did however approve of
+them and made them the basis for his work. The contents of these laws
+were consistent with the fundamental ideas of the German laws concerning
+compulsory labor service. These laws were coercive. The use of coercive
+measures is not called for as long as the legal authority of the
+occupying power is acknowledged by the population; they become necessary
+only when such authority fails.
+
+In this connection the Defendant Sauckel has repeatedly asked for the
+maintenance of executive authority by operations in partisan-infested
+territories for overpowering the resistance movement (Document R-124).
+No legal objections can be raised against the fact that to this end he
+demanded the use of means provided by the State. He is wrongly
+incriminated only by the words “SS and Police,” which have been
+connected by the Prosecution with the conception of crime. Such an
+incrimination would only be justified if the criminal character of the
+Police had been proven and if the Defendant Sauckel at that time had had
+cognizance of such criminal activity.
+
+That force may be used in case of resistance against orders of the
+occupation force cannot be disputed. The question is, where are the
+limits of force and whether or not there are legal and illegal,
+admissible and inadmissible, human and inhuman, measures of force.
+
+If fundamental laws are no longer deemed to be valid when a state of
+siege is declared within a state, surely this will apply all the more to
+a power occupying another country in wartime. Anyone who refuses to
+carry out the orders of the occupying power knowingly participates in
+the fight to which he is not entitled and has to accept the
+consequences. Obedience is the primary duty toward the occupying power;
+and where patriotism and obedience are conflicting issues, the law
+decides against patriotism. The punishment meted out is, as such, not
+subject to any limitation; and the threats of punishment by an
+occupation power are, for purposes of intimidation, usually extremely
+severe. The question is whether there exists a limit, from the
+standpoint of humanity, which prohibits punishment in excess of the
+legitimate purpose which may be considered unwarranted. Orders like the
+burning of houses, which were issued independently by subordinate
+offices in connection with the recruitment of labor, must be examined
+from this point of view.
+
+This question is not easy to answer, if one bears in mind the special
+underlying circumstances and realizes that it was a case here of an open
+struggle between the occupying power and the population, with official
+support from the enemy. In case of uprisings and organized general
+resistance one cannot disclaim the applicability of the military laws as
+practiced by the combat troops. Necessity alone must be the decisive
+factor in this case. International law has put only one limit to
+coercive measures in forbidding, in Article 50 of the Hague Convention
+on Land Warfare, collective punishment of an entire population for the
+deeds of individuals for which the population cannot be held partially
+responsible. It is essential that such partial responsibility shall have
+been established by actual events and not construed through orders. It
+is not specified wherein collective punishment may consist. The
+limitations of humanity, as I already pointed out, must be respected,
+but in war this is a vague conception; necessity and practical value
+must always have preference.
+
+Next to the manner of recruiting labor, the conditions of work may
+represent an ill-treatment which can be looked upon as a war crime. On
+principle, there can be no question of ill-treatment whenever the
+foreign workers are generally treated in the same way as the workers of
+the home country. Different treatment is only permissible when special
+circumstances justify it. Whereas generally foreign workers work on the
+same level as the Germans, the so-called, Eastern Workers were
+discriminated against. The most striking difference here was the
+limitation of freedom. If this had been arbitrary, that would be
+sufficient reason for declaring this to be ill-treatment. But the
+reasons for this limitation of freedom were not arbitrary; they were
+conditioned by the State’s need for security. During wartime the
+presence of an enemy alien in the country always represents a danger,
+and it is for that very reason that originally the bringing in of
+foreign workers had been dispensed with. Only when necessity demanded
+the utilization of foreign workers did the need of security have to be
+taken into account simultaneously. The measures to be taken will depend
+upon the danger, which will vary according to the attitude of the alien.
+Whereas police measures with regard to the French were almost
+imperceptible, the Eastern Workers were in the beginning kept under
+supervision in camps.
+
+The natural interest of the state lies in attaining security by winning
+the aliens over inwardly because their collaboration is desired. This
+will never be achieved by depriving them of their freedom. As long as
+the attitude of the alien cannot be clearly assessed, especially if he
+be like the citizens of the Soviet Union, propagandistically trained,
+more stringent control may be necessary. However, it must not develop
+into permanent captivity, and should at most constitute a sort of
+quarantine. To deprive people without guilt of their liberty for an
+extended period is not admissible, because that would correspond to a
+forbidden collective punishment. The mere assumption of danger is not
+sufficient to justify such limitations; there must be certain acts which
+show that such foreign workers appear dangerous even under normal
+working conditions. The custody of Eastern Workers behind barbed wire
+and without permission to go out, as ordered by Himmler, must be
+regarded as ill-treatment if it is a permanent practice.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel, guided by a feeling that in this matter the
+limits of the permissible had been overstepped, immediately took steps
+against this and in a tough fight against Himmler demanded and obtained
+the withdrawal of barbed wire and the prohibition to go out, as can be
+seen from the ensuing decrees, Document Number Sauckel-10, Exhibit
+USA-206.
+
+Where in spite of later arrangements the old methods were still applied
+by the police, Sauckel always intervened whenever he heard of such
+occurrences. This has been confirmed repeatedly by witnesses. I refer
+particularly to Exhibit Sauckel-10, the statement by the witness Goetz.
+
+Another controversial point was the identification by a badge “Ost,”
+which was maintained until 1944 and then replaced by a national
+insignia. This identification of the Eastern Workers, who were free to
+move among the population, was necessary for security reasons. This
+cannot be considered ill-treatment. The distaste for this sign shown by
+the Eastern Workers was chiefly due to the defamation of this badge by
+propaganda, and the Defendant Sauckel always tried to change this
+insignia and to replace it by a national insignia such as the other
+workers wore voluntarily. He finally prevailed here also against Himmler
+(Document RF-810, Page 12).
+
+Equality must also exist between a nation’s own workers and foreign
+workers with regard to the rules concerning maintenance of discipline.
+With all belligerent states the war has raised the same problem as to
+how to deal with those workers who do not properly fulfill their work
+duties; that is to say, slackers, shirkers, and saboteurs. The practice
+of discharge, common in peacetime, is ineffective during war; on the
+other hand, deserters from work cannot be tolerated today by any
+belligerent. In cases amounting to sabotage, police and penal measures
+were called for, the principal one being a short term in a labor
+training camp; in certain extreme cases, imprisonment in a concentration
+camp was inflicted. Document 1063-PS, RF-345, shows the similarity in
+the execution of the regulations as applied to Germans and foreigners.
+
+Such police measures, which are caused by disloyal conduct of the
+worker, are justified. The Wartburg Document RF-810 shows in the report
+of the expert Dr. Sturm that such measures were carried out on a very
+moderate scale and that only 0.1 to 0.2 per thousand were thus punished.
+
+Hence it follows that the issue of regulations concerning the
+maintenance of discipline is not yet in itself an ill-treatment which
+might form the basis for a crime against humanity. Such ill-treatment,
+however, can consist of excesses such as did occur outside the
+competence of the Defendant Sauckel. He can only be held responsible for
+those if he himself was subjectively to blame in that he knew of such
+excesses and approved of them although he might have prevented them.
+
+In summing up one can say that the “regulated mobilization of labor” is
+permissible in international law and that restrictions imposed on
+workers within the limits of necessities must be permitted for reasons
+of state security. On the other hand, excesses in carrying out the
+regulations must be looked upon as ill-treatment and may amount to
+crimes against humanity. Responsibility for those rests with whoever has
+instigated them or who, within the sphere of his competence, failed to
+prevent them in the performance of his duty. When measuring the grave
+charges brought against the Defendant Sauckel by the standards of the
+aforesaid legal considerations, it will be necessary first of all to
+single out those fields in which the evidence reveals him to be
+absolutely clear of any responsibility.
+
+In the first place, it is not proved that the Defendant Sauckel can be
+connected with the biological extermination of the population. His whole
+interest, as has been shown, pointed toward the opposite direction,
+since his purpose was to obtain people as laborers. He had nothing to do
+with migration measures and any methods used in that respect.
+
+Work in concentration camps was just as far removed from the Defendant
+Sauckel’s responsibility. Himmler’s speech in Posen in October 1943
+(Document 1919-PS, Page 21) reveals that the SS had erected gigantic
+armament plants of their own. We know that Himmler covered his extensive
+labor requirements by despotic arbitrary arrests of persons in occupied
+territories. Inside Germany he had workers engaged in regular employment
+arrested on insignificant pretexts and brought to concentration camps,
+fraudulently using the regular labor offices. This is clearly shown in
+Document 1063-PS, containing a letter dated 17 December 1942 as well as
+a letter dated 25 June 1943, in which a requirement of 35,000 prisoners
+is signified. Moreover, no correspondence with reference to
+concentration camp labor ever passed through Sauckel’s offices. As an
+example, I refer to Document 1584-PS containing some correspondence with
+Himmler’s department. The Defendant Sauckel’s name is never mentioned
+with reference to a conscription of prisoners, and the witnesses have
+unanimously stated that the Defendant Sauckel had no connection with
+these matters. This is also confirmed by the statement of the Director
+of the armament ministry’s Labor Office, Schmelter, who received the
+prisoners required direct from Himmler.
+
+Another field which must be eliminated is the conscription of Jews for
+labor. This formed a part of labor conscription of concentration camp
+prisoners; it was Himmler’s own personal secret sphere. This is revealed
+for instance by Document R-91, in which Himmler’s service orders the
+arrest of 45,000 Jews as concentration camp prisoners.
+
+By the production of Document L-61 the Prosecution has attempted to
+convict Sauckel of a share of guilt in this field. This document is a
+letter, dated 26 November 1942, from Sauckel’s office to the presidents
+of the provincial labor offices, stating that by agreement with the
+Chief of the Security Police and SD, Jewish workers remaining in the
+plants must be withdrawn and evacuated to Poland. As a matter of fact,
+this letter actually confirms that Sauckel had nothing to do with Jewish
+labor in the concentration camps, since Jewish workers were withdrawn
+from his department under the very pretext of evacuation. The measure is
+indeed solely concerned with the purely technical matter of excluding
+the Jewish laborers and replacing them by Poles, an operation which
+could not have been carried out without the participation of Sauckel’s
+office.
+
+This letter is in continuation of a correspondence which can be traced
+back to the period prior to Sauckel’s assumption of office, and Document
+L-156 subsequently deals with the same technical operation. The
+unimportant character of the matter is attested by the fact that these
+letters were not sent from the Defendant Sauckel’s head office in the
+Thüringerhaus, but from an auxiliary office in the Saarlandstrasse. The
+Defendant Sauckel disclaims knowledge of this correspondence and points
+out that the letters do not bear his original signature but were,
+according to the routine of his service, made out in his name just
+because they were of minor importance. The fact that the letters begin
+with the routine business term of “by agreement with,” instead of “by
+consent of,” the Chief of Police and SD does not mean that they refer to
+an agreement reached, but simply points to the agency in charge of the
+matter.
+
+Next, reference has been made to “extermination by labor.” However,
+Documents 682-PS and 654-PS, dated September 1942, unmistakably show
+that this is a case of a secret maneuver of Himmler and Goebbels in
+co-operation with the Reich Minister of Justice, Thierack. The Defendant
+Sauckel is not involved.
+
+Neither was the conscription of workers for the Organization Todt under
+Sauckel’s responsibility. The accusations proceeding from Document UK-56
+in this respect, bearing upon labor conscription methods in the Channel
+Islands, do not therefore concern him. The documents do not show that
+the Defendant Sauckel was aware of these proceedings or that he could
+have prevented them. This separation between the Defendant Sauckel’s
+labor jurisdiction and the Organization Todt is confirmed in Document
+L-191, the report of the International Labor Office in Montreal.
+
+The enlistment of labor by civil and military departments is another
+chapter. This was to a certain extent carried out as “pirate”
+mobilization and kept secret from the Defendant Sauckel, because he
+opposed these practices and endeavored to prevent them by all means.
+Occasionally he was by-passed by higher orders. In this category there
+is labor enlistment by the SS, the Reichsbahn, Air Force construction
+battalions, Speer’s transport and traffic units, fortification and
+engineering staffs, and other services.
+
+The exclusion of these aspects from the scope of the Indictment should
+exonerate Sauckel all the more since in these cases his directives did
+not apply.
+
+Document 204-PS illustrates in this respect the circumstances in which
+transport auxiliaries were produced in White Russia. Document 334-PS
+shows the same with regard to the execution of an independent drive for
+Air Force auxiliaries, which cannot be held against Sauckel. The
+commitment of adolescents, known as the Hay Action, according to
+Document 031-PS of 14 June 1944, remained outside Sauckel’s jurisdiction
+and activities, as becomes clear from the document itself. The 9th Army
+together with the Eastern Ministry were the originators.
+
+A letter from the Codefendant Rosenberg to Reich Minister Lammers of 20
+July 1944 (Document 345-PS) falsely refers to the “agreement” of the
+Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor; on the other hand
+it states that the Defendant Sauckel was not connected with an SS helper
+action and that he refused co-operation in this affair. According to
+this, as stated by Document 1137-PS of 19 October 1944, a special office
+in the Rosenberg Ministry with its own personnel attended to the seizure
+of juveniles. The Defendant Sauckel’s agency was by-passed and labor
+furnished directly to the armament industry.
+
+In circumvention of the Defendant Sauckel’s agency certain measures also
+took place which Hitler caused by direct orders to the local offices of
+the Armed Forces and of the civil administration; this for instance
+applied to the labor commitment ordered in the occupied territories for
+the fortification of the Crimea (Document UK-68).
+
+The enlistment of labor in Holland, which was carried out by the Armed
+Forces against the protest of the labor service offices, is another of
+these cases; this is shown in Document 3003-PS and is confirmed by the
+Defendant Seyss-Inquart.
+
+An important sector, which is beyond the Defendant Sauckel’s
+responsibility, embraces all the actions undertaken as punitive measures
+against partisans and resistance groups. These are independent police
+measures; I already spoke about their judicial evaluation. Whether they
+were admissible and could be approved depends on the circumstances. For
+example, measures against the resistance movement in France, as
+described in Document UK-78 (French Government Report), cannot be
+included under the direct responsibility of Defendant Sauckel. Thus the
+most incriminating occurrences enumerated in Count 3, Paragraph VIII of
+the Indictment under “Deportation,” which ended in concentration camps,
+are not within the responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel.
+
+The deportations for political and racial reasons, which are also
+mentioned under VIII (B) of the Indictment, such as the deportation of
+French citizens to concentration camps, do not come within the
+responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel either. The resettlement of
+Slovenes and Yugoslavs described under (B) 2, must also be excluded.
+
+According to the Indictment (under VIII, (H) 2) only part of the
+approximately 5 million Soviet citizens mentioned are stated to have
+been seized for labor commitment, the remainder being removed in other
+ways to which the regulations of the Defendant Sauckel did not apply.
+This is important not so much on account of the number of people
+involved, but because the alleged bad conditions might have applied in
+that very sector, since there the danger of improper treatment was
+unquestionably greater.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Would that be a convenient time to break off?
+
+ [_A recess was taken._]
+
+DR. SERVATIUS: The prisoners of war are also exempted from the field of
+responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel. Such labor did not have to be
+enlisted but was only directed. This was done by means of special labor
+offices, which operated independently in connection with the
+prisoner-of-war camps and collaborated exclusively with the Armed
+Forces. Their task consisted only of employing prisoners of war where
+they were needed. The Defendant Sauckel could only request a transfer of
+prisoners of war. This is referred to in the Prosecution Document
+1296-PS, of 27 July 1943, which mentions under Heading III the increase
+in the employment of prisoners of war in collaboration with the Army
+High Command.
+
+The assignment of prisoners of war to plants took place under the
+supervision of the Armed Forces, who at the same time enforced
+observance of the Geneva Convention. Sauckel is in no way connected with
+the death of hundreds of thousands of prisoners of war of the Soviet
+Union in 1941 of whom Himmler speaks in his Posen speech (Document
+1919-PS) and for whose replacement workers had to be brought in.
+
+By Document USSR-415, the official Soviet report about the Lamsdorf
+Camp, the Defendant Sauckel is connected with the alleged ill-treatment
+of prisoners; but this is done merely because the number of personnel in
+the camp was reported to him as a purely routine matter. The charge
+cannot be maintained. The document, moreover, is not chronologically
+substantiated after the year 1941.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel, although personally not competent, intervened in
+excess of his official duties for the care of the prisoners of war,
+because he had an interest in their work morale. He issued general
+decrees; this Document Sauckel-36 shows that he demanded an adequate
+standard food supply, and Document Sauckel-39 shows that he demanded the
+same working hours as for German workers; he also stressed the fact that
+no disciplinary punishment could be inflicted by the plants.
+
+Further discrimination among the accusations raised must be made
+according to the time of the incidents. The Defendant Sauckel did not
+take over his office until 21 March 1942. His measures, therefore, could
+only have had effect some time later. What conditions prevailed previous
+to that can be seen from some documents dating from 1941. In Document
+1206-PS leading authorities advocated feeding the workers on horse and
+cat meat, and in Document USSR-177 the production of bread of very
+inferior quality is suggested. Just a short time before the Defendant
+Sauckel took office Himmler in a sharp decree ordered the confinement of
+the workers behind barbed wire. It is fair to say that an extremely low
+level in the treatment of the foreign workers at that time in the Reich
+had been reached. The conception which prevailed with regard to the
+powers of resistance and the working capacity of the Russians is tragic.
+
+With the advent of the Defendant Sauckel a fundamental change took
+place, which led to a constantly increasing improvement of the
+situation. The credit for having effected a change here is, according to
+some documents I will cite, solely due to the Defendant Sauckel. This is
+shown in particular by Document EC-318, which is a record, dated 15
+April 1942, of the first meeting between the Defendant Sauckel and Reich
+Minister Seldte and his specialist staff when taking office. It is
+recorded there that it was the Defendant Sauckel who made his assumption
+of office dependent on the condition that food supplies for foreigners
+must equal those for Germans, and that the granting of this request was
+guaranteed by Hitler, Göring, the Minister for Food, Darré, and his
+state secretary, Backe. It is also established there that the Defendant
+Sauckel demanded the removal of the barbed wire, and actually succeeded
+in this; and finally, that he immediately took steps against the low
+wages of the Eastern Workers. The execution of his fundamental demands
+was then also immediately followed through with tenacity by the
+Defendant Sauckel against the resistance of all authorities.
+
+The program of the mobilization of labor of 20 April 1942, Document
+016-PS, accordingly proceeds to inveigh against all acts of cruelty and
+chicanery and demands that foreign workers be correctly and humanely
+treated; a hope is even expressed that a propaganda effect in Germany’s
+favor ought to be achieved by the way in which labor allocation was
+carried out. This thought was frequently reiterated later. An economical
+allocation of workers was urged in order to counteract the waste
+indulged in by influential agencies.
+
+A year later, on 20 April 1943, the Defendant Sauckel again addressed a
+declaration of the procedure to be followed to all persons concerned
+with labor commitment. This is the repeatedly mentioned “Manifesto of
+Labor Allocation,” Document Number Sauckel-81, which was issued as a
+warning and a call to battle addressed to all agencies preparing to
+challenge the serious responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel. Goebbels
+opposed it by claiming that the title was too assuming, while the
+propaganda aspect went beyond the bounds of the matter. Other agencies
+simply disregarded the copies sent to them and did not forward them,
+whereupon Sauckel sent copies directly to the industries concerned. How
+this circular was dealt with by the various recalcitrant agencies is
+shown by its description as a “notorious manifesto,” as it was referred
+to unchallenged in a session of the Central Planning Board on 1 March
+1944; Document R-124, Page 1779.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel was reproached for having been over-zealous. I
+refer to a remark made by General Milch (who was interrogated before the
+Tribunal), in which he mentions the Central Planning Board, criticizing
+the allegedly too lenient treatment of loafers, and declaring that if
+anything was undertaken against them, agencies would immediately become
+interested in Germany which would protect the “poor fellow” and
+intercede for the human rights of others. This is Document R-124, Page
+1913.
+
+The attitude of Defendant Sauckel was generally known and has been
+confirmed by various documents. Thus all the agencies addressed
+themselves to him in case of complaints and deficiencies, not in order
+to make the Defendant Sauckel responsible for them, but to solicit his
+help, because everybody knew how eagerly he advocated improvements.
+
+Thus Document 084-PS, which is a report by Dr. Gutkelch of the Central
+Agency for Eastern Nations of the Rosenberg Ministry, dated 30 September
+1942, emphasized in various places the influence of the Defendant
+Sauckel and recommends getting into closer touch with him. His
+Codefendant Rosenberg also points to Sauckel’s strenuous efforts in
+Document 194-PS, Page 6, a letter of 14 December 1942 to Koch, Reich
+Commissioner for the Ukraine. The Codefendant Frank likewise on 21
+November 1943 applied to the Defendant Sauckel—Document 908-PS—for a
+basic change in the legal position of Poles inside the Reich.
+
+To what extent do real events correspond with that which has been
+stated? The first point to be dealt with is the mobilization, which is
+practically identical with the point of deportation. Then follows the
+examination of the treatment of workers as designated by the term “slave
+labor.”
+
+The evidence has refuted the erroneous assumption that the Defendant
+Sauckel carried out the enlistment and mobilization of foreign workers
+on his own responsibility and through his own organization. It has been
+established that the supreme authorities in the occupied territories
+executed the laws regarding compulsory work as they had received them on
+Hitler’s orders. All these agencies had their own administrative system
+and guarded their departments against the intrusion of others.
+
+A communication of the Rosenberg Ministry of the East to Koch, the Reich
+Commissioner for the Ukraine, dated 14 December 1942, Document 194-PS,
+Page 7, in which the Codefendant Rosenberg particularly refers to the
+right of sovereignty existing in questions of labor allocation, proves
+that this administrative system had not been infringed upon. These
+supreme authorities had their own labor offices which were organized in
+detail from each ministry down to the least important office. In
+reference I wish to cite Document 3012-PS, an ordinance of 6 February
+1943, by the Supreme Command of the Army, dealing with compulsory work
+in the Eastern operational sector, and Document RF-15, an ordinance of 6
+October 1942.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel could merely place requests with these agencies
+for the number of workers he was ordered to bring to Germany, and give
+them the necessary instructions. These were his limitations, which he
+never exceeded. He respected the right of execution as opposed to the
+right of issuing instructions. For these tasks deputies were appointed
+for each territory who, in accordance with the ordinance of 30 September
+1942, Exhibit USA-510, were directly subordinate to the Defendant
+Sauckel; they did not however belong to his agency, but to the
+territorial authorities. It was expressly confirmed by the witness Bail,
+called by the Codefendant Rosenberg, that this applied to the chief
+deputy in the East, State Counsellor Peuckert who belonged to the staff
+of the Eastern Ministry.
+
+This State Counsellor Peuckert was at the same time consultant for the
+Economic Staff East for the rear army area which bordered on the
+territory under civil administration; here too he acted only in an
+accessory capacity as deputy of the Defendant Sauckel. This is proved by
+Document 3012-PS, which is a memorandum dealing with a conversation of
+10 March 1943 concerning labor allocation, in which the position of
+Peuckert is noted on the attendance list. Through this arrangement with
+regard to Peuckert’s functions, created in the interest of the
+territorial authorities, all personal interference by the Defendant
+Sauckel was made impossible. In Document 018-PS, that is, in the letter
+to the Defendant Sauckel dated 21 December 1942, the Codefendant
+Rosenberg complains about the methods of labor mobilization in the East;
+but this must be considered as the complaint of a minister who is unable
+to assert himself against his subordinates and turns toward the
+presumable sources of the difficulties he is encountering.
+
+It is true that these difficulties could have been removed immediately
+if the Defendant Sauckel had refrained from insisting on the fulfillment
+of his mission. But this fulfillment was the very task, specified in the
+decree of appointment as having to be effected under all circumstances.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel had to fight against all obstacles due to weakness
+or departmental egotism, and had to see to it that local agencies did
+not out of a desire to let things ride fail to supply the required
+manpower, while other offices held it back out of selfish interests.
+“With all means” and “ruthlessly” are recurring expressions employed in
+combating these symptoms.
+
+General Falkenhausen, the military commander in Belgium and northern
+France, during his hearing erroneously declared in Document RF-15 that
+the Defendant Sauckel forced him to mobilize labor and had carried this
+out by the aid of a special “organization” of his own. However, he had
+to admit that this was incorrect when the order signed by himself about
+the introduction of compulsory labor was put before him. This is also
+confirmed by the statements of the witnesses Timm and Stothfang.
+
+In France workers were mobilized by the French administration. The
+superior German office was not the office of the Defendant Sauckel, but
+of the military commander in France, where Sauckel had only a deputy.
+The negotiations which the Defendant Sauckel conducted in Paris and
+which were the subject of the evidence lie outside of this activity;
+they are negotiations of a diplomatic nature between the German and
+French Governments in which Sauckel participated. They were held in the
+German Embassy.
+
+Conditions and circumstances in the other territories were analogous.
+The recruiting commissions, which corresponded to the labor mobilization
+staffs in the rear army areas and the operational zones, were also by no
+means offices of the Defendant Sauckel, as the Codefendant Rosenberg
+assumes. These recruiting commissions were vaguely connected with the
+Defendant Sauckel only insofar as they were composed of experts who
+emanated from the German labor offices belonging to Sauckel’s
+department. They received directives only through their superior office,
+in order to guarantee uniform handling of all recruiting regulations.
+Regulation Number 4 in Document Number Sauckel-15 is very clear on this
+point. This advance appointment of the deputies as of 30 September 1942,
+which was already issued on 7 May 1942, provides for the sole
+responsibility of the military and civil authorities of the occupied
+territories. The deputies mentioned there as having been assigned the
+same functions, are the deputies with the German missions in friendly
+foreign countries.
+
+This was misunderstood by the Prosecution, so that wrong conclusions
+were arrived at, to the disadvantage of the Defendant Sauckel, about the
+responsibility for recruiting and transport. The interpretation of the
+provision that all technical and administrative procedures of labor
+allocation were exclusively within the competence and responsibility of
+the Defendant Sauckel is also incorrect as far as occupied territory is
+concerned. This stipulation refers solely to the functions in the Reich
+and establishes the competence of the Plenipotentiary General for the
+Allocation of Labor, of the district labor offices, and the labor
+offices; this can be seen from Document 016-PS, last paragraph.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel, therefore, is not directly responsible for the
+conscription of manpower. Indirectly, however, responsibility can be
+charged to him in that although he was aware of these unsatisfactory
+conditions and knew that they could not be stopped, he nevertheless
+demanded more workers.
+
+It must be added that in the Defendant Rosenberg’s letter of 21 December
+1942, Document 018-PS, the Defendant Sauckel learned for the first time
+of the recruiting methods which were described as mass deportation. At
+the meeting which followed in the beginning of January 1943, the
+Defendant Rosenberg declared that he was opposed to this and that he
+would not tolerate such procedures. This is also confirmed by his
+previous letter of 14 December 1942 addressed to Koch, Reich
+Commissioner for the Ukraine, Document 194-PS, in which he clearly calls
+the latter’s attention to his obligations to proceed legally.
+
+Koch’s memorandum of 16 March 1943, Document Rosenberg-13, of which the
+Defendant Sauckel learned only here at the Trial, explains that these
+incidents are exaggerated individual cases, their justification being
+based on the necessity of carrying out measures for the restoration of
+the prestige of the occupation authority. It is expressly declared in
+this that the recruitment of workers was undertaken by legal means and
+that steps were being taken in the event of arbitrary measures, Document
+Number Rosenberg-13, Pages 11 and 12.
+
+It was not altogether impossible that it might have been a matter of
+tricky propaganda exaggerations, as Koch specifically points out. In
+wartime such a possibility exists, and the propaganda tendency of the
+Molotov reports (Document USSR-151) goes to emphasize this.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel was also supported in this idea by the result of
+an investigation into the details of a “manhunt” which was reported to
+him at Minsk by Field Marshal Kluge; it turned out to be a round-up of
+workers employed by a private firm at the time of the retreat.
+
+The Katyn case shows how difficult it is to determine the truth of such
+events when they are made use of as effective weapons of propaganda. As
+the witnesses from the Defendant Sauckel’s office have confirmed, no
+other incidents involving such abuses have become known. The cases
+reported are to a certain extent obviously repetitions of the same
+happenings as communicated from various sources.
+
+None of these reports, however, displays any desire to approve of such
+things; they are a sort of house alarm for the purpose of remedying and
+improving conditions.
+
+Now, can one believe the Defendant Sauckel when he declares that he did
+not know about the conditions alleged by the Prosecution? What reached
+him through official channels is insufficient as proof of cognizance,
+and the witnesses confirm that the so-called “methods” were unknown. On
+the other hand we find here documents of the authorities of the occupied
+countries from which it appears that the Reich Commissioner in the
+Ukraine ordered the burning down of houses in retaliation for resisting
+the administration, and there are decrees providing for such measures.
+Reports made to the Eastern Ministry regarding such events do not lead
+to penal prosecution but to suspension of the proceedings, such as the
+Raab case (Document 254-PS) and the Müller case (Document 290-PS).
+
+Any doubt must be countered with the following: The measures employed
+were not approved by the highest instances, and were only
+surreptitiously applied by the lower offices who therefore had every
+reason not to let them become known. From the files on the preliminary
+proceedings of the cases of Raab and Müller it definitely appears that
+the existing regulations were unknown at the ministry.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel did travel through the Ukraine, but it is unlikely
+that his attention should have been called to matters which might have
+got the local offices into trouble. The views of the Defendant Sauckel
+were well known, while on the other hand there existed a violent quarrel
+between the offices of Reich Commissioner Koch and Reich Minister
+Rosenberg. When the documents from both offices such as have been
+submitted are read carefully, it can be seen from the file notes that in
+this struggle both sides were collecting arguments and that neither
+wished to commit itself. Since the Defendant Sauckel himself had no
+direct authority, it is understandable that actual conditions should
+have remained unknown to him. Still another point of view must be
+considered: various documents mention that a certain pressure would have
+to be applied in the procurement of workers, since the workers were to
+be obtained “under all circumstances.” Does this sanction all methods?
+It remains to be seen what was actually done in pursuance of these
+statements.
+
+The OKH in one case thereupon ordered the increased mobilization of
+workers and permitted collective conscription, while prohibiting
+collective punishment. In this connection see Document 3012-PS,
+containing a telephone message from the Economy Staff East to General
+Stapf of 11 March 1943.
+
+The best illustration can be found in that same Document 3012-PS by a
+file note concerning a discussion of 10 March 1943. Here General Nagel
+requests clear guiding principles and State Counsellor Peuckert asks for
+“reasonable” recruitment methods to be established by the OKH as the
+authorized agency. Document 2280-PS is also relevant here, which is the
+only personal statement made in Riga on 3 May 1943 on this question by
+the Defendant Sauckel. There he states that only “all permissible means”
+are allowed.
+
+Document 3010-PS, Economy Inspection South, may also be quoted, in which
+on 17 August 1943 the use of “all suitable means” is permitted.
+
+Orders are issued which contain severe measures in case of noncompliance
+with the duty to work: deprivation of ration and clothing cards.
+Imprisonment of relatives is threatened, as well as the taking of
+hostages.
+
+What is the position as to the admissibility of such measures?
+
+The deprivation of food cards has today become a generally applied means
+of coercion based on the rationing system, which derives from
+present-day conditions. It is easily carried out and does not require
+any special executive force, while being extremely effective. Concerning
+the imprisonment of relatives, severe violations of personal custody can
+be recorded even today. The Hague Convention on Land Warfare offers
+protection only against collective punishment of the population, but it
+does not protect the members of the family who may be considered as
+sharing the responsibility in the case of a refusal to work. The French
+law of 11 June 1943, which was presented as Document RF-80, also
+provides for such imprisonment only in the case of deliberate
+co-operation.
+
+There finally remains the shooting of a prefect, which the Defendant
+Sauckel demanded. Apart from the fact that this statement as such is
+irrelevant from the point of view of criminal law, because it was not
+actually carried out, its legal import is merely a request to apply the
+existing French law. This law has been submitted by the Prosecution as
+Document RF-25, a decree of 31 January 1943 by the military commander in
+France, Article 2 of which provides for the death penalty.
+
+Equally misunderstood by the Prosecution is a statement uttered by the
+Defendant Sauckel according to which one should handcuff the workers in
+a polite way (Document RF-86, Page 10, negotiation by Sauckel in Paris
+on 27 August 1943). But as appears from the context, the point in
+question is merely a comparison between the clumsy manner of the Police
+and the obliging manner of the French; handcuffing was not thereby
+especially advocated as a method of mobilization: Clean, correct, and
+Prussian on the one hand while at the same time obliging and polite on
+the other; that is how the work was to have been done.
+
+I also refer to the proposal for “shanghaiing” as described in Document
+R-124, Page 1770, which is known to the Tribunal from the proceedings.
+The statement which the Defendant Sauckel has made gives an
+understandable explanation; according to it, this was legally a
+preliminary recruitment intended to induce the workers to agree to the
+real enlistment later on in the official recruitment offices.
+
+These various incidents—shooting of a prefect, handcuffing, and
+shanghaiing—may be explained in various ways, but one can reach a
+complete understanding of the subjective side only if one considers why
+these statements were made, and under what conditions. The underlying
+reason for all these statements is the struggle against resistance and
+sabotage which in France assumed ever greater proportions. Therefore it
+is not a question of brutality and cynicism; rather were these
+statements intended to counteract the indecision displayed by the
+authorities.
+
+Another consideration which must be appended here is whether the
+Defendant Sauckel had not exhausted the manpower of the country by his
+measures to such an extent that more workers could only be obtained by
+inhuman methods and that the Defendant Sauckel must have known this. The
+important point here is the figure for the “quotas.” It has been
+established that they were high, but it has also been established that
+they were not fixed arbitrarily, but only after a careful study by the
+statistical department. Only a small percentage of the population was
+actually apprehended, and the decisive issue was not so much their
+inability to perform the work required as their will to offer
+resistance. In the occupied territories of the East were large reserves
+of manpower, especially among older adolescents, which were not
+effectively utilized. The German troops, their ranks greatly thinned,
+saw the densely populated villages during their retreat, and then felt
+the impact of the enemy thus reinforced shortly afterward.
+
+In France there were likewise many forces which placed themselves under
+the protection of the Maquis or the “blocked factories.” This is
+confirmed not only by the French Government Report, Document Number
+RF-22, but is also apparent from a remark which Kehrl, a witness for the
+Codefendant Speer, made in the Central Planning Board on 1 March 1944,
+Document R-124, Page 66. This witness states there that labor was
+available on an abundant scale in France.
+
+Another conclusive contribution here is Document 1764-PS, Page 6, which
+is the report by Minister Hemmen of 15 February 1944, which deals with
+the “Reconstruction Program” of Marshal Pétain, and points out that the
+population was unscathed by war and was increasing by 300,000 young men
+every year.
+
+If the number of workers mobilized is deemed to be of importance in this
+connection, it must be compared with the total population figures, while
+on the other hand it should be taken into consideration that Germany did
+not demand anything which she did not ask of herself to an even higher
+degree. The Defendant Sauckel was forced to the conclusion that the
+people, instead of being unable to work, did not want to do so. In order
+to influence the people the propaganda struggle intensified, and threats
+of punishment were proclaimed by both parties; this first engendered in
+the population of the occupied territories a conflict of feelings which
+was the undoing of many.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel could with good reason refer to the results of the
+counterpropaganda and of the deteriorating war situation as
+necessitating coercion; he could not, however, on the basis of the
+information at his disposal become convinced that the exhaustion of the
+countries was so great that nothing more could be extracted from them
+without the use of inhuman methods. The Defendant Sauckel believed he
+could obtain his object by creating special working conditions rather
+than by using violence. As an example I refer to the promise which
+Sauckel himself gave on 3 May 1943 in Riga, Document 2228-PS.
+
+Apart from all this there is one more field of labor procurement which
+must be put in a different category. That is the liberation of prisoners
+of war on condition that labor forces be made available for Germany by
+“relève” or “transformation.”
+
+The French Government Report RF-22 declares both methods of procuring
+labor forces to be inadmissible. It is pointed out in the report that
+the exchange on the basis of “relève” amounted to the enslavement of a
+roughly threefold number of French workers. Against this it must be
+stated that the replacement workers came only for 6 months for voluntary
+work and in succession. At the end of 18 months all workers were free,
+while the prisoner was liberated immediately.
+
+Coercion for the execution of the “relève” did not exist. From a legal
+point of view it was not assailable. Captivity can be terminated at any
+time; release may be made subject to a condition. The French report
+unduly stresses its moral indignation in quoting a phrase of the
+president of a news agency of the United States; this phrase speaks of
+the “abominable choice of either to work for the hereditary enemy or to
+deprive a son of one’s own country of a chance of release from
+captivity.”
+
+To refute this, I refer to the healthy sentiment according to which in
+the older Russian literature such a change was applauded as a patriotic
+and magnanimous deed during the Nordic War. Neither the King of Sweden
+nor Peter the Great seems to have considered exchange as equal to
+replacement by a substitute slave.
+
+The “transformation” (“Erleichtertes Statut”) is contained in Document
+Number Sauckel-101. This is the release of a Frenchman from captivity if
+he accepts other work, or under condition that an additional French
+worker should come to Germany according to the “relève” regulations. No
+prisoner of war was forced in this manner to change his legal status,
+but whole camps volunteered for it. If a prisoner made use of the
+possibility offered, he forfeited thereby the special legal protection
+of the Geneva Convention with regard to work; but this was done in
+agreement with his government, and thus does not constitute a violation
+of international law.
+
+The home furlough connected with the change-over was discontinued
+because the men granted these furloughs did not return, even in the case
+of the first convoys. The French Report, RF-22, itself states on Page 69
+that of the 8,000 men forming one leave convoy, 2,000 did not return.
+The report states that the “unfortunate people” were placed before the
+alternative: “Either you return, or your brothers die.” This
+consideration, however, did not impress them. Nor could their promise
+prevent them from immediately joining the Maquis.
+
+The cancellation of these home furloughs does not therefore constitute
+an arbitrary act in slave labor. Perusal of the French report can only
+strengthen that impression.
+
+It follows therefore that no conscription of workers, violating the laws
+of war or carried out in an inhuman manner, was effected by the
+Defendant Sauckel in this field either.
+
+I now come to the question of the treatment of workers.
+
+In order to facilitate proper judgment, a clear distinction must be made
+between the different bearers of responsibility. The works manager was
+responsible for general labor conditions in the works, while the general
+conditions of life outside the works were the competence of the German
+Labor Front.
+
+These spheres of responsibility become clearly apparent through the fact
+that two exponents for them are mentioned in the Indictment, namely,
+Krupp and Dr. Ley. The Defendant Sauckel can be held responsible for
+what happened in these spheres only insofar as events were due to his
+decrees, or where, contrary to his duty, he failed to exercise direct
+supervision. The Defendant Sauckel was directly responsible for the
+wages. On assuming office he found a table of wages which he could not
+modify on his own responsibility; to do so he had to apply for
+permission to his superior office, which was the Four Year Plan, and for
+the consent of the competent Reich minister. The legal regulations
+compiled in the chapter on wages of my Document Book 2 show that the
+basic decrees were not issued by the Defendant Sauckel, but by the
+Ministerial Council for the Defense of the Reich (see Documents
+Sauckel-50, 17, and 58) and the Reich Minister of Economics (Document
+Sauckel-51) and the Reich Minister of Finance (Document Number
+Sauckel-52).
+
+The Defendant Sauckel could schedule wages and fix wages for piece work
+only within the general outlines existing for him, and in so doing he
+had to consider the interests of the ministries in question. So far as
+it was at all possible for the Defendant Sauckel to do so, he worked for
+an amelioration; thus a series of his decrees show that he granted
+premiums such as bonuses, compensatory payments, and the like [see
+Document Numbers Sauckel-54 and 58(a)].
+
+The Defendant Sauckel’s activity, however, could on the whole only aim
+at increasing wages by influencing the competent agency. This is shown
+in Document 021-PS of 2 April 1943. There we find as appendix a treatise
+with statistical material bearing on a proposal for a basic improvement
+of wages for Eastern Workers. From a study of wage sheets dating from
+different periods it will also be seen that the average wages of Eastern
+Workers were raised several times during the Defendant Sauckel’s term of
+office.
+
+It was for the Defendant Sauckel to determine the working hours, but
+only within the framework of the superior competence of the Reich
+Minister of Labor Seldte. This is shown by Document Number Sauckel-67,
+where Seldte fixes the working hours for Eastern Workers in Paragraph 3
+of the Decree of 25 January 1944. Generally speaking, the working hours
+were the same as for the German workers, depending upon the output in
+each factory. This is also admitted by the French Government Report,
+Document UK-783; the cases enumerated there, on Page 580, of excessive
+working hours are contrary to the orders of the Defendant Sauckel.
+
+Since they do not specify any year, it cannot be ascertained if they
+deal only with temporary measures or with permanent conditions. The same
+lack of clarity obtains in the French Report RF-22, Page 101; there the
+minimum working time is given as 72 hours, which was liable to increase
+to 100 hours. This may refer to the work of concentration camp inmates.
+Working hours were then changed by Goebbels, who on the basis of his
+powers of plenipotentiary for the waging of total war introduced the
+10-hour day for Germans and foreigners alike, although in practice this
+could not be applied generally. Unreasonably long working hours cannot
+be maintained and will lead to setbacks. I should like to add that
+Sauckel was responsible for the fact that these extra hours were paid
+for, or compensated, in the same manner as overtime work.
+
+Special attention has been paid by the Prosecution to the regulation of
+the working hours of female domestic workers from the East, of whom,
+instead of the 400,000-500,000 girls originally demanded by Hitler; only
+13,000 actually came to Germany. The Prosecution has presented the
+instructions for the employment of these female domestic workers as
+Document USSR-383. There it says under Number 9 that they shall not be
+entitled to take time off. The purpose of this was to leave the
+settlement of their time off to each household according to convenience.
+Any other interpretation of the regulation is hardly imaginable, because
+after all it was intended permanently to receive these female domestic
+workers into the families, and to give them the chance to remain in
+Germany. They had been selected as girls who were considered
+particularly dependable, and had all reported voluntarily for domestic
+work. In the light of new experiences the order was later modified by a
+subsequent decree (Document Number Sauckel-26), by which all remaining
+limitations were also canceled.
+
+Determination of working hours for children took place within the scope
+of the German labor protection legislation. This referred to children
+who, contrary to the decrees of the Defendant Sauckel, had come to
+Germany with their parents in an irregular manner. Their work can have
+concerned only rural occupations, since that applies equally to German
+children. In this context it may be pointed out that during the war
+schoolchildren in Germany as from 10 years of age could be employed for
+work in accordance with the decree of the Reich Youth Leader of 11 April
+1942 [Document Number Sauckel-67(a)].
+
+A general survey by Dr. Blumensaat in the complete Document Number
+Sauckel-89 provides full information about the entire complex of wages
+and working hours as finally established by laws.
+
+This factor of immediate responsibility alone, however, cannot serve the
+Defendant Sauckel as an excuse, if he knew and tolerated those things
+which, according to the Prosecution’s assertion, characterized the
+transports and life in the camps and factories. It was his duty to
+superintend even where he was not directly responsible.
+
+The accommodation and feeding of the workers was the responsibility of
+the industries. With regard to the installations of the camps for
+foreigners, the same regulations as for the camps for German workers
+applied by virtue of decrees by the Reich Minister of Labor, Seldte
+(Documents Number Sauckel-42, 43 and 44). It is indisputable that the
+accommodation suffered as a result of difficulties, in particular from
+the effects of air warfare. The deficiencies, however, were remedied as
+far as at all possible. The situation of the foreign workers was not
+different from that of the German civilian population.
+
+The food supply suffered from the blockade and transportation
+difficulties. The established rations, contrary to the notorious
+statements on the feeding of the Russians, amounted to 2,540 calories
+for the Soviet prisoners of war, according to the table of 24 November
+1941 in Document USSR-177. A further table has been submitted with the
+affidavit of the witness Hahn as Exhibit Number Sauckel-11. According to
+this rations in the Krupp works amounted to 2,156 calories for the
+ordinary Eastern Worker and 2,615 calories for those performing heavy
+work; supervision insured a proper distribution.
+
+The Reich Ministry of Food was responsible for the supply of food. Grave
+accusations have been made by the Prosecution with regard to both
+points. These, however, can only apply where the existing regulations
+were not observed. It is quite likely that mistakes should have been
+made in this large sphere of activity in the course of years, but the
+general picture is not composed of mistakes, and judgment cannot be
+based thereon. The actual conditions have not been clarified in this
+procedure to the extent that one might contend that deficiencies were so
+general and obvious that the Defendant Sauckel must have known them, and
+did in fact know them.
+
+In contrast to the vague statements of the witness Dr. Jäger we have the
+affidavit of the witness Hahn, which refutes the former to a large
+extent. The affidavits of the witnesses Scharmann and Dr. Voss (Exhibits
+Number Sauckel-17 and 18) confirm that no serious deficiencies existed
+in their spheres of activity.
+
+In addition to the obligations on the part of the works managers, the
+German Labor Front had to look after the foreign workers (Document
+Number Sauckel-16). Its tasks included transports and the supervision of
+medical care, as well as general welfare activities. The extensive
+activity which this very large organization developed has not been
+described in these proceedings. The basic principles of the German Labor
+Front can be seen from Document Number Sauckel-27, which is the
+ordinance of the German Labor Front regarding the status of foreign
+workers at their working site. The aim is characterized as maintenance
+of morale by observing conditions of contracts, absolutely fair
+treatment, and comprehensive care and attention.
+
+The German Labor Front was also responsible for transports, according to
+Regulation Number 4 (Document Number Sauckel-15), wherein Sauckel’s
+instructions are contained. This task included transport as far as the
+working site. The witnesses Timm, Stothfang, and Hildebrandt have
+testified about this and did not report anything about bad conditions.
+The description in the Molotov Report (USSR-51) cannot refer to
+transports carried out under orderly direction, but only to so-called
+“pirate” convoys. The same applies to convoys which, according to the
+Indictment, were heading for the concentration camps. The special
+attention which the Defendant Sauckel from the very beginning accorded
+to the transport problem, is shown particularly by Document 2241-PS,
+submitted by the Prosecution. It contains a decree where detailed
+directives to prevent the utilization of unsuitable trains are given.
+
+However, mistakes did occur, especially the incident mentioned in
+Document 054-PS in connection with a return transport of workers. These
+had been brought into the Reich before Sauckel’s time in a manner
+contrary to his basic principles. The matter was an isolated incident,
+and the necessary steps were immediately taken. The return of sick
+persons unfit for travel was prohibited, and Bad Frankenhausen was
+placed at their disposal, Document 084-PS, Page 22. This was followed by
+the order specifying the attendance at such transports of male and
+female Red Cross nurses (Document Number Sauckel-99).
+
+The carefully and thoroughly organized system of medical care, which
+operated in collaboration with the Association of Panel Doctors did not
+break down in the face of the greatest difficulties; rather is it a fact
+that no epidemics or serious diseases broke out.
+
+The cases presented by the Prosecution from some camps among the total
+of 60 run by Krupp’s can only have arisen out of an unusual chain of
+circumstances. They cannot prove that bad conditions, of which these
+examples might have been typical, prevailed generally.
+
+Another document, RF-91, has been presented, which contains the medical
+report of Dr. Février of the French Delegation of the German Labor
+Front, which was compiled after the beginning of the invasion on 15 June
+1944. Besides deficiencies it is intended to correct, the report also
+points out favorable aspects. It speaks with particular acknowledgement
+of leaders of youth camps, of the systematic X-ray examinations, and of
+the support given by district administrations, and similar things. A
+genuine over-all picture of conditions could only be obtained by the
+study of the medical reports of the health offices of the German Labor
+Front existing everywhere.
+
+For the defense of the Defendant Sauckel it may be said here that from
+his remote post he could not obtain a clear picture of unsatisfactory
+details. Any sanctioning of such bad conditions would have been in
+striking contrast to the actions and declarations of Sauckel. The
+Defendant Sauckel did not acquiesce when, for instance, one Gauleiter
+said: “If anybody is going to be cold, then first of all let it be the
+Russians.” He intervened and publicly proclaimed his views in his
+official Handbook on the Allocation of Labor (Document Number
+Sauckel-19). The Defendant Sauckel also made efforts to improve the
+food, although this was outside his competence. That has been confirmed
+by several witnesses, among others the witness Goetz (Exhibit Number
+Sauckel-10). It is also shown by the record of the Central Planning
+Board (Document R-124, Page 1783). The Defendant Sauckel did not let
+matters slide, but established a personal staff of his own, whose
+members traveled around the camps and corrected bad conditions on the
+spot. He also endeavored to obtain clothing, and put factories to work
+to a large extent for the purpose of supplying Eastern Workers. All the
+witnesses heard regarding this problem have again and again unanimously
+confirmed that the Defendant Sauckel basically took great interest in
+the welfare of workers.
+
+I would also refer to the announcements and speeches of the Defendant
+Sauckel, which always advocate good treatment. I do not wish to
+enumerate the documents in detail, and shall only mention in particular
+the “manifesto” on the allocation of labor, Document Number Sauckel-84,
+in which he refers to his binding basic principles, and demands that
+these be constantly kept in mind. I also refer to the speeches to the
+presidents of the provincial labor offices of 24 August 1943 (Document
+Number Sauckel-86), and of 17 January 1944 (Document Number Sauckel-88).
+The Defendant Sauckel finally got even Himmler, Goebbels, and Bormann to
+acknowledge his ideas as correct. That is shown by Document 205-PS of 5
+May 1943, which is a memorandum regarding the general basic principles
+for the treatment of foreign workers. There the basic principles of a
+regulated mobilization of labor are accepted.
+
+How do the statements of the Prosecution on ill-treatment of workers as
+slaves correspond with this? It will be necessary to examine closely
+whether the cases referred to involve real abuses affecting workers in
+the process of normal mobilization, or abuses incidental to the
+deportation of prisoners and to their work. Next, one should investigate
+exaggerations and distortions such as may be due to human weakness and
+foibles. In my opinion no adequate clarification of this subject has so
+far been obtained, and press reports have already begun to appear which
+are bound to increase doubts as to the accepted standard applying to the
+life of foreign workers.
+
+The plan submitted as Exhibit Number Sauckel-3 displays the numerous
+offices for checking and inspection relative to the question of
+laborers. They did not report any particular abuses to the offices of
+the Defendant Sauckel. Perhaps the fact that these offices were so
+numerous constitutes a weakness: It is quite possible that each
+government department kept silent about whatever mistakes originated
+under its own jurisdiction and failed to bring them to the attention of
+the Defendant Sauckel, because as a rule the controlling agencies were
+on a higher level than the Defendant Sauckel. This should be considered
+particularly with regard to relations between the most important agency,
+the German Labor Front, under the leadership of Reichsleiter Dr. Ley,
+and Gauleiter Sauckel.
+
+On closer examination of the document submitted as 1913-PS, an agreement
+on the creation of “central inspection offices for the care and welfare
+of foreign labor,” it appears to have been carefully designed as an
+instrument of defense against the Defendant Sauckel. The document was
+devised by Dr. Ley and signed on 2 June 1943, then submitted for his
+signature to the Defendant Sauckel who did not approve or publish it
+until 20 September 1943. It is quite possible that Dr. Ley did not wish
+to invite criticism. On the other hand, there is little likelihood that
+the abuses were general and manifested themselves openly. Otherwise they
+would obviously have become known to the Defendant Sauckel through his
+own control agencies.
+
+In addition to his own staff, the Defendant Sauckel on 6 April 1942
+appointed the Gauleiter as “Commissioners for the Mobilization of
+Labor,” impressing upon them as their foremost duty that of supervision
+with regard to the enforcement of his orders. This becomes apparent from
+Document Number Sauckel-9, Figure 5; the same applies to Document 633-PS
+of 14 March 1943. Several Gauleiter were examined by the Tribunal as
+witnesses, and they have confirmed the fact that the supervision was
+carried out as ordered and that Sauckel checked it through members of
+his staff. No abuses were reported.
+
+After due consideration of the matter, whom should one believe? Are we
+concerned here with exaggerated complaints, or do findings to the
+contrary command credibility? There is no testimony by those Frenchmen
+who, according to Document UK-783, Draft III, were taken to the real
+slave centers; there is no testimony by those Russians, who, according
+to Document USSR-51, were sold at 10 or 15 Reichsmark.
+
+In any case one fact clearly speaks in favor of the Defendant Sauckel,
+one which has always been confirmed by competent witnesses, namely, that
+the workers were willing and industrious and that when the collapse came
+no uprising occurred in which they would have given vent to their
+natural wrath against the slaveholders.
+
+I have summarized actual happenings and appraised them juridically. All
+this, however, must appear to be juridical quibbling when a higher
+responsibility is involved. It has been stated here that it would not do
+to let the insignificant works managers take the blame, and that the
+moral responsibility must go to the highest Reich Government offices: On
+their own initiative they ought to have introduced corrections on a
+larger scale to cope with the difficulties inherent in the circumstances
+of that time. This might have applied to offices which had the power and
+the means to bring about improvement. The Defendant Sauckel and his
+small personal staff had merely been incorporated in a ministry already
+in existence, and he had no such means at his disposal. His authority
+consisted of a narrowly defined power to give directives on the
+mobilization of labor, and he untiringly made use of this authority.
+
+The works managers in the armament industry formed an independent
+administration and were secure from so-called bureaucrats. The duty of
+self-maintenance results from such a privilege of self-administration.
+Consequently, if something was to be done to improve the security of
+foreign workers, or their situation in armaments works, it was up to
+these establishments and to the armaments ministry, under whose
+supervision they operated, to deal with the matter. It was not the duty
+of the office of the Defendant Sauckel to intervene in these matters,
+since it was under the armaments ministry. That is clearly evident from
+Document 4006-PS, containing the decree of 22 June 1944, and is also
+borne out by the most intimate personal relations between the armaments
+minister and Hitler, which made him the most influential man in the
+economic sphere. If higher responsibility existed for mistakes made in
+the factories, such responsibility can be placed only at the door of
+those who had knowledge of such conditions and the power to correct
+them.
+
+There is still another legal question to be considered with regard to
+the Indictment; namely, whether the position of the Plenipotentiary
+General for the Allocation of Labor is determined by Article 7 or
+Article 8, in other words, whether the Defendant Sauckel was an
+independent government official or whether he acted on orders. The
+requests for labor were placed from time to time on Hitler’s special
+orders, in the form of a general program, and only the subsequent
+distribution was left to Sauckel. This is also confirmed by the fact
+that the Defendant Sauckel always refers to Hitler’s “orders and
+instructions,” as in the manifestos of the Plenipotentiary General for
+the Allocation of Labor (Document Number Sauckel-84, in circulars to the
+Gauleiter, Figure 7, Document Number Sauckel-83 and others). From this
+also derives the fact that the Defendant Sauckel in every case
+specifically reports execution of the orders, as well as the beginning
+and end of his official journeys (Document 556-PS of 10 January 1944 and
+28 July 1943).
+
+Another argument against his working independently is that according to
+the nomination decree the Defendant Sauckel was immediately subordinate
+to the Four Year Plan and attached to the Reich Ministry for Labor,
+which had been preserved with its state secretaries; only two
+departments were placed at his disposal. If the form of responsibility
+is to be determined, it can thus only be within the limits of Article 8
+of the Charter.
+
+Herewith I conclude my exposition regarding the special field of labor
+allocation.
+
+The Defendant Sauckel is accused on all Counts of the Indictment, in
+addition to labor mobilization; specific acts however are not charged
+against him. A closer characterization of the accusation has been
+effected in the course of the proceedings only with regard to the
+concentration camps. In this connection, however, it has been proved by
+a sworn statement by the witness Falkenhorst (Exhibit Number 23) and an
+affidavit by the witness Dieter Sauckel (Exhibit Number 9) that no order
+for the evacuation of the Buchenwald Camp upon the approach of American
+troops was given. Knowledge and approval of conditions at the camp
+cannot be deduced from two visits of the camp before 1939, because the
+excesses submitted by the Prosecution had not yet occurred. Nor did the
+geographical proximity of the camp to the Gauleitung of the Defendant
+Sauckel bring about any close connection with the SS staff, as they had
+their seat in Kassel and Magdeburg. Finally it must be remembered that
+the human convictions of the Defendant Sauckel, which were based on his
+earlier career, were irreconcilable with Himmler’s point of view.
+
+What part can the Defendant Sauckel have played in the conspiracy? He
+was Gauleiter in Thuringia and did not rise above the rest of the
+Gauleiter. His activities and his aims can be deduced from his fighting
+speeches, which have been submitted as Document Number Sauckel-95. They
+consistently show the fight for “liberty and bread,” and a desire for
+real peace.
+
+During his activity, extending over many years in the Party, the Party
+program was authoritative for the Defendant Sauckel; the aims and plans
+contained therein required neither war nor the extermination of the
+Jews. The practical realization of the program alone could disclose the
+reality. For every convinced Party exponent, however, the official
+explanation of events was authoritative and met with no doubts. Up to
+his nomination as the Plenipotentiary General for Allocation of Labor in
+March 1942, the Defendant Sauckel did not belong to the narrow circle of
+those who had access to Hitler’s plans. He had to rely upon the press
+and the broadcasts like everybody else. He had no contact with the
+leading men. This is demonstrated somewhat tragically by his action, so
+often ridiculed, of boarding a submarine as an ordinary seaman for some
+mission. That is no way to participate in conspiracies.
+
+As a faithful follower of Hitler, the Defendant Sauckel remained
+isolated in the circle of the initiated. It is understandable that the
+extremists should have shunned him owing to his well-known opinions. He
+was not initiated into the secrets of people who aspired to be Hitler’s
+friends and murderers at the same time, nor was he kept informed by the
+group of people who were Hitler’s enemies, but who kept their knowledge
+secret with a novel kind of courage. A believer to the end, the
+Defendant Sauckel cannot to this day understand what has happened. Must
+he, like a heretic, recant his error in order to find mercy? He lacks
+the contact with reality, which would make understanding possible.
+
+Does his sentence depend on his having unknowingly served a good or a
+bad cause? Nothing is either good or bad, but thinking makes it so. One
+thing, however, is always and under all circumstances good, and that is
+a good intention. This good intention was shown by the Defendant
+Sauckel. Therefore, I ask that he be acquitted.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Exner for the Defendant Jodl.
+
+PROFESSOR DR. FRANZ EXNER (Counsel for Defendant Jodl): May it please
+the Tribunal, in this unique Trial the discovery of the truth is faced
+with difficulties of an exceptional nature. At a time when the wounds of
+the war are still bleeding, when the excitement of the events of the
+last few years is still felt, at a time when the archives of one side
+are still closed, it is asked that a just verdict be given with
+dispassionate neutrality. Material for the Trial has been spread out
+before us covering a quarter of a century of world history and events
+from the four corners of the globe.
+
+On the grounds of this tremendous amount of material we see 22 men being
+accused simultaneously. That makes it immensely difficult to gain a
+clear picture of the guilt and responsibility of each individual, for
+inhumanities of an almost unimaginable vastness have come to light here,
+and there exists a danger that the deep shadow which falls upon some of
+the defendants may also darken the others. Some of them, I fear, appear
+in a different light because of the company in which they now sit than
+they would if they were alone in the dock.
+
+The Prosecution has promoted this danger by repeatedly making joint
+accusations, thereby mixing legal and moral reproaches. They have said
+that all the defendants had enriched themselves from the occupied
+territories, that there was not one who did not shout, “Perish, Judah!”
+and so forth. No attempt to prove this in the case of any single
+individual was made, but the statement in itself creates an atmosphere
+hostile toward all of them.
+
+Another fact brought about by the Prosecution which renders elucidation
+of the question of individual guilt still more difficult is that the
+Defendants Keitel and Jodl are treated as inseparable twins: One common
+plea against them by the British prosecutor, one common trial brief by
+the French Prosecution; the Russian Prosecution indeed spoke very little
+about the individual defendants but preferred to heap reproach after
+reproach upon all of them.
+
+All of this is presumably intended to shorten the Trial, but it hardly
+serves to clear up the question of individual responsibility. Indeed,
+the Indictment goes still further. It reaches beyond these 22 defendants
+and affects the fate of millions through a prosecution of certain
+organizations, which, taken in conjunction with Law Number 10, leads to
+the result that one can be punished for the guilt of other persons.
+
+Something that is more important at the moment is a further form of
+summary treatment of the defendants. The Prosecution is bringing in the
+conception of a “conspiracy” in order once more to obtain the result
+that persons may be made individually responsible for some wrong that
+others committed. I must deal with this point in greater detail, since
+it also concerns my client.
+
+It is actually clear, I think, from the previous speakers’ statements
+that a conspiracy to commit Crimes against Peace and the laws of war and
+humanity did not in fact exist. Therefore, I shall demonstrate only
+that, if such a conspiracy did actually exist, Jodl at least did not
+belong to it.
+
+The Prosecution has admitted that Jodl’s participation in the conspiracy
+before 1933 could not be proved. In fact, anyone whose attitude toward
+the whole National Socialist movement was so full of distrust and who
+spoke with such skepticism about its seizure of power did not conspire
+to help Hitler take over the reins of Government. But the Prosecution
+seems to think that Jodl joined the alleged conspiracy in the period
+before 1939. In truth, during this time, too, nothing essential changed
+as far as he was concerned. True, his attitude toward Hitler was now an
+entirely loyal one. But it was Jodl’s respected Field Marshal Von
+Hindenburg who had called Hitler into the Government, and the German
+people had confirmed this decision with more than 90 percent of its
+votes. Added to this was the fact that in Jodl’s eyes—and not only in
+his—Hitler’s authority was bound to rise by leaps and bounds in view of
+his remarkable successes at home and abroad, which now followed one
+after another in quick succession; yet personally Jodl remained without
+any connection with Hitler. He did not participate in any of the big
+meetings at which Hitler developed his program. He had only read
+extracts of Hitler’s book _Mein Kampf_, the bible of National Socialism.
+Jodl remained just an unpolitical man, quite in line with his personal
+inclinations, which were far removed from Party politics and in
+accordance with the traditions of the old family of officers from which
+he sprang. Of liberal leanings, he had little sympathy for National
+Socialism; as an officer he was forbidden to belong to the Party, and he
+had no right to vote or be politically active.
+
+If, as the Prosecution says, the Party held the conspiracy together and
+was the “instrument of cohesion” between the defendants, then one asks
+with wonder what cohesion actually existed between Jodl and, let us say,
+Sauckel, or between Jodl and Streicher. Of all the defendants, the only
+one he knew before the war, outside of the officers, was Frick, from one
+or two official conferences in the Ministry of the Interior. He kept
+clear of the NSDAP, and his attitude toward its organizations was even
+in a certain sense inimical. His greatest worry during these years,
+right up to the end, was the danger of Party influence in the Armed
+Forces.
+
+Jodl did what lay in his power to prevent the SS from being puffed up
+into a subsidiary Wehrmacht, to prevent the transfer of the customs
+frontier guards to Himmler, and he notes triumphantly in his diary that
+after the withdrawal of General Von Fritsch, Hitler did not, as had been
+feared, make General Von Reichenau, who had Party ties,
+Commander-in-Chief of the Army, but the unpolitical General Von
+Brauchitsch, and so forth. If Jodl had conspired for National Socialism
+in any way, his attitude would have been the opposite on every one of
+these points.
+
+Nor was Jodl present at any of the so-called meetings of the
+conspirators, as on 5 November 1937—Hitler’s testament was unknown to
+him—at Obersalzberg in February 1938, and at the meetings on 23 May
+1939 and 22 August 1939.
+
+No wonder; for Jodl was after all at that time still much too
+insignificant to be permitted to participate in conferences and meetings
+which were of such decisive importance to the State. People do not
+conspire with lieutenant colonels or colonels of the General Staff. They
+simply tell them what to do, and that settles the matter.
+
+However, the most incontrovertible proof of the fact that Jodl can have
+belonged to no conspiracy to wage aggressive war is his absence for 10
+months just before the beginning of the war. Jodl had left the OKW in
+October 1938 and was sent to Vienna as artillery commander. At that time
+there was in his mind so little probability of war that before leaving
+Berlin he drafted, on his own initiative, a plan of deployment in all
+directions for security purposes. In this he disposed the bulk of the
+German forces in the center of the Reich because he could not see any
+definite opponent against whom a deployment plan might have to be
+prepared.
+
+Exactly a year before the beginning of the attack, this alleged
+conspirator for aggressive wars drew up a purely defensive General Staff
+plan, and, although he knew definitely that in case of war he would have
+to return to Berlin, this possibility seemed so remote that he moved to
+Vienna, taking along all his furniture.
+
+Besides, since he wished to get away from office work again, he arranged
+to have the mountain division at Reichenhall promised him for 1 October
+1939. Lastly, as late as July he obtained passage on a sea cruise
+planned to last several weeks, which was to have started in
+September—so sure was he of peaceful developments during these 10
+months.
+
+Up to the time he was called to Berlin shortly before the outbreak of
+the war, Jodl had no official or private connections with the OKW. The
+only letter he got from them at that time was the one which promised him
+his transfer to Reichenhall on 1 October.
+
+Note that at the most critical time when the alleged conspirators were
+discussing and working out the Polish plan, Jodl was for 10 months out
+of all contact with the authoritative persons and knew no more of what
+was happening than one of his second lieutenants.
+
+When the Führer came to Vienna during the summer, it did not even seem
+worth while to Keitel to introduce Jodl to him, although Jodl, as the
+Supreme Commander’s strategic adviser, was called upon in the event of
+war to carry out the allegedly common aggressive plan.
+
+One can imagine how astonished Jodl was to read in the Indictment that
+he had been a member of the conspiracy to launch the war.
+
+Mr. President, I have reached the end of a paragraph, and this perhaps
+might be an opportune moment to recess.
+
+THE PRESIDENT: Very well.
+
+ [_The Tribunal adjourned until 19 July 1946 at 1000 hours._]
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER NOTES
+
+Punctuation and spelling have been maintained except where obvious
+printer errors have occurred such as missing periods or commas for
+periods. English and American spellings occur throughout the document;
+however, American spellings are the rule, hence, “Defense” versus
+“Defence”. Unlike Blue Series volumes I and II, this volume includes
+French, German, Polish and Russian names and terms with diacriticals:
+hence Führer, Göring, etc. throughout.
+
+Although some sentences may appear to have incorrect spellings or verb
+tenses, the original text has been maintained as it represents what the
+tribunal read into the record and reflects the actual translations
+between the German, English, French, and Russian documents presented in
+the trial.
+
+An attempt has been made to produce this eBook in a format as close as
+possible to the original document presentation and layout.
+
+[The end of _Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International
+Military Tribunal Vol. 18_, by Various.]
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75266 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75266 ***</div>
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:80%'>
+<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='blue cover' id='iid-0000' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
+<p class='line' style='margin-top:2em;font-size:1.5em;'>TRIAL</p>
+<p class='line' style='margin-top:.2em;margin-bottom:.2em;font-size:.7em;'>OF</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:1.5em;'>THE MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.7em;'>BEFORE</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:1.2em;'>THE INTERNATIONAL</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:1.2em;'>MILITARY TRIBUNAL</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.7em;'><span class='gesp'>NUREMBERG</span></p>
+<p class='line' style='margin-top:.2em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:.7em;'>14 NOVEMBER 1945—1 OCTOBER 1946</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/title.jpg' alt='logo' id='iid-0001' style='width:80px;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='margin-top:4em;font-size:.7em;'><span class='gesp'>PUBLISHED AT NUREMBERG, GERMANY</span></p>
+<p class='line' style='margin-top:.2em;font-size:.7em;'><span class='gesp'>1948</span></p>
+</div> <!-- end rend -->
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='literal-container' style='margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:20em;'><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';fs:.8em;' -->
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.8em;'>This volume is published in accordance with the</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.8em;'>direction of the International Military Tribunal by</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.8em;'>the Secretariat of the Tribunal, under the jurisdiction</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.8em;'>of the Allied Control Authority for Germany.</p>
+</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:8em;margin-bottom:4em;'> <!-- rend=';' -->
+<p class='line'>VOLUME XVIII</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<hr class='tbk100'/>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:1.2em;'><span class='gesp'>OFFICIAL TEXT</span></p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.8em;'><span class='gesp'>IN THE</span></p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:1.2em;'>ENGLISH LANGUAGE</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<hr class='tbk101'/>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:1.2em;'><span class='gesp'>PROCEEDINGS</span></p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.8em;'>9 July 1946—18 July 1946</p>
+</div> <!-- end rend -->
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
+<colgroup>
+<col span='1' style='width: 6em;'/>
+<col span='1' style='width: 22.5em;'/>
+<col span='1' style='width: 2.5em;'/>
+</colgroup>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'><span style='font-size:larger'>CONTENTS</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>One Hundred and Seventy-fourth Day, Tuesday, 9 July 1946,</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_48'>48</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>One Hundred and Seventy-fifth Day, Wednesday, 10 July 1946,</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_89'>89</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>One Hundred and Seventy-sixth Day, Thursday, 11 July 1946,</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_129'>129</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_164'>164</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>One Hundred and Seventy-seventh Day, Friday, 12 July 1946,</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_193'>193</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_227'>227</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>One Hundred and Seventy-eighth Day, Monday, 15 July 1946,</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_253'>253</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_287'>287</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>One Hundred and Seventy-ninth Day, Tuesday, 16 July 1946,</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_325'>325</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_364'>364</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>One Hundred and Eightieth Day, Wednesday, 17 July 1946,</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_403'>403</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>One Hundred and Eighty-first Day, Thursday, 18 July 1946,</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Morning Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_442'>442</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle2'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle3'>Afternoon Session</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'><a href='#Page_468'>468</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>Editor’s Note: <span class='it'>In respect to the presentation of the final pleas by
+Counsel for the Defense, the Tribunal in several instances directed
+that written speeches of excessive length be shortened for oral
+presentation in Court and that notice would be taken by the
+Tribunal of the paragraphs omitted. In the sessions to follow
+such passages have been reproduced in small type.</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' title='1' id='Page_1'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>ONE HUNDRED<br/> AND SEVENTY-FOURTH DAY</span><br/> Tuesday, 9 July 1946</h1></div>
+
+<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>MARSHAL (Lieutenant Colonel James R. Gifford): May it please
+the Tribunal, the Defendants Hess and Fritzsche are absent.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT (Lord Justice Sir Geoffrey Lawrence): I have
+an order to read. The Tribunal orders:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>1. Applications for witnesses for organizations to be heard
+by the Tribunal in open court in accordance with Paragraph 5
+of the Tribunal’s order of 13 March 1946 should be made to
+the General Secretary as soon as possible, and in any case
+not later than 20 July.</p>
+
+<p>2. The Tribunal believes that so much evidence has already
+been taken, and so wide a field has been covered, that only
+a very few witnesses need be called for each organization.
+That is all.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. OTTO NELTE (Counsel for Defendant Keitel): Mr. President,
+Gentlemen of the Tribunal, yesterday I dealt with the problem
+of Keitel and the Russian campaign. Now I recall to you what
+Keitel said in the witness box concerning the so-called ideological
+orders:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I knew their content. In spite of my personal misgivings
+I passed them on without letting myself be deterred by
+the possibility of serious consequences.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I wanted to point that out in order to make what I have to
+say now comprehensible, above all, in its extent. In the course
+of time the opinion arose and was disseminated throughout the
+Army, that Field Marshal Keitel was a “yes man,” a tool of Hitler’s
+and that he was betraying the interests of the Armed Forces.
+These generals did not see, nor were they interested in the fact
+that this man was fighting a constant battle, day after day, in
+every possible field, with Hitler and the forces which were influencing
+him on all sides. The effects of this distorted picture
+shown here in detail, which definitely did not apply to Keitel,
+especially not in the sphere of strategic operations, planning, and
+execution, made themselves still felt even in this Trial; perhaps not
+without the fault of the Defendant Keitel himself. As to the
+<span class='pageno' title='2' id='Page_2'></span>
+justification of his conception of duty there can in principle be
+no argument. It has also been confirmed here by the witness
+Admiral Schulte-Mönting for the Defendant Grossadmiral Raeder.
+There can be no doubt that the rest of the admirals and generals
+were in principle of the same point of view, that it is impossible
+in military spheres to criticize before subordinates the decision
+of a superior as expressed in an order, even if one has misgivings
+about the order.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One may say that every principle, every basic rule must be
+interpreted and applied in a reasonable way, that every exaggeration
+of a good principle detracts from it. In the case of Keitel
+this objection affects the problem of his responsibility and guilt.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Does nonrecognition of the point where a principle, correct in
+itself, is being carried to excess and thus endangers the object
+for the protection of which it has been established, constitute
+guilt? In the case of Keitel we must consider this crucial question
+from the point of view of a soldier. The thoughts and ideas which
+the Defendant Keitel had in this connection were the following:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is incontestable that the principle of obedience is necessary
+for every army; one might say that obedience—in civilian life
+a virtue and therefore more or less unstable in its application—must
+be the essential element of a soldier’s character, because
+without this principle of obedience the aim which is to be
+accomplished by the army could not be achieved. This aim—the
+security of the country, the protection of the people, the maintenance
+of the most precious national possessions—is so sacred that
+the importance of the principle of obedience cannot be valued
+highly enough. Hence, the duty of those called upon to preserve
+that national institution, the Armed Forces, in the sense of its
+higher task, is to emphasize the importance of obedience. But
+what the general demands of the soldier, because it is indispensable,
+must hold good for himself too. This also applies to
+the principle of obedience.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It would be dangerous to weaken an order, still less an essential
+principle, by mentioning exaggerations and taking them into consideration
+at the outset. That would leave the principle of decision
+to the individual, that is, to his judgment. There may be cases
+where the decision depends, or must be made dependent, on actual
+circumstances. In theory, that would lead to a devaluation or
+even to an abrogation of the principle. In order to forestall this
+danger and to eliminate any doubt as to its absolute importance,
+the principle of obedience has been changed in military life into
+one of “absolute obedience,” and embodied in the oath of allegiance.
+This is equally valid for the general as for the common
+soldier.
+<span class='pageno' title='3' id='Page_3'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Keitel not only grew up in this school of
+thought, but during the 37 years of his military service, up to
+1938, including the first World War, he had become convinced
+that this principle of obedience is the strongest pillar upon which
+the Armed Forces, and thereby the security of the country, rests.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Deeply imbued with the importance of his profession, he had
+served the Kaiser, Ebert, and Von Hindenburg in accordance with
+this principle. As representatives of the State, they had to a
+certain extent an impersonal and symbolic effect on Keitel; Hitler,
+from 1934, at first appeared in the same light to him, that is,
+merely as representing the State, without any personal connection,
+in spite of the fact that his name was mentioned in the oath of
+allegiance. In 1938 Keitel as Chief of the OKW came into the
+immediate circle and the personal sphere of Hitler. It appears
+important for further explanation and in assessing the personality
+of Keitel to bear in mind that Keitel, as the result of his highly-developed
+soldierly conception of duty described above, and the
+pronounced feeling of soldierly obedience, was now exposed to the
+direct effects of Hitler’s personality.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I am inclined to assume that Hitler had clearly realized, in
+the preliminary discussions with Keitel which led to the Führer
+Order of 4 February 1938, that Keitel was the type of person he
+was including in his calculations: A man upon whom he could
+rely as a soldier at any time; who was devoted to him with sincere
+soldierly loyalty; whose bearing fitted him to be a worthy representative
+for the Armed Forces in his sphere; and who in the
+opinion of his superiors was an extraordinarily able organizer as
+shown by the report of Field Marshal Von Blomberg. Keitel
+himself has admitted that he sincerely admired Hitler, and that
+the latter subsequently attained a strong influence over him and
+brought him completely under his spell.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This must be borne in mind if we wish to understand how Keitel
+could have made out and transmitted orders from Hitler which were
+irreconcilable with the traditional conceptions of a German officer,
+such as, for instance, orders C-50, 447-PS, et cetera, submitted by
+the Soviet Russian Prosecution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>By exploiting the willingness to fight for Germany, which might
+be taken for granted in the case of every German general, Hitler
+was able to camouflage his party political aims with the pretext
+of defending the national interests and to present the impending
+struggle with the Soviet Union as a dispute which must inevitably
+be settled—even as a war of defense, the necessity for which was
+made clear by definite information which had been received and
+on which depended the existence of Germany.
+<span class='pageno' title='4' id='Page_4'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this way Hitler broached the fateful question. General Jodl
+has testified here to the fact that, as an officer of long standing,
+Keitel’s conscience pricked him nevertheless; and that he repeatedly,
+but unsuccessfully, raised objections and suggested alternatives to
+the orders drafted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During his cross-examination by the representative of the American
+Prosecution, the Defendant Keitel has openly declared that he
+was aware of the illegal nature of these orders, but that he believed
+that he could not refuse to obey the orders of the Supreme Commander
+of the Armed Forces and head of the State, whose final
+pronouncement in the case of all objections was: “I do not know
+why you are worrying; after all, it is not your responsibility. I
+myself am solely responsible to the German people.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This is a reasoned analysis of Keitel’s attitude toward the so-called
+ideologically-based orders of Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Keitel’s last hope, which in many cases proved to be justified,
+was that the commanders-in-chief and subordinate commanders of
+the Armed Forces would at their discretion and within the scope
+of their responsibility either fail altogether to apply these harsh,
+inhuman orders, or would apply them only to a limited degree. In
+view of his position, Keitel had only the choice between military
+disobedience by refusing to transmit the orders, or complying with
+the instructions to forward them. I shall investigate in another connection
+the question of what alternative cases of action might have
+been open to him. The problem here is to show how Keitel came
+to forward orders which indisputably violated the laws of warfare
+and humanity and why, by reason of his duty to obey, his sworn
+loyalty to the Supreme Commander, and the fact that he saw in
+the order of the head of the State the absolution of his own responsibility,
+he failed to recognize the point at which even the soldier’s
+strict duty of obedience must end.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Every soldier who has appeared here as a defendant or as a witness
+has mentioned the duty of allegiance. All of them, when they
+sooner or later realized that Hitler had drawn them and the Armed
+Forces into his egocentric gamble for the highest stakes, have considered
+their oath of allegiance as rendered to their country and
+have believed that they must continue to do their duty in circumstances
+which to us and even to themselves, when they realized the
+extent of resulting disaster, appear inconceivable. Not only soldiers
+such as Raeder, Dönitz, and Jodl, but Paulus as well, kept their
+positions and remained at their posts, and we have heard the same
+from other defendants. The statements of the Defendants Speer and
+Jodl in this connection were deeply moving.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The question of whether these facts relieve the Defendant Keitel
+of guilty responsibility requires investigation. Keitel does not deny
+<span class='pageno' title='5' id='Page_5'></span>
+that he bears a heavy moral responsibility. He realizes that no one
+who played even the smallest part in this terrible drama can feel
+himself devoid of the moral guilt in which he was entangled.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If I nevertheless emphasize the legal point of view, I am doing
+so because Justice Jackson, in his speech on behalf of the Prosecution,
+expressly referred to the law as being the basis of your
+verdict—to international law, the law of individual states, and the
+law which the victorious powers have embodied in the Charter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I assume that the Defendant Keitel has recognized that some of
+Hitler’s orders violated international law. The Charter says that a
+soldier cannot clear himself by referring to orders given by his
+superiors or by his government. At the beginning of my argument
+I asked you to determine whether, independently of the terms of
+the Charter, the principle is unimpeachable that the standard determining
+right or wrong cannot but depend on a national concept.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Nelte, I see that in the next few pages
+you pass into the realm of metaphysics. Don’t you think that part
+you might leave for the Tribunal to read?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>You must remember that you began your speech yesterday before
+the morning adjournment, and you have got over seventy pages left
+of your speech to read.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I have limited it and shall be through by noon.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well. Do you think it is necessary to
+read these passages about metaphysics?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I want to show in these pages that they are not
+metaphysical forces, and that the individual is not in a position to
+free himself through metaphysical forces. I shall—well, I think I
+shall continue on Page 121, immediately following my reference to
+Hitler’s character.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Perhaps I may just read from Page 120 at the bottom.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well, if you tell the Tribunal that you
+have limited your presentation. I think you began yesterday at a
+quarter past 12. Go on then. Take your own course, but do your
+best to limit it, and go to Page 120 now.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">DR. NELTE: The French prosecutor, M. De Menthon, has pointed to the
+“demoniacal” undertaking of Hitler and therewith pronounced a word which had
+necessarily to be brought up in a discussion which is dedicated to the investigation
+of events forming the background of these Trials. It is the natural endeavor
+of intelligent people to analyze the reasons for events which have deeply touched
+the fate of mankind in these days. If these events deviate from the regular
+happenings and the natural course of things so much that they sharpen our
+imagination, we take our refuge in metaphysical powers. I ask you not to
+consider the pointing to such metaphysical forces as an attempt to evade
+responsibility. We are all still under the impression of the attempt by a single
+man to lead the world from its course. I should not care to be misunderstood:
+The “demoniacal” is an incomprehensible yet extremely real power. Many call
+it “fate.” If I speak of fateful, metaphysical powers, I do not mean the fate
+<span class='pageno' title='6' id='Page_6'></span>
+of antiquity and of pre-Christian Germanism to which even the gods are
+necessarily subject.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">I should like to make this quite clear: The demoniacal about which I am
+talking in this connection does not exclude the capacity of man to discern evil;
+of course, I believe that the demoniacal, should it become effective, does limit
+the capacity for perception. Principiis obsta. The old German maxim says:
+“Resist from the very start, the remedy will be prepared too late.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Fate and guilt are not phenomena excluding one another, but rather circles
+which overlap, so that there are sections of life when both power groups are
+operative. I can only indicate here in a few words what things may be considered
+as being governed by fate: nationality, historical and traditional conditions
+of existence, individual origin, professional surroundings.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Mankind today cannot yet recognize the difference between the fateful, that
+is, the metaphysical powers which have become operative, and the persons who
+have appeared as tools of these powers; therefore the people who made their
+appearance as actors on the stage of this terrible drama are “guilty people” to
+them. The further removed mankind is from the events, the less it sees or feels
+the consequences, the more objective does judgment—divested of actuality and
+subjective instincts—become within the framework of the history of human
+development. In this way the active figures and their share in the events will
+be better recognized. But as long as we are under the recent impression of the
+events, we do, it is true, realize the border line between guilt and fate, but we
+cannot yet recognize it clearly.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">No less a person than Marshal Stalin has pointed out in February 1946 that
+the second World War was not so much the result of mistakes of individual
+statesmen, but rather the consequence of a development of economic and
+political tension on the basis of the existing capitalist economic system.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I am now beginning Paragraph 3 on Page 120.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler was the exponent of an idea. He was not only the representative
+of a Party political program, but also of a philosophy
+which separated him and the German people from the ideology
+of the rest of the world. As a convinced enemy of parliamentary
+democracy, and obsessed with the conviction that this was the true
+ideology, he was devoid of tolerance and the spirit of compromise.
+This produced an egocentric ideology which recognized as right
+only his own ideas and his own decisions. It led to the “Führer
+State,” in which he was enthroned on a lonely height as the incarnation
+of this faith, blind and deaf to all misgivings and objections,
+suspicious of all those who he thought might constitute a
+threat to his power, and brutal to everything that crossed his ideological
+path.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This outline of his character, which has been verified by the
+evidence, is incompatible with the Prosecution’s assumption that a
+partnership of interests might have existed between Hitler and the
+defendant. There was no partnership of interests and no common
+planning between Hitler and the men who were supposed to be his
+advisers. The hierarchy of the Führer State, in connection with the
+Führer Order Number 1, which gives the crudest expression to the
+separation of work, can only admit of the conclusion that the so-called
+co-workers were merely mouthpieces or tools of an overwhelming
+will, and not men who translated their own will into
+deeds. The only question, therefore, which can be raised is whether
+<span class='pageno' title='7' id='Page_7'></span>
+these men were guilty in putting themselves at the disposal of such
+a system and in submitting to the will of a man like Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This problem requires special examination in the case of soldiers,
+because this submission to the will of some person, which is
+contrary to the nature of a free man, is for the soldier the basic
+element of his profession, and of the duties of obedience and allegiance
+which exist for the soldier in all political systems.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The legal problem of conspiracy in the sense of the Indictment
+has been dealt with by my colleague Dr. Stahmer and by Dr. Horn.
+In the specific case of the Defendant Keitel I should only like to
+refer to two sentences of the speech as the starting point of my
+statements:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>(1) “It is not sufficient that the plan be common to them all;
+they must know that it is common to all of them, and each
+one of them must of his own accord accept the plan as his
+own.</p>
+
+<p>(2) “That is why a conspiracy with a dictator at the head is
+a contradiction in itself. The dictator does not enter into a
+conspiracy with his followers; he concludes no agreement with
+them; he dictates.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Dr. Stahmer has pointed out that no one acting under or on
+account of pressure can therefore be a conspirator. I should like
+to modify this for the circle to which the Defendant Keitel belonged.
+To say that the defendants belonging to the military branch acted
+on account of or under pressure, does not accurately represent the
+real circumstances. It is correct to say that soldiers do not act
+voluntarily, that is, of their own free will. They must do what
+they are ordered, regardless of whether or not they approve of it.
+Accordingly, when soldiers engage in any action, their will is disregarded,
+or at least not taken into consideration; it will in fact
+always be disregarded because of the nature of the military profession,
+and in applying the Leadership Principle in the Armed
+Forces it cannot appear as a causal factor in the initiation and execution
+of orders. In this military sphere, therefore, we are not
+dealing with an abstract and thus theoretical deduction, but with
+a conclusion which is bound to result from the nature and practice
+of the military profession, when we maintain that the function of
+the Defendant Keitel was based on military orders. The activity of
+the Defendant Keitel with regard to the initiation of orders, decrees,
+and other measures by Hitler, even insofar as they are criminal,
+cannot therefore be considered as common work, that is, as the
+result of a common plan within the meaning of the term “conspiracy.”
+Keitel’s activity in regard to the execution of orders consists
+in the proper transmission of orders in the operations sector
+<span class='pageno' title='8' id='Page_8'></span>
+and in the proper execution of orders concerning the administration
+of the war, that is, in the so-called ministerial sector.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>No matter how this activity in itself might be qualified in terms
+of the penal code, the Prosecution have not, I think, so far submitted
+anything which could refute this train of thought as to the
+conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This is a soldierly principle, and is valid wherever the military
+command system exists. The significance of this statement is particularly
+important in the case of the Defendant Keitel. For the
+validity of such evidence might be questioned by saying that Keitel’s
+functions were not those of a soldier, or at least not only those of
+a soldier; and that he is therefore not entitled to claim consideration
+purely on the grounds of the existing system of command.
+The unfortunate nature of his position and the many and varied
+assignments, not all of which can be fitted into the framework of
+a system, which fell to him as Chief of the OKW, tend to obscure
+for us the primary factor with regard to the Defendant Keitel,
+namely, that no matter what Keitel did, or with what authority
+or organization he negotiated or was in contact, he was always
+motivated by his function as a soldier and by some general or particular
+order issued by Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The existence of a conspiracy seems to me incompatible with
+the theory of a soldier’s functions and with Keitel’s position as head
+of the OKW, and cannot logically be derived therefrom. In all cases
+in which the Prosecution has claimed conspiracy to be prejudice,
+the purpose of this conspiracy is an activity indulged in by the
+members in perpetrating acts which differ from their normal private
+activity. The <span class='it'>ex contrario</span> proposition is that the activity which a
+man must practice because it belongs to his profession or office
+cannot be termed a conspiracy. It may be added that the soldier
+does not act on his own initiative, but on orders received. A soldier
+may therefore take part in a conspiracy aimed against the duties
+he has undertaken as a soldier; but his activity within the scope of
+his military functions can on no account be termed a conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The OKW, including the Armed Forces Operations Staff, was
+relatively little affected by the conduct of the war in the East. By
+the OKW I mean the staff of the OKW. It is well known that Hitler
+himself as Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, dealt with
+all matters concerning the conduct of this—his own—ideological
+war and took a hand in it. The Army was in command; but Hitler
+was in close and constant collaboration with the Commander-in-Chief
+of the Army and his Chief of General Staff up to December
+1941 when, after taking over the supreme command of the Army,
+he also took over its direct leadership.
+<span class='pageno' title='9' id='Page_9'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This union in one person of the Supreme Commander of the
+Armed Forces and Commander-in-Chief of the Army was evidently
+the cause of the numerous mistakes which led to the severe incrimination
+of the OKW as staff OKW, and of its Chief of Staff, Keitel.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Keitel feels himself to be gravely incriminated by the frank
+statements he made in the witness box on the whole question of
+the Russian war. It is, therefore, not only an understandable proceeding
+on the part of the defense, but in fact its duty, to clarify
+the extent to which Keitel bears the responsibility for these entire
+conditions of most frightful atrocity and unimaginable degeneration.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To make these matters of competency, which are frequently
+extremely complicated, easier of understanding, I refer to the
+Defendant Keitel’s affidavit Number K-10, which was submitted to
+the Tribunal. It seems to me essential just to emphasize the fact
+that the war against the Soviet Union was from the first subject
+to three effective factors: (1) Operations and command: High Command
+of the Army; (2) Economics: The Four Year Plan; (3) Ideological:
+The SS Organizations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These three factors were outside the competency of the OKW,
+which was not empowered to issue orders affecting them. It is true,
+nevertheless, that as a result of Hitler’s practically anarchic methods,
+by which he himself retained entire control of the Government in
+his own hands, the OKW and Keitel were sometimes used to transmit
+Hitler’s orders; but this fact cannot in itself deflect the basic
+responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In view of the mass of material presented by the Soviet Prosecution,
+I can refer within the scope of my statement to only a comparatively
+small number of the documents. I shall give a brief
+summary of the documents which have been dealt with separately,
+Pages 126 to 136.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To begin with, I referred to Documents USSR-90, 386, 364, 366,
+106, and 407, and tried to prove in detail that the charges made
+against the OKW and Keitel as the guilty parties have no value as
+evidence as far as these documents are concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Then, on Page 130, I referred to a category of documents with
+which I have dealt earlier in Part 2 of my presentation on the subject
+of official documents. If I refer in this connection to the official
+reports of the Investigation Commission, I do so not because of their
+actual contents, but because, although they were submitted in order
+to implicate Keitel, they are in themselves proof that the charges
+made against Keitel and the OKW are not justified as far as these
+grave indictments are concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Out of the large number of documents in this connection I have
+dealt with USSR-40, 35, and 38. These official reports, which implicate
+the High Command of the Armed Forces, do not contain a
+<span class='pageno' title='10' id='Page_10'></span>
+single concrete fact referring to the Staff of the OKW—that is,
+Keitel—as the perpetrator or instigator of these atrocities.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I make no comment on the contents of the documents; I merely
+point out that Keitel in his official position, had neither the authority
+nor the opportunity to give orders which resulted in the crimes
+alleged.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">First of all I shall deal with the Documents USSR-90, 386, 364, 366, 106, 407,
+submitted by the Prosecution for the specific purpose of establishing Keitel’s
+responsibility.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">They will show that not in a single case are they orders, decrees, or regulations
+issued by the German High Command of the Armed Forces and that it has
+not been proved that the latter was even informed thereof.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(1) The document Exhibit USSR-90 is a court-martial sentence against the
+German Generals Bernhardt and Hamann, and includes the following sentence:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“During the temporary occupation of the Orlova area ... German Fascist
+intruders committed bestial crimes in huge numbers against the peaceful
+populations and prisoners of war on direct orders of the rapacious Hitler
+Government and the command of the Armed Forces, thus violating the
+rules of warfare established by international law....”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The argumentation leading up to the verdict does not reveal proof of the
+claim that the “German Armed Forces command”—if this means the OKW and
+the Defendant Keitel—ordered the crimes with which the court-martial verdict
+is dealing. This is another of the frequent confusions as to the status of the
+High Command of the Army and the High Command of the Armed Forces. Statements
+on Page 2 of the verdict seem to indicate this; it is said there:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“The defendant, Lieutenant General Bernhardt ... acted according to
+plans and instructions of the Commander-in-Chief of the Army ...”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This document, therefore, cannot furnish proof for the Prosecution’s contention
+that the Defendant Keitel is connected with the crime which is described
+in Document USSR-90.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(2) In connection with the facts in the case dealing with “compulsory labor,”
+the Prosecution submitted in proof of its charge against Keitel Document
+USSR-36, a letter by Reich Marshal Göring, in whom Hitler had vested general
+powers within the framework of the Four Year Plan for this essential project—Plan
+Barbarossa-Oldenburg—as shown in the Green File.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(3) Nor does the report or discussion of the Economic Staff East (Wirtschaftsstab
+Ost) of 7 November 1941 (USSR-386) touch upon the competency and responsibility
+of OKW, because the Economic Staff East had nothing to do with the
+OKW and the Defendant Keitel.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This is also proved by the Green File, the Thomas Document 2353-PS, and
+Keitel’s affidavit, Keitel Document Book 2, Exhibit Number Keitel-11.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The conclusion drawn by the Soviet Russian Prosecution that “Proof is
+established of the OKW commander having been primarily responsible for the
+mobilization of labor in the Reich” is erroneous, if the argument is to establish
+responsibility on the part of the Defendant Keitel. If, on the other hand,
+reference as commander of the OKW is made to Hitler, this cannot be contradicted.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(4) Document USSR-364 is a document from the OKH (High Command of the
+Army), signed by the Quartermaster General of the Army, Wagner. It can be
+seen from the distribution of the document that the OKW was not even informed
+through the usual channels.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(5) Document USSR-366 mentions the name of the defendant as having
+complained because: “OT (Organization Todt) units operating in the vicinity of
+Lvov paid local laborers a daily wage of 25 rubles and because OT availed itself
+of the services of local factories.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The Prosecution’s argument runs that “Keitel writes to Minister Todt ...”
+The document which was submitted does not reveal this, because it does not
+<span class='pageno' title='11' id='Page_11'></span>
+make any mention of such a letter. Inasmuch as the entire economic administration
+and the exploitation of the Eastern Territories had been transferred to the
+Four Year Plan, OKW had no relevant office for this problem.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This becomes evident from the Green File just referred to, and from the
+Führer order for the “Barbarossa-Oldenburg Plan.” Presumably, after discussion
+of the basic question during the conference on the situation, Keitel once
+again received orders from Hitler to get into touch with Reich Minister Todt.
+This would then be one of the instances where the defendant merely served as
+an instrument for the transmission of a Hitler order to the competent office without
+the matter being in any way within the competency of the OKW. In any
+case, the information conveyed by the document does not show in how far this
+problem should be a charge on Keitel.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(6) Document USSR-106 is a Führer Order of 8 September 1942, dealing with
+the employment of prisoners of war and the construction of field fortifications
+behind the front. The heading of the Führer order reads:</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">“The Führer.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">“OKH: General Staff of the Army Operations Section 1.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The order was sighed by the Army General Staff and issued by Halder.
+This proves conclusively that the Defendant Keitel or the OKW was not involved.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(7) Nor is it possible to refer to Document USSR-407 for the establishment
+of the defendant’s participation. This document deals with the order given by
+a local commander, who refers to alleged OKW instructions.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It has already been emphasized on several occasions that the OKW does
+not mean Keitel. It may however be quite possible, as no date of the alleged
+OKW order is mentioned in Document USSR-407, that this is one of the
+numerous cases of confusion, especially since even in Armed Forces circles
+the exact conception of the OKW was not known.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In any case the conclusion by the Soviet Russian Prosecution, after submission
+of this document, that “OKW and Keitel have not only ordered the
+mobilization of labor from the occupied part of Russia, but have worked directly
+in the execution of this order” is incorrect and has not been proved.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Now there is still a category of documentary evidence which contains official
+communiqués of the Extraordinary Commission for the determination and
+investigation of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity. I already some time
+ago dealt with the importance of official documents in the presentation of
+evidence, and pointed out their limited value as evidence.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">If in this connection I discuss the official reports of the investigating commissions,
+then I do so because ostensibly they have been presented in order
+to incriminate Keitel, while in actual fact they furnish proof that the accusations
+against Keitel and the OKW Staff are not based on any reasoning in
+these very weighty Prosecution charges.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">From the large number of documents concerning this I would refer to the
+following:</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Document USSR-4 has been submitted to show that the Soviet-Russian
+population was exterminated through intentional infection with typhus,
+and that this was a case of a planned spreading of typhus-epidemics among
+the Soviet population. For this the following, among others, are named as the
+culprits (Page 10 of the document); “The Hitler Government and the Supreme
+Command of the Armed Forces.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Once again it cannot be seen from the document itself on what concrete
+facts the commission supports the guilt of the “Supreme Command of the German
+Armed Forces” and what military agency is thereby described. There is
+no mention made of an order of the “Supreme Command of the German Armed
+Forces” in any part of this lengthy document. However, since the Prosecution
+have presented this document as proof of the guilt of the Defendant Keitel and
+the OKW, I establish that this document cannot be valid as evidence for an
+accusation against Keitel in this horrible charge.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Document USSR-9 bears the heading:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Report of the Extraordinary State Commission for the determination and
+investigation of the atrocities of the Fascist German invaders and the
+<span class='pageno' title='12' id='Page_12'></span>
+damage caused to citizens, collective enterprises, social organizations,
+State plants and institutions of the Soviet Union.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Regarding the demolitions and bestialities which the German Fascist
+invaders have committed in Kiev.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">On Page 4 it is stated: By order of the German High Command German
+Army units looted, blew up, and destroyed the old cultural monument, the
+Lavra of Kiev. The following are described as responsible: “The German Government
+and the German High Command and all officers and officials listed by
+name.” From the speech of the representative of the Prosecution and from the
+term, “the German Government and the German High Command” it can be
+seen that the High Command of the Armed Forces and Keitel are to be accused
+as having been responsible. This document lacks any positive statement on
+which the Investigating Commission supports this judgment.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It is also shown here that the judgment of the investigating commission—in
+any case with reference to the Defendant Keitel—is not basically supported.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Document USSR-35 is a report “regarding the material damage which the
+Fascist German invaders inflicted on State plants and institutions, collective
+industries, and citizens of the Soviet Union.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This document states:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“The German armies and occupation authorities which carried out the
+directives of the criminal Hitler Government and the High Command of
+the Armed Forces, destroyed and looted the Soviet cities occupied by
+them....”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">To this it must be stated:</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(1) The contents of this document do not show one single concrete “directive”
+issued by the OKW or Keitel.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(2) The OKW had no authority to give orders, and therefore could not issue
+directives.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(3) Therefore the findings of the State investigation commission, which for
+formal reasons would not be binding for the Tribunal, cannot be considered
+as justified insofar as the OKW and Keitel are concerned.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(4) No opinion is going to be expressed as to the remaining contents of the
+reports.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Document USSR-38 is entitled:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Communication of the Extraordinary State Commission for the Determination
+and Investigation of the Atrocities of the Fascist German
+invaders and their Accomplices. Regarding atrocities of the Fascist German
+invaders in the city of Minsk.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In this document it is stated on Page 1:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Following instructions, which were issued directly by the German
+Government, the Hitlerite military authorities destroyed without any
+limitation scientific research institutes, et cetera ... they exterminated
+thousands of peace-loving Soviet citizens and also prisoners of war.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class="fs">Page 13 states:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Responsible for the crimes committed by the Germans at Minsk ... are
+the Hitler Government and the High Command of the Armed Forces.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Nowhere in this document have either concrete or verifiable instructions
+or orders by the Defendant Keitel or from the OKW been given.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Then, on Page 134, Paragraph 1:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the documents previously quoted, either Keitel or the OKW
+is named as the responsible party. However, during the Prosecution’s
+presentation many such official reports were quoted as
+evidence for Keitel’s guilt, which do not even mention either the
+name of the defendant or the OKW. In this connection, I draw
+your attention to Documents USSR-8, 39, 45, 46, and 63. I only
+ask the Tribunal to examine the remaining documents with equal
+<span class='pageno' title='13' id='Page_13'></span>
+care in order to ascertain whether, if submitted in connection with
+Keitel and the OKW, they allow Keitel’s guilt to be concluded or
+whether that is not the case. In this connection I should like to
+add that I am not going to read, and am not referring to, the
+remarks at the bottom of Page 134 (USSR-3).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I beg the Tribunal to take note of my statements on the economic
+exploitation of the occupied territories—Pages 137 to 142—without
+my reading them. Since Reich Marshal Göring’s defense
+counsel has already dealt with this problem and has clarified the
+spheres of competency and responsibility, it would mainly be
+repetition for me to speak on it. However, I wish to draw attention
+to this part of my presentation and beg the Tribunal to take
+judicial notice of it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In the war against Poland as well as later in the West, extended on the
+basis of experiences in Poland, expert personnel trained in military economy
+were detached from the Armed Forces Economic Office in the form of small
+staffs and units to the Army Groups and Army High Commands as expert advisers
+and assistants in all military economic questions which resulted from the conquest
+and occupation of economically and industrially valuable territories. The
+Economic Armament Office, together with the OKW, prepared the organization
+of these groups of experts and technical detachments.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">By and large, they consisted of: (a) Expert advisers with the unit staffs
+(at first known as liaison officers of the OKH Economic Armament Office); (b)
+Reconnaissance Staffs for factories and raw materials important to war economy:
+(c) technical detachments and formations for security, repairs, and protection
+from destruction of essential and vital plants and supply installations.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This organization was prepared by the OKW (Economic Armament Office)
+because it relied on expert research personnel from all three branches of the
+Armed Forces and civilian economy with the “technical emergency aid” (Technische
+Nothilfe). The Army completed the set-up itself.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The organization was subordinated to the senior troop commanders in charge.
+Their employment took place exclusively on the orders of the troop command,
+for which each adviser submitted suggestions from time to time to the unit
+staffs (the General Staff Ib or the Chief Quartermaster).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The missions of these technical detachments were: (a) Advising the command
+concerning the importance and significance of industrial plants and
+supply installations (fuel, water, electric current, repair plants, mines, et cetera);
+(b) Protection of these installations from destruction by the enemy and our own
+forces and the civilian population; (c) Utilization for the purpose of Germany’s
+conduct of the war for troops and population; (d) Examination of essential and
+vital plants and establishment of their productive capacity for German use; (e)
+Establishment of raw material supplies of metals, ore, coal, fuel, et cetera, for
+reindustrialization or Germany’s conduct of the war.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">All functions, with the exception of those mentioned under (d) and (e),
+served exclusively to supply the fighting troops, the occupational troops, and
+the native population. The statistical collections (d) and (e) were reported,
+through military channels to the competent offices at home (Plenipotentiary for
+Economy, Four Year Plan, Minister of Armaments) who had to make disposition
+concerning use and utilization. The Armed Forces itself had no independent
+right of action.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It is correct that (according to the Thomas book, 2353-PS) raw materials and
+also machines were removed to Germany for the production of implements of
+war as the Prosecution charges, since both had served the enemy’s conduct
+of the war and had necessarily gone out of production. No military agency could
+order the removal to Germany, because it had no right at all to dispose of “booty”
+of this sort. Only the three highest Reich authorities mentioned could effect
+such a removal on the basis of a general authority by the Führer or a special
+order by him to the Commander-in-Chief of the Army. The OKW and the Chief
+<span class='pageno' title='14' id='Page_14'></span>
+of the OKW, as well as the Economic Armament Office, had no right of disposition
+and command outside of their own fields, nor did any separate chain of
+command exist from the OKW Economic Armament Office to these detachments,
+et cetera. The communications and report chain ran via the unit staffs
+to the OKH Quartermaster General, with whom the highest Reich authorities
+(Food, Economy, Armament Ministry, Four Year Plan) had representatives who
+reported to their departmental chiefs. Orders by the Defendant Keitel as Chief
+of the OKW concerning utilization, use, or seizure of economic goods have not
+been given; this follows from Document 2353-PS.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The unified leadership of the entire war economy in France and Belgium
+was then centered in Reich Marshal Göring as Delegate of the Four Year Plan
+by the Führer Decree of 16 June 1940.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">For determining the responsibility it is of significance that the staff of the
+Economic Armament Office examined the problems which concerned the armament
+economy and utilization of economy in the occupied territories. Their
+appraisals, which in this respect were regarded as decisive, are collected in Document
+EC-344, coming from the Foreign Department in the OKW (headed by
+Admiral Canaris).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">With reference to Articles 52, 53, 54, and 56 of the Hague Convention of Land
+Warfare, it is explained therein in connection with total warfare that “economic
+rearmament” must be regarded as forming part of the “belligerent enterprise,”
+and accordingly all industrial supplies of raw materials, semifinished and manufactured
+goods as well as machinery, et cetera, are to be regarded as serving
+the war effort. Therefore, according to the viewpoint of the author of this
+opinion, all these goods are liable to be seized and used against compensation
+after the conclusion of peace. Furthermore, the problem of the need for war
+is examined and Germany’s state of economic difficulty at that time is already
+affirmed. For the judgment of the Defendant Keitel this opinion is of significance
+insofar as the well-known Foreign Department under the responsible leadership
+of Admiral Canaris as late as November 1941 gave vent to an opinion which
+justified the economic utilization of the occupied countries. That was the office
+which concerned itself with problems of international law and on which the
+Defendant Keitel based his confidence.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">An organization for all economic requirements and intended to supersede the
+former organization was created for Russia on the basis of experiences in the
+West by Reich Marshal Göring by virtue of a general delegation of authority by
+the Führer.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The chief of the Economic Armament Office together with State Secretary
+Körner drew up this organization for Reich Marshal Göring without participation
+by the Chief of the OKW. The Chief of the OKW for this purpose put General
+Thomas at the disposal of Reich Marshal Göring. The Chief of the OKW did not
+acquire any influence at all on this organization, and severed his own and the
+OKW’s connection with it after Reich Marshal Göring had received full powers
+and the OKW had put General Thomas at his disposal. General Thomas thus
+acted solely on instructions by Reich Marshal Göring. The OKW and the
+Defendant Keitel were never under Reich Marshal Göring’s orders nor were
+they bound by his instructions. The Defendant Keitel was not represented in
+Göring’s Economic Staff and had nothing to do with the Eastern Economic Staff
+(See Thomas book, Page 366).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The execution of the work was centrally directed by the Economic Operations
+Staff in Berlin as part of the Four Year Plan. The local higher command
+in the Eastern district was under the Eastern Economic Staff. To this organization
+was also attached the troops’ supply department. The OKW, and the
+Defendant Keitel as Chief of the OKW, never issued orders concerning the
+exploitation, administration, or confiscation of economic property in occupied
+territory. This is revealed in the book submitted by the Prosecution, Document
+2353-PS. On Page 386 of this document, Thomas, in summarizing, correctly stated
+as follows:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“The Eastern Economic Operations Staff under the Reich Marshal or State
+Secretary Körner was responsible for the whole economic direction of the
+Eastern area; the state secretaries were responsible for departmental
+instructions; the Economic Armament Office was responsible for the
+reconstruction of the economic organization; the Eastern Economic Operations
+Staff was responsible for the execution of all measures.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='15' id='Page_15'></span></p>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class="fs">The same is shown by Document USSR-10:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Directives (of Reich Marshal Göring) for the unified conduct of economic
+management in the zone of operations and in political administrative
+areas to be subsequently established.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This ought to prove that the OKW and Keitel are clear of any responsibility
+for the consequences attendant upon carrying out the measures within the scope
+of the Barbarossa-Oldenburg operation.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to Page 143 and following pages, where I refer to
+the assertion made by the French Prosecution regarding the participation
+of the OKW and Keitel in the cases of Oradour and Tulle.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The French Prosecution have charged the Defendant Keitel in
+person with the commission of war crimes and crimes against
+humanity. The accusation concerns in particular the execution of
+French civilians without a trial. In this connection the cases of
+Oradour and Tulle received special emphasis. They are recorded
+in a report made by the French Government—Document F-236.
+The French Prosecution stated: “Keitel’s guilt in all these things
+is certain.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection it is not my task to discuss the frightful
+events of Oradour and Tulle. As defense counsel for the Defendant
+Keitel I have to examine whether the Prosecution’s assertion
+that the Defendant Keitel bears any guilt or responsibility for
+these atrocious happenings has any foundation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>You will understand that the Defendant Keitel attaches particular
+importance to the production of evidence to the effect that
+he is not responsible for these terrible occurrences, and, further,
+that when such things came to his knowledge he took steps to
+have them cleared up in order that the actual offenders might be
+brought to account. It is an indisputable fact that Keitel had no
+direct part in these crimes. Any responsibility and guilt attaching
+to the defendant can therefore be derived only from his official
+position. No orders of any kind bearing Keitel’s signature have
+been submitted by the Prosecution, so that, whoever is guilty,
+Keitel is not, at any rate, among those directly responsible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The terrible sufferings inflicted on a large number of French
+villages are recorded in the notes of General Bérard dated 6 July
+and 3 August 1944. I pointed out, when this document was submitted,
+that the submission of these complaints alone—that is,
+unaccompanied by the replies, which are also in the hands of
+the Prosecution—cannot convey an objective picture of the actual
+facts, on which to base a pronouncement on the guilt of the
+Defendant Keitel. As the Defendant Keitel, not being empowered
+to issue orders in the matter, cannot possibly be taken into consideration
+as the originator of the orders which led to the complaint,
+any responsibility and guilt on Keitel’s part can therefore
+be based only on the fact that he did not cause the necessary steps
+to be taken on receiving information from the German Armistice
+<span class='pageno' title='16' id='Page_16'></span>
+Commission. What Keitel did or did not do can be gathered only
+from the reply notes and from the directives issued by the OKW
+to the German Armistice Commission.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Here, too, the Defendant Keitel would have been unable to
+provide proof to the contrary, had not the French Prosecution
+themselves submitted a document, F-673, which was intended
+to furnish proof of Keitel’s individual guilt. This document
+was already read by the French Prosecution at the session of
+31 January 1946:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“High Command of the Armed Forces; F. H. Qu., 5 March 1945; Secret.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“WFST./Qu. 2 (I) No. 01487/45 g.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Subject: Alleged Killing of French Nationals without Trial.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“German Armistice Commission; Group Wa/Ib No. 5/45 g.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“1) German Armistice Commission; 2) Commander-in-chief West.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Received: 17 March 1945.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“In August 1944 the French delegation of the German Armistice Commission
+addressed a memorandum to D. W. St. K. (German Armistice
+Commission) describing in detail incidents leading to the alleged shooting
+without justification of Frenchmen during the period of 9 to 23 June 1944.
+Statements made in the French note were almost entirely made in such
+detail that an examination by Germany was possible without any
+difficulty.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“On 26 September 1944 the High Command of the Armed Forces charged
+the German Armistice Commission with the handling of the case. Thereupon,
+the German Armistice Commission asked the Commander-in-Chief
+West to investigate the incidents and to take action with regard to the
+representation of facts given in the French memorandum.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“On 12 February 1945 the German Armistice Commission was informed by
+the Judge of Army Group B that since November 1944 the case was in the
+hands of Army Judge of Pz. AOK/6 (6th Armored Army Command) and
+that Pz. AOK/6 and 2. SS Pz. Division ‘Das Reich’ (2nd Armored SS
+Division ‘Das Reich’) had in the meantime separated from the Army
+Group.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Handling of this matter calls for the following remarks:</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“The Frenchmen, and the delegation of the Vichy Government, have made
+the grave charge against the German Armed Forces of numerous cases of
+unjustified killing of French nationals, in other words, of murder. Germany’s
+interest demanded a reply to this charge at the earliest possible
+moment. Considering the length of time which has elapsed since receipt
+of the French memorandum, it should have been possible to take up at
+least some of the charges and to refute them through actual investigation,
+irrespective of subsequent development in military matters and the transfer
+of troops incidental thereto. If even a portion of the charges made had
+been refuted at once, the French people would have been shown that their
+whole subject matter is based on doubtful material; but because nothing
+was undertaken by the Germans, the opponents’ impression must be that
+we are not in a position to answer these charges.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“The manner in which this case was handled indicates that there possibly
+still exists a great deal of ignorance as to the importance to be attached
+to all reproaches against the German Armed Forces, to counteract any
+enemy propaganda, and to refute immediately any purported German acts
+of atrocity.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“The German Armistice Commission is hereby instructed to continue to
+devote to this matter all possible energy. It is requested to render any
+assistance possible, and particularly to take all steps for expediting
+matters within its own sphere of action. The fact that Pz. AOK/6 (6th
+Armored Army Command) no longer forms part of the forces of the Commander-in-Chief
+West is no reason to hold up the necessary investigations
+in order to clarify and refute the French charges.</span>
+<span class='pageno' title='17' id='Page_17'></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“For information: Army General Staff (Gen. St. d. H.); Headquarters
+Gen./Qu.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“(signed) Keitel.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This document of the OKW, signed by Keitel, shows that:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>1. On receiving the French complaint of 26 September 1944,
+the OKW issued orders to the German Armistice Commission to
+investigate and deal with the matter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>2. The German Armistice Commission thereupon instructed
+Commander-in-Chief West to investigate the incidents.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>3. On receiving a letter from Army Group B, the OKW expressed
+itself as follows:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It was in the German interest to answer these charges at
+the earliest possible moment.</p>
+
+<p>“This case shows that there is still widespread ignorance
+as to the importance of combating all imputations made
+against the German Armed Forces and all enemy propaganda,
+and of refuting immediately any alleged acts of atrocity on
+the part of the Germans.</p>
+
+<p>“The German Armistice Commission is hereby instructed
+to continue to pursue their investigations as energetically as
+possible. It is requested that every possible assistance be
+rendered to the commission and that all possible steps be
+taken to expedite matters in your own sphere of action. The
+fact that Pz. AOK/6 is no longer under the jurisdiction of
+Commander-in-Chief West is no reason for discontinuing the
+necessary investigation in order to clarify and refute the
+French charges.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It may therefore be considered as proved that in this case the
+Defendant Keitel, on receiving information, took energetic steps
+in accordance with the range of his competency as Chief of the
+OKW, and as far as he was in a position to do so. This eliminates
+the charge made by the Prosecution insofar as the Defendant Keitel
+is concerned. At the same time, however, the way in which the
+Defendant Keitel handled this case suggests that he acted in similar
+manner in other cases.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Mr. President, before dealing with the problem of hostages
+which I may discuss later, I should like to discuss the grave
+evidence on the Night and Fog Decree on Page 154.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">War, which is frightful even under orderly international law, becomes atrocious
+when the last restraints are removed. Many terrible things have happened
+during this war and it is impossible to tell which chapter of this book of sorrows
+and tears is the saddest; but, in any case, one of the most lamentable chapters
+is that of the treatment of hostages. In international law the question of
+treatment of hostages is controversial. The taking of hostages is almost generally
+admitted. Doubtless, although taking hostages is assumed to be admissible under
+international law, that has as yet no bearing on their treatment. The treatment,
+even more than the seizure, of hostages must be subject on the one hand to the
+law of absolute military necessity which cannot otherwise be met, and, on the
+<span class='pageno' title='18' id='Page_18'></span>
+other, to the application of all possible guarantees to prevent the indiscriminate
+shooting of hostages as a principle. Any primitive and brutal handling of this
+very institution, which is doubtful under international law and is apt to affect the
+absolutely innocent, must be rejected.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Unfortunately, this problem which seldom arose in previous wars between
+civilized people, acquired considerable importance during World Wars I and II.
+The cases previously taken into consideration and also explained in the Army
+Manual 2g (H. Dv. 2g) (Document Book 1, Exhibit Number Keitel-7) resulted from
+military necessity of troops in operation. As happened with so many things in
+this war, but especially due to the change-over from theater of operations to
+rear area, there finally developed a broadening and degeneration in the application
+of a principle which originally was indisputable according to international
+law.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The immediate connection with military necessity was absent, that is to say,
+with military action; its place was taken by interests which naturally included
+military safeguards, particularly of lines of communications between the front
+zone and home.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It must be said that this fundamental change ought to have been recognized,
+and ought to have been taken into consideration in the handling of the existing
+rules governing hostages. The degeneration in the treatment of hostages was
+decisively influenced by the fact that civil administrative and police organizations
+claimed for themselves one of the extreme means of soldierly warfare and often
+made use of it arbitrarily, wherever they wanted to break resistance, by arresting
+people without concrete individual or even presumptive guilt and by treating
+them from the viewpoint of reprisals. Collective arrests for individual offenses
+come into this category.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">All these cases have nothing to do with the original facts in the cases of
+hostages; but since the word “hostage” is used for all these cases, the Prosecution
+in many cases has placed on the Armed Forces a responsibility which they
+should not bear.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">I request the Tribunal, when judging this complex and when examining the
+responsibility of the Defendant Keitel, to take into consideration:</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(1) The concept of hostages, the basic conditions governing the taking of
+hostages end their treatment had become known to all authorities in command
+and their offices in the Armed Forces by the Army manual regulations (H. Dv. 2g)
+before the war, especially before the campaign in the West. The Documents 1585-PS,
+submitted by the Prosecution itself (discussions of the hostage question with
+the Luftwaffe), and 877-PS (operation orders of the Army for “Case Yellow” and
+the attack in the West, dated 29 October 1939) reveal that special regulations had
+originally been issued for the seizure of hostages. Their application was justifiably
+transferred to the Army offices and later to the military commanders who
+were subordinate to the Army, never to the Armed Forces High Command (OKW).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(2) Nobody could be in doubt, according to existing regulations (H. Dv. 2g),
+as to what authority Army commanders had and as to who had to make a
+decision on a possible shooting of hostages. No supplementary order or supplementary
+regulation was ever issued by the Armed Forces High Command (OKW).
+The letter from Falkenhausen (Military Commander in Belgium), dated 16 September
+1942 (Document 1594-PS), mentioned by the Prosecution, and the report of this
+military commander (1587-PS) are not addressed to Keitel, but quite correctly
+to his superior office, the Army High Command (OKH) Quartermaster General;
+Keitel received neither the letter nor the report. Whether Hitler received them
+in his capacity of Supreme Commander of the Army and military superior of the
+military commanders, Keitel does not know.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(3) The OKW was not informed of the cases in which inhabitants of the
+occupied territories were mistakenly and falsely described as hostages and treated
+without legal procedures.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(4) Whenever hostages, without being connected with the plots and terror
+acts against the occupying power, were held responsible for them without
+local or material connection, such practice is contrary to service regulations.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(5) Insofar as the OKW or the Defendant Keitel was approached by military
+agencies in individual cases referring to hostage problems, for example by the
+Military Commanders in France and Belgium, the evidence has shown that the
+“hostages” to be shot were to be selected from the circle of persons already
+<span class='pageno' title='19' id='Page_19'></span>
+sentenced to death by virtue of the law. However, so that this should not be outwardly
+recognized—for producing the desired deterrent effect—it was to be
+announced that hostages had been shot.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The French Prosecution has cited the OKW and Keitel in connection with this
+complex by means of Document 389-PS, which is the same as UK-25, a Führer
+order of 16 September 1941 drawn up by Keitel. This document, whose contents
+are monstrous, does not, however, have anything to do with the question of taking
+hostages and the treatment of hostages. The word “hostages” does not appear in
+the text. From the subject and from the contents it can be seen that this is an
+order designed to combat the resistance movement in the eastern and southeastern
+war theaters, and therefore is related to the basic principles of the so-called
+ideological war against the Soviet Union, which has been already dealt
+with at another place, and condemned. When the communication of 16 September
+1941 was addressed to the Military Commander in France by the High Command
+of the Army for information purposes the latter had already decreed the so-called
+“Hostages Law” (Document Number 1588-PS). Accordingly no causal connection
+existed, as the French Prosecution has assumed, between the directives signed
+by Keitel and ordered by Hitler in Document 389-PS, and the hostage legislation
+in the West. The latter had been decreed without collaboration or consultation
+of the OKW. The agency to which the Military Commanders in France and in
+Belgium were subordinated was the High Command of the Army (OKH), and not
+the OKW; the agency which specialized in this matter was the Quartermaster
+General (in the OKH). With regard to this it must also be considered that at this
+period of time Hitler himself was the Commander-in-Chief of the Army, which
+explains the above-mentioned references to the OKW. In reality, they were not
+references to the OKW, but to Hitler as Supreme Commander of the Armed
+Forces and Commander-in-Chief of the Army, which were partially routed through
+Hitler’s working staff (the OKW). This however establishes no competence and
+thereby no responsibility of the OKW and the Defendant Keitel as Chief of
+the OKW.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In conclusion I request permission to hand in some literature to the Tribunal
+demonstrating present-day opinions pertaining to international law with regard
+to the question of hostages for consideration in the examination of these facts
+in the case. I limit myself to reading the summarization of expert opinions and
+military practices:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“In summarizing it must be said, concerning the question of taking
+hostages and the execution of hostages, that according to existing
+practices and probably also according to existing rules of international
+law, the taking of hostages in occupied territory is permissible under
+international law insofar as hostages are taken in order to guarantee the
+proper legal behavior of the enemy civilian population. According to the
+commentary by Waltzog, which is standard for the German conduct of
+warfare, it is also a formal requirement, whenever hostages are taken
+according to unwritten international law (common law), that such taking
+of hostages, the reasons therefor, and in particular the threat of their
+execution must be brought to the knowledge of those for whose lawful
+behavior the hostages are to go bail. The question as to whether it is
+permissible to execute hostages cannot be interpreted unequivocally. The
+German jurisprudents of international law, like Meurer, the Englishman,
+Spaight, and the Frenchmen, Sorel and Funck, consider this permissible
+in the extremes of emergency, and therefore not contrary to international
+law.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During the whole course of this Trial, no order made such a
+deep impression on the mind of the public as did the Night and
+Fog Decree. This was an order which originated during the fight
+waged against acts of sabotage and against the resistance movement
+in France. As a result of the withdrawal of troops in connection
+with the campaign against the Soviet Union, the number
+of plots aimed against the security of German troops stationed
+in France, and in particular the acts of sabotage aimed at the
+destruction of all means of communication increased daily. This
+<span class='pageno' title='20' id='Page_20'></span>
+necessitated increased activity on the part of the counterintelligence
+offices, which in its turn led to proceedings being taken
+and sentences being passed by military courts against members of
+the resistance movement and their accomplices. These sentences
+were very severe. In addition to a large proportion of death
+sentences, sentences of imprisonment were also passed. The reports
+made almost daily during the situation conferences led to violent
+disputes in which Hitler, in accordance with his usual habit, tried
+to find someone on whom to put the blame; in this instance he
+fixed upon the far too cumbersome handling of military justice.
+In his spontaneous and explosive way, he ordered directives to
+be worked out for a rapid, effective, and lasting intimidation of
+the population. He declared that imprisonment could not be considered
+an effective means of intimidation. To Keitel’s objection
+that it was impossible to sentence everyone to death and that
+military courts would, in any case, refuse to co-operate, he replied
+that he did not care. Offenses found sufficiently grave to necessitate
+the imposition of capital punishment without very lengthy
+court proceedings would continue to be dealt with as before—that
+is, by the courts—but where this was not the case, he would
+order the suspected persons to be brought secretly to Germany
+and all news of their fate to be withheld, since the publication
+of prison sentences in occupied territory was robbed of its intimidating
+effect by the prospect of the amnesty to be expected
+at the end of the war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Keitel thereupon consulted the chief of the
+Judge Advocate’s Office of the Armed Forces and the chief of
+the counterintelligence office (Canaris), who is also the originator
+of the letter of 2 February 1942, Document UK-35, on the procedure
+to be followed. When repeated applications made to Hitler to
+refrain from this procedure, or at least not to insist upon complete
+secrecy, had no effect, they finally submitted a draft which we
+have before us in the well-known decree of 7 December 1941.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The staff of experts and the Defendant Keitel had succeeded
+in establishing the competency of the Reich Administration of
+Justice for the persons removed to Germany (see last paragraph
+of directives of 7 December 1941). Keitel had guaranteed this
+stipulation by means of the first Enactment Decree governing the
+directives, in which he specified (last sentence in Paragraph I, IV)
+that unless orders to the contrary were issued by the OKW, the
+case would be turned over to the civil authorities in accordance
+with Section 3, Paragraph 2, second sentence, of the Articles of
+War. The defendant believed that in this way he had at least
+made certain that the persons concerned would have the benefit
+of regular court proceedings and that in accordance with the
+<span class='pageno' title='21' id='Page_21'></span>
+German regulations for the accommodation and treatment of prisoners
+on trial and prisoners serving a sentence, there would be
+no danger to life and limb. Keitel and his staff of experts reassured
+themselves by the fact that however cruel the suffering and
+suspense endured by those concerned might be, the lives of the
+deported persons had at least been saved.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection, allusion is also made to the text of the
+covering letter of 12 December 1941. As the Codefendant General
+Jodl stated during his examination, a certain wording was regularly
+adopted to indicate that the signatory did not agree with the
+order submitted. The covering letter begins with the words: “It
+is the carefully considered desire of the Führer ...”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The closing sentence runs: “The attached directives ... represent
+the Führer’s views.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Persons who received such letters knew from that wording
+that here was another order of the Führer which could not be
+evaded, and concluded that the order should be applied as leniently
+as possible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The letter of 2 February 1942 originated with the counterintelligence
+office (Amt Ausland Abwehr), and the original which
+is before you must have been signed by Canaris. At that time
+the defendant was not in Berlin where, after promulgation of the
+decree of 7 December 1941, the matter was dealt with further.
+Keitel, at the Führer’s headquarters, was not informed of the
+contents of the letter. In connection with the above remarks, the
+possibility of leniency in application, which might be deduced
+from the wording of the letter, resided in the fact that counterintelligence
+offices were directed “to insure as far as possible
+before making the arrest that they were in possession of sufficient
+evidence to justify a conviction of the offender.” The competent
+military court had also to be approached before the arrest took
+place with a view to ascertaining whether the evidence was
+adequate.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In Germany the persons concerned were to be handed over to
+the Reich Administration of Justice. The correctness of the Defendant
+Keitel’s assumption in this respect is borne out by the fact
+that Canaris, in view of his attitude with which the Tribunal is
+familiar, would never have ordered a prisoner to be handed over
+to the Gestapo. As already stated, the Defendant Keitel did not
+know of the letter of 2 February 1942.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Although the Defendant Keitel believed that he had succeeded
+as far as possible in safeguarding those in question, the Night
+and Fog Decree, as it was later called, weighed heavily on his
+mind. Keitel does not deny that this decree is incompatible with
+international law and that he knew that.
+<span class='pageno' title='22' id='Page_22'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What Keitel denies, however, is that he knew—or that prior
+to the Nuremberg Trial he knew—that on arrival in the Reich
+the persons involved were imprisoned by the Police and then
+transferred to concentration camps. This was contrary to the
+meaning and purpose of the decree. The Defendant Keitel could
+not know of this because in cases which did not involve proceedings
+by a military court, the competency of the Armed Forces only
+extended to turning over the persons concerned through the competent
+military court officials to the Police to be transferred to
+Germany and there turned over to the Administration of Justice.
+The Defendant Keitel is unable to say from his own knowledge
+why so many persons were brought into concentration camps and
+there subjected to the treatment known as “Night and Fog,” as
+described by witnesses who have appeared here. The evidence
+presented to this Tribunal must lead to the conclusion that all
+political suspects who, as a result of political measures, were
+removed from the occupied territories to Germany for detention
+in concentration camps were without the knowledge of the military
+authorities designated “NN” prisoners by the Police, for according
+to the testimonies we have heard the majority of persons in “NN”
+camps had not been formally sentenced by military courts in
+occupied territories for transfer to Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is evident therefore that Police authorities in the occupied
+territories made use of this decree as a universal and unrestricted
+<span class='it'>carte blanche</span> for deportations, exceeding every conceivable limit
+and disregarding the exclusive rights exercised by the military
+authorities and the rules of procedure imposed upon them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Such a state of affairs in the occupied territories without the
+knowledge of the Armed Forces authorities can only be explained
+by the fact that as a result of the appointment of Higher SS and
+Police leaders the military commanders of the occupied territories
+no longer had executive powers in Police affairs and that these
+Higher SS and Police leaders received their orders from the Reichsführer
+SS.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Reichsführer SS and the Higher SS and Police leaders were
+never authorized by the OKW to apply this decree, which was
+intended as a police executive measure to be used only by the
+Armed Forces. The decree affected only those offices of the Armed
+Forces exercising judicial authority; and it is clear from the wording
+that it was restricted to these and drafted to apply to them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The German Armistice Commission’s letter of 10 August 1944
+(Document 843-PS) proves that the OKW really had no knowledge
+of this improper application of the decree of 7 December 1941. It
+says there:
+<span class='pageno' title='23' id='Page_23'></span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“... that the basis for arrests seems to have undergone a
+change, since in the early stages they were only made in
+individual cases of attacks on the Reich or the occupation
+forces; in other words, those elements were apprehended who
+had played an active part in definite cases”—and who were
+liable to punishment under those articles of the Hague Convention
+which refer to land warfare—“whereas at present ...
+numerous persons are also being deported to Germany who,
+on account of their anti-German sentiments, are being removed
+from France as a precautionary measure ...”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Paragraph 4 of that letter contains the following passage:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The above-mentioned decree is based on the condition that
+the persons arrested will be made the subject of judicial proceedings.
+There is reason to believe that on account of the
+number of cases—especially those coming within the scope
+of precautionary measures—such proceedings are now frequently
+dispensed with and prisoners are no longer confined
+in the detention or penal institutions of the German legal
+authorities, but in concentration camps. In this respect, too,
+there has been a considerable change as compared with the
+original provisions of the decree ...”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The OKW’s reply of 2 September 1944, which is signed by
+Dr. Lehmann, refers expressly to the directives of the Führer decree
+of 7 December 1941, the so-called Night and Fog Decree. It contains
+no statement to the effect that the original conditions for
+deportation to Germany were changed by the OKW.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This reply, however, was sent from Berlin without the knowledge
+of the Defendant Keitel; and the Armistice Commission’s letter
+was obviously also sent to Berlin, where the legal department of
+the Armed Forces was situated. Keitel himself was at the Führer’s
+headquarters and did not hear of the correspondence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It must be admitted that failure to reply immediately to the
+German Armistice Commission’s letter of 10 August 1944, with the
+explanation that this constituted an abuse of the decree of 7 December
+1941 and the directives issued in connection with it, was a grave
+omission. An investigation should have been initiated at once in
+order to find and punish those responsible for this abuse. Insofar
+as the Tribunal should regard Hitler’s military staff as guilty, the
+Defendant Keitel accepts responsibility within the scope of his general
+responsibility as Chief of the OKW.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps this will be a convenient time to take
+a recess.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='24' id='Page_24'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: Mr. President, the Prosecution have charged the
+Defendant Keitel with participating in the deportations for the purpose
+of obtaining forced labor. In this connection Keitel declares
+that his competency did not cover the procurement, recruiting, and
+conscription of people in the occupied territories nor did it cover
+allocation of the labor forces procured in this way for the armament
+industry. The Codefendant Sauckel confirmed this in his testimony
+of 27 May 1946.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Mr. President, I should like to have official notice taken of
+the following statements without my reading them. My colleague
+Dr. Servatius, according to our agreement, will explain the connection
+between the Armed Forces replacement and the procurement
+of manpower through the Plenipotentiary General for the
+Allocation of Labor.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The Codefendant Sauckel gave the following testimony:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Question: You mean by that that the OKW and the Defendant Keitel had
+no functions whatsoever appertaining to the matter of procurement,
+recruiting, and conscription of labor in the occupied territories?</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Answer: He had no function whatsoever appertaining to this matter.
+I got in touch with Field Marshal Keitel, because the Führer frequently
+charged me to ask Field Marshal Keitel to transmit his orders by phone
+or by instructions to the army groups.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Question: Did the OKW, and in particular Keitel as Chief of the OKW,
+have any function appertaining to the question of labor allocation in the
+homeland?</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Answer: No; because the commitment of workers took place in the economic
+branches for which they had been requested. They had nothing to do
+with the OKW.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">During the cross-examination by General Alexandrov documents were presented
+which, according to the opinion of the Prosecution, should prove the
+participation of Keitel and the OKW. In this connection it must be examined
+whether and in what way the OKW and Keitel had participated in the sphere of
+duty of Defendant Sauckel as Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor
+(GBA). Document USSR-365, presented by the Prosecution, contains the basic
+provisions concerning spheres of tasks and powers of the GBA, the decree of
+21 March 1942 about the appointment of Sauckel as GBA, the order of Göring as
+Delegate for the Four Year Plan dated 27 March 1942, the program for labor
+allocation, and the task and solution as conceived by Sauckel.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">These documents give expression to the relationships and contacts of the GBA
+with many offices. These relationships and contacts vary in their nature.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The jurisdiction and the official channels in the sphere of tasks of the GBA
+are clear: He is the spokesman for the Four Year Plan (Order Number 3 of
+27 March 1942) and he was therefore subordinate to Reich Marshal Göring and
+Hitler, who was identified with the Four Year Plan. The relationships and contacts
+of the OKW or Keitel with the GBA and his sphere of tasks, according to
+the outcome of the evidence (testimony of Keitel, Sauckel, and the documents)
+were as follows:</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The replacement system for the whole Armed Forces was under the jurisdiction
+of the Defendant Keitel in his capacity as Chief of Staff of the High
+Command of the Armed Forces (OKW). Losses at the front were reported to the
+OKW by each individual branch of the Armed Forces and at the same time
+replacements were requested.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">On the basis of these requests, Keitel submitted a report to the Führer,
+according to which replacements had to be procured for the troops of the various
+branches of the Armed Forces at certain designated times by the service commands
+through their replacement inspectorates.</span>
+<span class='pageno' title='25' id='Page_25'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The replacement inspectorates consequently called up the recruit year group,
+besides those draftees who had been deferred up to that time. With the war
+progressing, the result was almost invariable that, for instance, the Armament
+Ministry (for the deferred employees of the armament industry), the Ministry for
+Agriculture (for the deferred employees of agriculture), the Transportation Ministry
+(for the deferred employees working for the railroad), et cetera, made the
+greatest difficulties with regard to the demands of the replacement authorities,
+and protested against them.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">They pointed out that the tasks of the various departments would suffer
+dangerously if the deferred employees were removed without further ado. The
+competent ministers requested that before the release of deferred employees new
+workers should be procured to make up for those released.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Therefore, the matter was referred by way of the labor offices to the Plenipotentiary
+General for the Allocation of Labor (GBA), whose task it was to
+procure the necessary manpower for the domestic labor allocation required. The
+Defendant Sauckel as the GBA, who as a special deputy personally did not have
+at his disposal an independent organization of his own for the recruiting, procurement,
+and possible conscription of labor, was therefore forced to get in touch with
+the competent authorities in the occupied territories for the execution of his task.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(a) In the occupied territories under civil administration (Holland, Norway,
+East), it was the Reich Commissioner who had to assist Sauckel.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(b) In the territories under military commanders (France, Belgium and the
+Balkans) it was the Quartermaster General of the Army.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(c) In Italy, in the highest instance, it was the Ambassador, Rahn.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This is obvious from the decree of 27 March 1942.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Before Sauckel became active in the execution of his task in the various territories,
+he invariably turned to Hitler, whose subordinate he was with respect to
+the Four Year Plan, in order to obtain through his instructions the necessary
+backing by the local authorities. This was done in such a way that the order was
+issued to the local authorities to give Sauckel the assistance which he considered
+necessary for the execution of his task. The Defendant Keitel was not present at
+such discussions between Hitler and Sauckel, nor did he have any jurisdiction or
+competence in these questions. However, somebody had to inform the local authorities
+about Hitler’s orders, and the result was that Hitler, who did not recognize
+any difficulties of jurisdiction, told the next best man to inform the local authorities
+about Sauckel and to point out Hitler’s wish to grant him all the necessary
+assistance.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">These “next best” were Keitel, for the military administration of the occupied
+territories, or Dr. Lammers, for the territories under civilian administration.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Such was the contact which existed between Keitel and Sauckel in this matter.
+How the details of recruiting or otherwise procuring labor were carried out was
+not within the competence of the OKW, nor did they receive any reports on the
+matter. The interest of the OKW was limited to the fact that the required number
+of soldiers were placed at its disposal through induction by the replacement
+authorities. In particular, the OKW and the Defendant Keitel had nothing to do
+with the allocation of the labor procured by the Plenipotentiary General for the
+Allocation of Labor within war economy; this was solely the business of the
+labor offices, where firms requiring labor requested the workers deemed necessary.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(1) The name of Keitel stands at the beginning of Sauckel’s activity, as submitted
+by the Prosecution, because Keitel was cosignatory to the Führer decree
+concerning the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor (Document
+USSR-365). From repeated references of the Prosecution to this fact the conclusion
+must be drawn that apparently it sees in this cosignatory act of the Defendant
+Keitel the beginning of a chain of developments, at the end of which stood such
+frightful happenings as were presented here.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In this connection I would refer to the significance, expounded elsewhere,
+of the cosignature by Keitel as Chief of the OKW on such decrees of the Führer.
+This fact, which penally cannot be considered as determinative, does not constitute
+guilt for the reason that all conception of the events occurring during the further
+course of developments was lacking.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(2) If the Führer’s decree of March 1942 provides the legal origin of the
+Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor (GBA), the first step in the
+participation of this official is also connected with the name of Keitel as head
+<span class='pageno' title='26' id='Page_26'></span>
+of the OKW, as the personnel replacements matters were subordinated to him
+and he made his requests for replacement of losses at the front to the subordinate
+military replacement offices. Here also the same applies as in (1), as neither an
+appreciable determinative effect nor criminal guilt was involved.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">(3) Owing to the situation, as characterized by the shortage of manpower,
+there came into being a purely factual connection between the military
+personnel requirements and the requirements of the economic replacement of
+workers, without Keitel thereby coming in contact with the GBA either as regards
+competence or orders.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Sauckel confirmed the statement of Keitel that the OKW had nothing to do
+with the recruiting, levying, or any other mobilization of labor, nor with the
+allocation of the labor procured for German economy.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have to refer to some documents which the French Prosecution
+have submitted to incriminate the OKW and Keitel on account of
+active participation in deportation. These are Documents 1292-PS,
+3819-PS, 814-PS, and 824-PS.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The first document is a marginal note by the Chief of the Reich
+Chancellery, Dr. Lammers, on a conference with Hitler, at which
+the question of procuring labor for 1944 was discussed. The Defendant
+Keitel took part in this discussion. Annexed to this report is
+a copy of a letter from the Defendant Sauckel dated 5 January 1944,
+in which he sums up the results of the conference of 4 January and
+proposes a Führer decree. I quote the following passages:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“5. The Führer pointed out that all German offices in occupied
+territories and countries within the Tripartite Agreement
+must become convinced of the necessity of taking in foreign
+labor, in order to be able to give uniform support to the
+Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor in carrying
+out the required organization, propaganda, and police
+measures.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='noindent'>I quote from the penultimate paragraph:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In my opinion the decree should in the first place be sent to
+the following offices ...</p>
+
+<p>“3. The Chief of the OKW, Field Marshal Keitel, for the
+information of the Military Commanders in France and Belgium,
+the Military Commander Southeast, the General accredited
+to the Fascist Republican Government of Italy, the
+chiefs of the army groups in the East.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The document therefore proves that Field Marshal Keitel took
+part in a conference, without, however, stating his point of view
+on the problem of labor procurement; and that he was to be informed
+of the Führer decree so that the military commanders might
+be informed. This confirms what the Defendant Keitel stated in
+the passages which I have not read as to how he came to be concerned
+with this question. The second and third documents refer
+to a conference in the Reich Chancellery on 11 July 1944, in which
+Field Marshal Keitel did not take part.
+<span class='pageno' title='27' id='Page_27'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now the French prosecutor has made the statement that the teletype
+is an order issued by Field Marshal Keitel to the military
+commanders to carry out the decisions of the conference of 11 July.
+M. Herzog has said in this connection that Keitel’s order was dated
+15 July 1944. A brief examination of the document, a photostat,
+shows it to be a teletype dated 9 July, containing an invitation
+from the Chief of the Reich Chancellery, Dr. Lammers, to a conference
+on 11 July, which invitation Keitel transmitted to the military
+commanders.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This was, therefore, an error. The conclusions based by the
+Prosecution on this document are therefore also invalid, but the
+document is interesting from another point of view as well. It contains
+the following statement:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The following directives will govern the attitude of military
+commanders or their representatives:</p>
+
+<p>“... I refer to my directives for the collaboration of the
+Armed Forces in the procurement of labor from France
+(OKW/West/ku (Verw. 1 u. 2 West) Nr. 05210/44 geh.).”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Keitel requested me to call the attention of the
+Court to this method of expression for the following reasons:
+Numerous documents bearing the signature “Keitel” have been
+submitted here. In accordance with his position, which has already
+been described and which excluded all powers of command, Keitel
+never used the first person in communications or transmissions of
+orders. Apart from this document, only one other teletype was
+submitted by the Prosecution in which the first person is used.
+In consideration of the large number of documents which bear
+out Keitel’s statement, his claim that he was transmitting an
+order from the Führer must be believed; and, indeed, the whole
+style of wording is that of a Führer order.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>General Warlimont (Document 3819-PS) also expressly refers
+during the conference of 11 July to a “recently issued Führer
+order,” the contents of which as reproduced by him are exactly as
+contained in the teletype directive bearing the signature “Keitel.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The newly-submitted Document F-824 (RF-1515) is also significant
+and confirms the evidence given by the Defendant Keitel. This
+is a letter written on 25 July 1944 by the Commander-in-Chief West,
+Von Rundstedt, who in the meantime had become the Chief of the
+Military Commanders in France and Belgium. It states that “by
+order of the Führer the demands of the GBA and of Speer are to
+be fulfilled”; further, that in the event of evacuation of the battle
+area measures must be taken to secure refugees for labor and
+finally, that reports on the measures taken must be sent to the OKW.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This reference to the Führer’s order shortly after 11 July 1944
+shows, as does Warlimont’s statement, that no directives from Keitel
+<span class='pageno' title='28' id='Page_28'></span>
+or the OKW existed. It may therefore be considered proved that
+neither Keitel himself nor the OKW had any part in measures for
+the recruitment or conscription of labor. The OKW was the office
+responsible for transmitting the orders which Hitler as Sauckel’s
+superior wished to forward to the military commanders; it had no
+competence and no legal responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nor is this complex in line with subjects within the ministerial
+scope of the OKW, where at least there functioned a team of experts
+providing an opportunity for voicing objections.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the sphere of labor procurement and labor commitment Keitel
+was in contact with Sauckel’s activities at the following points:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(a) He was cosignatory of the Führer’s decree of 21 March 1942
+concerning the appointment of the GBA;</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(b) He transmitted Hitler’s orders to support the activities of the
+GBA by special instructions to the local military authorities in the
+occupied territories.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, the French Prosecution, at the session of 2 February 1946,
+made the following statement in regard to the deportation of the
+Jews, within the scope of the Defendant Keitel’s responsibility:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I shall discuss the order for the deportation of the Jews later;
+and I shall prove that in the case of France this order was
+the result of joint action on the part of the military government,
+the diplomatic authorities, and the Security Police. This
+leads to the conclusion that: (1) the Chief of the High Command,
+<span class='it'>et cetera</span>; (2) the Reich Foreign Minister, and (3) the
+Chief of the Security Police and Reich Security Main Office
+(RSHA) must necessarily have been informed of and have
+agreed to this action, for it is clear that through their official
+functions they must have learned that such measures concerning
+important matters were taken, and also that the decisions
+were invariably made jointly by the staffs of three
+different administrations. These three persons are therefore
+responsible and guilty.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If you examine the very detailed treatment of this point of the
+Indictment you will find that the High Command of the Armed
+Forces is not mentioned and that no document is produced which
+originates either with the OKW or with the Defendant Keitel. It
+appears from the Keitel affidavit, Document Book 2, that the military
+commander for France, who is mentioned several times, was
+not subordinated to the OKW. In handling this question the Prosecution
+have attempted to prove that the “Army” as M. Faure says,
+co-operated with the Foreign Office and the Police, and is endeavoring
+to place responsibility for this co-operation upon the highest
+authorities, that is, in the case of the Army, on the OKW, and
+<span class='pageno' title='29' id='Page_29'></span>
+therefore on Keitel. This deduction is erroneous. In order to make
+that clear, I must point out that there was a military commander
+in France. This military commander was invested with civil and
+military authority and represented the defunct state authority, so
+that in addition to military tasks he had police and political functions.
+The military commanders were appointed by the OKH and
+received their orders from the latter. It follows that on this question
+they had no direct relations with the OKW. Since the Defendant
+Keitel as Chief of the OKW was not superior to the OKH, there
+is likewise no direct relation either of subordination or seniority.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>M. Faure’s statement in this connection is unfortunately true. In
+France there existed a large number of authorities who worked
+along different lines, contradicted each other, and frequently encroached
+upon each other’s spheres of competency. The OKW and
+the Defendant Keitel had actually nothing to do with the Jewish
+question in France or with the deportations to Auschwitz and other
+camps; they had no powers of command or control, and therefore
+no responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact that the letter K in the telegram of 13 May 1942 (Document
+RF-1215) was interpreted to mean Keitel is characteristic of
+the attitude adopted by the prosecuting authorities, all of whom
+assumed that the Defendant Keitel was implicated. The French
+Prosecutor has fortunately cleared up the error.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prisoner-of-War Question.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fate of prisoners of war has always aroused considerable
+feeling. All civilized nations have tried to alleviate the fate of soldiers
+who fell into the hands of the enemy as far as was possible
+without prejudicing the conduct of the war. The reaching of an
+agreement to be adhered to even when the nations were engaged
+in a life and death struggle has been considered one of the most
+important advances of civilization. The torturing uncertainty with
+regard to the fate of these soldiers seemed to be ended; their
+humane treatment guaranteed; the dignity of the disarmed opponent
+assured.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Our belief in this achievement of human society has begun to
+waver, as in the case of so many other instances. Although the
+agreement was formally adhered to originally owing to the determined
+resistance of the general officers, we must nevertheless admit
+that a brutal policy oblivious of the nation’s own sons and of anything
+but its own striving after power, has in many cases disregarded
+the sanctity of the Red Cross and the unwritten laws of
+humanity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The treatment of the responsibility of the Defendant Keitel in
+the general complex of the prisoner-of-war system comprises the
+following separate problems:
+<span class='pageno' title='30' id='Page_30'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) The general organization of the treatment of prisoners of
+war, that is, the German legislation on the prisoner-of-war system;
+(2) the power of command over prisoner-of-war camps, which are
+classified under Oflag, Stalag, and Dulag; (3) the supervision and
+control of this legislation and its application; (4) the individual cases
+which have been brought before the Court in the course of the
+indictment.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Since the organization of the prisoner-of-war system has been
+set forth as part of the presentation of evidence, I can restrict
+myself to stating that Keitel was, by order of Hitler and within the
+scope of his assignments as War Minister, in accordance with the
+decree of 4 February 1938 competent and to that extent responsible:
+(a) for the material right to issue ordinances within the entire local
+and pertinent sphere, restricted in part by co-operation and co-responsibility
+regarding the utilization of prisoner-of-war labor;
+(b) for the general allocation of prisoners of war arriving in Germany
+to the corps area commander, without having powers of command
+over prisoner-of-war camps and prisoners of war themselves;
+(c) for the general supervision of the camps in the OKW area not
+including those within the zone of operations, the rear Army area,
+or the area of the military commanders, nor the Navy and Air Force
+prisoner-of-war camps.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The competent office in the OKW was the “Chief of the Prisoner-of-War
+Organization,” who was several times made personally
+responsible by the Prosecution. The Defendant Keitel attaches importance
+to the fact that the Chief of the Prisoners of War Organization
+was his subordinate through the Armed Forces Department.
+Hence the responsibility of the Defendant Keitel in this domain is
+self-evident, even in those cases in which he did not personally sign
+orders and decrees.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The basic regulations for the treatment of prisoners of war were:
+(1) The service regulations issued by the Chief of the OKW within
+the scope of normal preparations for mobilization, and laid down
+in a series of Army, Navy, and Air Force publications; (2) the
+stipulations of the Geneva Convention, to which special reference
+was made in the service regulations; (3) the general decrees and
+orders which became necessary from time to time in the course of
+events.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Apart from the treatment of Soviet Russian prisoners of war
+who were subject to regulations on an entirely different basis, to
+which I shall later make particular reference, the provisions of the
+service regulations in accordance with international law, that is the
+Geneva Convention, held good. The OKW exercised supervision
+over the strict observance of these Army service regulations through
+an Inspector of the Prisoners of War Organization and, from 1943
+<span class='pageno' title='31' id='Page_31'></span>
+on, through a further control agency, the Inspector General of the
+Prisoners of War Organization.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The representatives of the protecting powers and the International
+Red Cross may be considered as constituting an additional
+control agency, which no doubt submitted to the various governments
+reports on inspections and visits to the camps, in accordance
+with the provisions of the Geneva Convention. No such reports
+have been submitted here by the Prosecution; I shall come back to
+the charges made here by the French prosecutor. But the fact that
+the British and American prosecutors, for instance, have not submitted
+such reports may well permit the conclusion that the protecting
+powers did not discover any serious violations with regard
+to the treatment of inmates of prisoner-of-war camps.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The treatment of prisoners of war, which led to no serious complaints
+during the first few years of the war with the Western
+Powers—I except isolated cases like that of Dieppe—became more
+and more difficult for the OKW from year to year, because political
+and economic considerations gained a very strong influence in this
+sector. The Reichsführer SS tried to get the Prisoners of War
+Organization into his own hands. The resulting struggles for
+power caused Hitler to turn over the Prisoners of War Organization
+to Himmler from October 1944 on, the alleged reason being that
+the Armed Forces had shown itself to be too weak and allowed
+itself to be influenced by doubts based on international law.
+Another important factor was the influence exerted on Hitler, and
+through him on the OKW, by the labor authorities and the armament
+sector. This influence grew stronger as the labor shortage
+increased.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Party Chancellery, the German Labor Front, and the Propaganda
+Ministry also played a part in this question, which was in
+itself purely a military one. The OKW was engaged in a constant
+struggle with all these agencies, most of which had more influence
+than the OKW.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All these circumstances must be taken into consideration in
+order properly to understand and evaluate the responsibility of the
+Defendant Keitel. As he himself had to carry out the functions “by
+order,” and since Hitler always kept the problem of the Prisoners
+of War Organization under his personal control for reasons previously
+described, the Defendant Keitel was scarcely ever in a
+position to voice his own, that is, military, objections against instructions
+and orders.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Treatment of French Prisoners of War.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As a result of the agreement of Montoire, the keynote to apply
+to relations with French prisoners of war became “collaboration.”
+<span class='pageno' title='32' id='Page_32'></span>
+Their treatment moved in the direction indicated by this; and discussions
+with Ambassador Scapini brought about a considerable
+improvement for them. In this connection I refer to the affidavit
+of Ambassador Scapini, who states among other things:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is correct that General Reinecke examined the questions
+at hand objectively and without hostility, and that he attempted
+to regulate them reasonably when this depended on
+his authority alone. He took a different attitude when the
+pressure exercised on the OKW by the Labor Service—that
+is by the Allocation of Labor—and sometimes by the Party
+made itself felt.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The prisoners of war used for labor were scarcely guarded,
+and those employed in the country had almost complete freedom of
+movement. By virtue of the direct understanding with the Vichy
+Government there were considerable alleviations in comparison
+with the rules of the Geneva Convention, after repatriation under
+the armistice provisions had very considerably lessened the number
+of the original prisoners of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To mention just a few ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Nelte, is there anything very important
+in these next few pages, until you get to Page 183?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: It is the treatment of the French ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: If you would only deal with it in a very
+general way. I should have thought there was nothing very important
+until you get to Page 183 where you begin to deal with
+the accusation in reference to the Sagan case. You see, it is
+12 o’clock now.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I believe that by 1 o’clock I shall be through. Or
+am I to understand your remark to mean that you are limiting
+my speech to a certain time? I asked you to grant me 7 hours
+for my speech, and my request ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: That is what the Tribunal’s order was.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I submitted my request to the Tribunal, and believed
+I could assume that in this particular case my request was
+granted, but if that is not the case ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, the Tribunal will give you until 12:30
+on account of any interruptions which I may have made. But I
+again suggest to you that there is really nothing between 178 and
+183 which is of any real importance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. NELTE: I hope, Mr. President, that that does not mean
+that these statements are to be considered irrelevant. I think my
+subjective opinions ...
+<span class='pageno' title='33' id='Page_33'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I said “of real importance.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">DR. NELTE: (1) Release of all prisoners of war born in or before 1900; (2)
+release of fathers of families with numerous children and widowers with children;
+(3) considerable alleviation of the mail and parcel facilities; increased German
+support for officers’ and enlisted personnel camps by establishing institutions for
+entertainment and physical welfare of the prisoners of war; (4) for officer candidates,
+facilitation of their further training in their civilian occupation and care
+by a French General, Didelet.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">As Ambassador Scapini himself has testified, he and the members of his
+delegation had complete freedom of correspondence with and access to all camps
+and labor detachments, except for special military reasons in isolated cases. The
+members of the delegation were able to speak to their prisoner comrades privately,
+like every representative of a protecting power, and they were particularly
+able to make detailed inquiries about conditions with the French camp leader or
+the trustees, who were elected by the prisoners of war themselves. In addition to
+this, officers who had been selected by him personally were placed at his disposal
+as his assistants.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The subsequent regrettable occurrences, as presented by the French Prosecution
+here, resulted from the deterioration of the political and military situation.
+One of these occurrences was the escape of General Giraud, which Hitler, in spite
+of all arguments brought by the OKW, used to have measures against the French
+generals and officers increased in severity. The second decisive incident was the
+Allied invasion of Africa, which led to general unrest and to numerous attempts
+at escape. Finally, at the time of the last stage of the war, measures were applied
+which can only be explained by the—I would call it catastrophic—morale.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In examining the responsibility of the Defendant Keitel it must be considered
+that he did not possess any direct influence on the occurrences in the camps and
+workshops. His responsibility can only be determined if it is proven that he had
+caused a lack of necessary supervision, or that no intervention had taken place
+after learning of such occurrences. In this respect, however, there is no proof of
+guilt of the OKW.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The French Prosecution, in the charges against the Defendant Keitel, have
+presented a note from Ambassador Scapini to the German Ambassador, Abetz, of
+4 April 1941 under a collective number, F-668. This refers to the retaining of
+French civilians in Germany as prisoners of war. This document states on Page 5:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“In order to facilitate the examination of the categories to be released,
+I am transmitting enclosed a summarized chart. I am also enclosing a
+copy of the note of the German Armistice Commission Number 178/41 of
+20 January 1941, which refers to the decision of the OKW to liberate all
+French civilians who are being treated as prisoners of war.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“I hope that the execution of this decision will be expedited through
+this report, which I have the honor to submit to you.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">I have asked the French Prosecution to pass on to me the note of the German
+Armistice Commission Number 178/41 of 20 January 1941, in which this decision
+of the OKW is mentioned. I believe that the copy of this note, which was attached
+to the communication of 4 April 1941 (Document F-668) should have been handed
+over with this document, because it was part of this document. Unfortunately
+this has not been done.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">From the reference it can be seen that the OKW, and thereby the Defendant
+Keitel, held the view that things would have to be dealt with in a correct manner
+in accordance with the agreements with France, and that the OKW, which was
+the proper authority for these fundamental orders with regard to the prisoners
+of war, had decided to release all French civilians who were being treated as
+prisoners of war.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It is difficult to recognize how this document can serve as evidence of guilt
+of the Defendant Keitel. Rather will this document have to be regarded as symptomatic
+of the fact that the Defendant Keitel, when violations against existing
+agreements came to his knowledge, saw to it that they were stopped.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The Treatment of Soviet Russian Prisoners of War.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Hitler already regarded the prisoner-of-war problem as a personal domain of
+his legislation, and the more time passed, the less he regarded it from the points
+<span class='pageno' title='34' id='Page_34'></span>
+of view of international law and military needs, but rather from a political and
+economic angle. The problem in the treatment of Soviet Russian prisoners of war
+from the very beginning was also subject to ideological considerations which for
+him was the primary motive in the war against the Soviet Union. The fact that
+the Soviet Union was not a member of the Geneva Convention was exploited by
+Hitler, in order to obtain a free hand in the treatment of Soviet Russian prisoners
+of war.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">He stated to the generals that the Soviet Union felt equally free from all
+stipulations which had been created by the Geneva Convention for the protection
+of prisoners of war. One must read the decrees of 8 September 1941 (Document
+Number EC-338, Exhibit Number USSR-356) in order to understand clearly Hitler’s
+attitude. In the official document of the counterintelligence office (Amt Ausland
+Abwehr) of 15 September 1941, rules were laid down, which were to be observed
+according to international law, concerning the treatment of prisoners of war
+where the Geneva Convention did not apply between belligerents.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The Defendant Keitel has testified on the witness stand that he had accepted
+the viewpoints laid down in this document and had presented them to Hitler.
+The latter strictly refused to rescind the decree of 8 September 1941. He told Keitel:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“Your doubts originate from the soldierly conception of a chivalrous war.
+Here we are concerned with the destruction of an ideology.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Keitel noted this passage down word for word and added to his written statement
+of 15 September 1941: “I therefore approve and countenance these measures.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It was a typical example of Keitel expressing his doubts and Hitler taking
+his final decision. Keitel stood up for these decisions and did not let his subordinate
+offices know that he was of a different opinion. Such was his attitude. For this
+also he is, within the limits of his official position, taking responsibility.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">What Keitel actually thought is revealed in the excerpt submitted as Document
+Keitel-6, Document Book 1, from the book <span class='gesp'>Employment Conditions for
+Eastern Workers and Soviet Russian Prisoners of War</span>. The
+Codefendant Speer has testified in cross-examination that he over and over again
+told the Defendant Keitel that any employment of prisoners of war of any enemy
+country in enterprises prohibited by the Geneva Convention was out of the question.
+Speer further testified that Keitel several times rejected any attempt to
+employ prisoners of war of any western nation in actual war plants.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The defense counsel for the Defendant Speer will also deal with this question
+in detail.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In addition, I just want to submit certain individual cases charged against the
+Defendant Keitel personally by the Prosecution, that is to say, cases where, in the
+opinion of the Prosecution, he is supposed to have exceeded the limits of the
+general responsibility inherent in his position.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should not like to omit that case which was repeatedly mentioned—and
+rightly so—in the course of the evidence, the case of
+the 50 Royal Air Force officers, the shameful case of Sagan.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It particularly affects us as Germans, because it shows the utter
+lack of all restraint and proportion in the orders and the character
+of Hitler, who did not allow himself to be influenced for an instant
+in his explosive decisions by any thought of the honor of the
+German Armed Forces.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The cross-examination of the Defendant Keitel by the representative
+of the British Prosecution has determined how far his
+name too has been implicated in these abominable facts. Although
+the evidence clearly establishes the fact that Keitel neither heard
+nor transmitted Hitler’s murderous order, that he and the Armed
+Forces had nothing to do with the execution of this order and,
+finally, that he did everything in his power to prevent the escaped
+<span class='pageno' title='35' id='Page_35'></span>
+officers from being handed over to Himmler and did at least succeed
+in saving the officers who were taken back to the camp, he
+is painfully conscious of his guilt in not realizing at the time the
+terrible blow which such a measure must inflict on German military
+prestige throughout the world. In connection with the treatment
+of the Sagan case the French Prosecution confronted the
+Defendant Keitel with Document 1650-PS, which deals with the
+treatment of escaped prisoners of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This, Mr. President, is the so-called “Bullet Decree.” Considering
+the lack of time, I should like to deal shortly with this case, but
+I must deal with it because it is one of the most significant and
+gravest accusations against my client; I shall only summarize.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During his cross-examination, Keitel made the following statement:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“This Document 1650-PS emanates from a police agency and
+contains a reference to the OKW by the words: ‘The OKW
+has decreed the following ...’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Keitel says:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I have certainly neither signed this order of the OKW nor
+seen it; there is no doubt about that.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He cannot explain it; he can only assume how this order
+came to be issued by the Reich Security Main Office.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his examination he mentions the various possibilities whereby
+such an order could have reached the office which issued it. Then
+he refers to another document, 1544-PS, which contains all the
+orders and directives concerning prisoners of war, but not this
+order referring to the escaped officers and noncommissioned officers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The witness Westhoff has confirmed that the concept “Stufe III”
+and its meaning were unknown to him and to the office of the
+OKW Prisoners of War Organization. He also stated that on assuming
+office on 1 April 1944 he found no order of this nature, not
+even a file note.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The meaning of that Bullet Decree was completely obscure. I
+believe this obscurity has been cleared up by the evidence given
+by the Codefendant Kaltenbrunner, who on his part had never
+before spoken to the Defendant Keitel on the matter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I pass on to Page 187, where Kaltenbrunner said:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I had never heard of the Bullet Decree before I assumed
+the office. It was an entirely new concept for me. Therefore
+I asked what it meant. He answered that it was a Führer
+order; that was all he knew. I was not satisfied with this
+information, and on the same day I sent a teletype message
+to Himmler asking for permission to look up a Führer order
+<span class='pageno' title='36' id='Page_36'></span>
+known as the Bullet Decree.... A few days later, Müller
+came to see me on Himmler’s orders and submitted to me
+a decree which, however, did not originate with Hitler but
+with Himmler, and in which Himmler stated that he was
+transmitting to me a verbal Führer order.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From this it is safe to assume that, without consulting Keitel
+and without the latter’s knowledge, Hitler must have given a
+verbal order to Himmler, as stated in Document 1650-PS which
+was submitted here.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now I come to Page 190 of my final plea:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This confirms the assumption which Keitel expressed in his interrogation,
+although Kaltenbrunner had not previously informed him that he knew of verbal
+orders given by the Führer.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">3) In another case also, the one dealing with the branding of Soviet prisoners,
+Keitel’s statement in the witness box has proved to be the simple truth.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The witness Roemer has confirmed in her supplementary affidavit that the
+order to mark Soviet prisoners of war by branding was cancelled immediately
+after being issued. A further statement of the Defendant Keitel is therefore
+also credible, according to which this order had been issued without his knowledge,
+although naturally Keitel’s responsibility for the acts of the party concerned
+is not thereby contested.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">4) In this connection I refer finally to Document 744-PS dated 8 July 1943,
+submitted in support of the charge against Keitel. It deals with the increased
+iron and steel program, for the execution of which the allocation of the necessary
+miners from among the prisoners of war was ordered. The first two paragraphs
+of the document read:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“For the extension of the iron and steel program the Führer on 7 July
+ordered the unqualified promotion of the necessary coal production and
+the employment of prisoners of war to cover the labor requirements. The
+Führer ordered the following measures to be taken with all possible
+dispatch for the ultimate purpose of assigning 300,000 additional workers
+to the coal mining industry.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class="fs">The last paragraph reads:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“In connection with the report to the Führer, the Chief of Prisoner of War
+Affairs will advise every 10 days concerning the progress of the drive.
+First report on 25 July 1943, reference date: 20 July 1943.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">I submit this document, not because of its actual content, which will be taken
+up by the defense of the Defendant Speer, but because of its symptomatic evidential
+value for the answer of the Defendant Keitel, when he stated that Hitler was
+particularly interested in prisoner of war affairs and himself personally issued the
+principal orders and those he considered important.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">5) The cases also connected with this complex such as: Terror-fliers, lynch law,
+Commando tasks, combat against partisans, will be dealt with by other defense
+counsels. The Defendant Keitel has made his statement regarding these individual
+facts during his interrogation and cross-examination.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the subjective facts of the alleged crimes one element is
+of special importance: the knowledge of them. Not only from the
+point of view of guilt, but also in view of the conclusions which
+the Prosecution have drawn, namely, acquiescence, toleration, and
+omission to take any counteraction. The fact of knowledge comprises:
+(1) Knowledge of the facts; (2) recognition of the aim;
+(3) recognition of the methods; (4) conception of, or possibility of
+conceiving the consequences.
+<span class='pageno' title='37' id='Page_37'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During the discussion of the question of how far the Defendant
+Keitel could possibly have drawn any conclusion as to the
+intention of realization by force from knowledge of the text of
+the National Socialist Party Program and from Hitler’s book, <span class='it'>Mein
+Kampf</span>, I have already demonstrated why Keitel did not have this
+recognition of a realization by force.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Keitel denied any knowledge of the intended wars of aggression
+up to the time of the war against Poland, and his statement is
+confirmed by Grossadmiral Raeder. This comment is certainly a
+subjective truth inasmuch as Keitel did not seriously believe in
+a war with Poland, not to mention one involving intervention by
+France and England. This belief, held by Keitel and other high-ranking
+officers, was based on the fact that the military potential
+was insufficient, according to past experiences, to wage a war
+with any chance of victory, especially if it developed into a war
+on two fronts. This belief was strengthened by the nonaggression
+pact signed on 23 August 1939 with the U.S.S.R.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>However, that is not the core of the problem. The speeches
+which Hitler delivered before the generals, beginning with the
+conference of 5 November 1937, at which Keitel was not present,
+made it increasingly clear that Hitler was determined to attain
+his goal by any means, that is, if peaceful negotiations did not
+succeed, he was prepared to fight, or at least to use the Armed
+Forces as an agent of pressure. There is no doubt about that. It
+is a debatable point whether the text of Hitler’s speeches, of which
+no official record is available, is altogether accurately reproduced.
+There is, however, no doubt at all that they allow Hitler’s intentions
+to be clearly recognized.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A distinction must be made as to whether it was possible for
+his hearers merely to gather that a definite plan was to be carried
+out, or whether they could not but recognize the existence of a
+general aim of aggression. If they did not recognize this, the only
+explanation lies in the fact that the generals on principle did not
+include the question of war or peace in their considerations. From
+their point of view this was a political question which they did
+not consider themselves competent to judge since, as has been
+stated here, they were not acquainted with the reasons for such
+a decision and, as the Defendant Keitel has testified, the generals
+were bound to have confidence in the leadership of the State to
+the extent of believing that the latter would only undertake war
+for reasons of pressing emergency. That is a consequence of the
+traditional principle that although the Armed Forces was an instrument
+of the politicians it should not itself take part in politics—a
+principle which Hitler adopted in its full stringency. The Court
+must decide whether this may be accepted as an excuse. Keitel
+<span class='pageno' title='38' id='Page_38'></span>
+stated on the witness stand that he recognized the orders, directives,
+and instructions which had such terrible consequences, and that
+he drew them up and signed them without allowing himself to be
+deflected by any consequences which they might entail.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This testimony leaves three questions undecided: (1) The question
+of the methods used to carry out the orders; (2) the question
+of the conception of the consequences which actually followed;
+(3) the question of the <span class='it'>dolus eventualis</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Keitel, in his affidavit (Document Book Number
+12), showed with reference to the so-called ideological orders
+how the SS and Police organizations influenced the conduct of
+the war, and how the Wehrmacht was drawn into events. The
+evidence has shown that on their own responsibility numerous
+Wehrmacht commanders failed to apply such terrible orders, or
+applied them in a milder form. Keitel, brought up in a certain
+military tradition, was unfamiliar with SS methods which made
+the effects of these orders so terrible, and they were therefore
+inconceivable to him. According to his testimony he did not learn
+of these effects in their full and terrible extent.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same is true of the Führer’s Night and Fog Decree which
+I have just discussed. If he did not allow himself to be deflected
+by the “possible” results when he transmitted the orders, the
+<span class='it'>dolus eventualis</span> cannot be affirmed in regard to the results which
+took place. It must be assumed rather that if he had been able
+to recognize the horrible effects, he would, in spite of the ban on
+resignations, have drawn a conclusion which would have freed
+him from the pangs of conscience and would not have drawn
+him from month to month further and further into the whirlpool
+of events.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This may be an hypothesis; but there are certain indications
+in the evidence which confirm it. The five attempts made by
+Keitel to leave his position, and the fact that he resolved to commit
+suicide, which General Jodl confirmed in his testimony, enable
+you to recognize the sincerity of Keitel’s wish.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact that he did not succeed must be attributed to the
+circumstances which I have already presented: The unequivocal
+and, as Keitel says, unconditional duty of the soldier to do his
+duty obediently to the bitter end, true to his military oath.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This concept is false when it is exaggerated to the extent of
+leading to crime. It must be remembered, however, that a soldier
+is accustomed to measure by other standards in war. When all
+high-ranking officers, including Field Marshal Paulus, represent
+the same point of view, the honesty of their convictions cannot
+be denied, although it may not be understood.
+<span class='pageno' title='39' id='Page_39'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In reply to the questions asked so often during this Trial—why
+he did not revolt against Hitler or refuse to obey his orders—the
+Defendant Keitel stated that he did not consider these questions
+even for a moment. His words and behavior show him to be
+unconditionally a soldier.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Did he incriminate himself by such conduct? In general terms:
+May or must a general commit high treason if he realizes that
+by carrying out an order or measure he will be violating international
+law or the laws of humanity?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The solution of this problem depends on whether the preliminary
+question is answered as to who is the “authority” which
+“permits or orders” such criminal high treason. This question
+seems to me important because the source of the authority must
+be established—the authority which can permit or order the
+general to commit high treason; which can “bind and absolve.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Since the existing state power, which in this case was represented
+by the Chief of State, who was identical with the Supreme
+Commander of the Armed Forces, can certainly not be this authority,
+we merely have to decide whether an authority exists above or
+beyond the authority of the particular state, which could “bind or
+absolve.” Since the struggle for power between Pope and Emperor,
+which dominated the Middle Ages, has no longer any significance
+in regard to constitutional law, such a power can only be impersonal
+and moral. The German poet Schiller expresses the supreme commandment
+of the unwritten eternal law in the words: “The tyrant’s
+power yet one limit hath ...” That is only one of the manifold
+poetical revelations in world literature, which express the deep
+yearning for freedom felt by all peoples.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If there is an unwritten law which indisputably expresses the
+conviction of all men, it is this, that with due consideration for the
+necessity of maintaining order in the state, there is a limit to the
+restriction of freedom. Where this is transgressed, a state of war
+will arise between the national order and the international power
+of world conscience.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is important to state that no such statute of international law
+has hitherto existed. This is understandable, since freedom is a
+relative conception, and the different conceptions existing in various
+states and the anxiety of all states for their sovereignty are irreconcilable
+with recognition of an international authority. The
+authority which “binds and absolves”—which absolves us of guilt
+before God and the people—is the universal conscience which
+becomes alive in every individual. He must act accordingly. The
+Defendant Keitel did not hear the warning voice of the universal
+conscience. The principles of his soldierly life were so deeply
+rooted, and governed his thoughts and actions so exclusively, that
+<span class='pageno' title='40' id='Page_40'></span>
+he was deaf to all considerations which might deflect him from
+the path of obedience and faithfulness, as he understood them.
+This is the really tragic role played by the Defendant Keitel in
+this most terrible drama of all times.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann—yes, go on, Dr. Kauffmann.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KURT KAUFFMANN (Counsel for Defendant Kaltenbrunner):
+Mr. President, may I first say that I have a few changes
+which I will announce when I come to them. I shall take about two
+hours altogether, Mr. President.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal: The present Trial is world history—world
+history full of revolutionary tensions. The spirits conjured
+up by mankind are stronger than the cries of the tortured peoples
+for justice and peace. Since man was deified and God humiliated,
+chaos, as an inevitable consequence and punishment, has afflicted
+mankind with wars, revolutions, famine, and despair. Whatever the
+guilt borne by my country, it is now enduring—and permanently
+enduring—the greatest penance ever endured by any people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The means adopted to restore longed-for prosperity are wrong,
+because they are second-rate. And none of my listeners can question
+the truth of my assertion that the present Trial was not begun
+at the end of a period of wrong, and in order to end it, but is
+surrounded by the surging waves of a furious torrent bearing on
+its surface the hopeless wreckage of a civilization guarded through
+the centuries, and in the demoniacal depths of which lurk those
+who hate the true God, who are the enemies of the Christian religion,
+and therefore opposed to all forms of justice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The European commonwealth of peoples, of which my country, if
+only because of its geographical position, was the very heart, is
+seriously afflicted. It suffers from the spirit of negation and humiliation
+of human dignity. Rousseau would have cursed his own
+maxims had he lived to see the radical refutation of his theories
+in this twentieth century. The peoples proclaimed the “liberty” of
+the great revolution, but in the course of a mere 150 years they
+have in the name of that same liberty created a monster of bondage,
+cruel slavery, and ungodliness, which contrived to elude earthly
+justice, but did not escape the living God.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This Tribunal, conscious of its task and its mission, will some
+day have to submit to the searching eye of history. I do not doubt
+that the judges selected are striving to serve justice as they see it.
+But is not this task indeed impossible of solution? The American
+chief prosecutor stated that in his country important trials seldom
+begin until one or two years have elapsed. I do not need to elucidate
+the profound core of truth contained in this practice. Could human
+beings, torn between love and hate, justice and revenge, conduct
+<span class='pageno' title='41' id='Page_41'></span>
+a trial immediately after the greatest catastrophe humanity has
+ever known—and constantly harassed by the statutory demands for
+rapid and time-saving proceedings—in such a way as to earn the
+thanks of mankind when the waters of this second deluge have
+withdrawn into their old bed?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Would it not have been better to allow for that very lapse of
+time between crime and atonement with regard to the present
+proceedings?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Justice can be administered only when the Court possesses that
+inner liberty and independence which owes allegiance only to conscience
+and to God himself. Such a sacred activity had largely been
+forgotten in my country, above all, by the governing class of the
+nation; Hitler had prostituted the law. But this Tribunal intends
+to prove to the world that the welfare of the peoples is based on
+law alone. And no conception could arouse more joy and hope
+within the heart of people of good will than that of unselfish justice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I am not criticizing the provisions of the Charter; but I do ask
+whether any justice has ever been, or ever could be, found on earth
+if might submitted to reason so far as to grant its enemies regular
+trial, but could not see fit to crown this tribute to reason by appointing
+a genuinely international tribunal; for even though 19 nations
+have approved of the legal basis of the Charter it is far more difficult
+to administer the laws laid down.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The American chief prosecutor has emphatically declared that
+he did not propose to hold the entire German nation guilty; but the
+records of this Tribunal, which history will some day scrutinize
+attentively, nevertheless contain many things which, to us Germans,
+appear to be false and, therefore, painful. Unfortunately they also
+contain numerous explicit questions on the part of the French
+Prosecution as to the extent to which, for instance, certain Crimes
+against Humanity committed both inside and outside Germany were
+known to the German people. Indeed, the French Prosecution have
+asked explicitly: “Could these atrocities remain, on the whole, unknown
+to the entire German nation, or were they aware of them?”
+These and similar questions are not conducive to the solution of
+such a difficult and tragic problem with even the slightest approach
+to the truth. Insofar as evil, which always grows and manifests
+itself organically, reigns supreme in a nation, every individual who
+has reached the age of reason will bear some guilt for his country’s
+disasters. Yet even this guilt, which is on the metaphysical plane,
+could never become the collective guilt of a nation unless every
+individual member of this nation has incurred a separate guilt. But
+who would be entitled to establish the existence of such a guilt
+without examining thousands of individual circumstances?
+<span class='pageno' title='42' id='Page_42'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The problem, however, becomes even more difficult if one should
+try—and this is the final aim—to establish the so-called national
+guilt for any past crimes against peace, humanity, and so forth,
+committed on the part of the omnipotent State, no matter through
+what agencies. One must bear in mind most carefully the condition
+of the Reich before 1933. This has been done sufficiently here and
+I shall not discuss it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler claimed for himself alone such far-reaching concepts as
+the powerful German diligence, austerity, family affection, willingness
+to make sacrifices, aristocracy of labor, and a hundred more.
+Millions believed in this; millions of others did not. The best of
+them did not lose hope of being able to avert the tragedy which
+they foresaw. They flung themselves into the stream of events,
+assembled the good, and fought, visibly or invisibly, against the
+evil. Can the man in the street be blamed for not immediately
+refusing to believe in Hitler, considering the latter’s ability to pass
+as a seeker after the truth, and the fact that he constantly raised
+the palm of peace for the benefit of the peace lovers? Who knows
+whether he himself was not convinced at the outset that he could
+strengthen the Reich without going to war? After the assumption
+of power large sectors of the German people probably felt themselves
+to be at unison with many other peoples on earth. Therefore,
+it is not astonishing that gradually, and with the approval or
+tolerance of other countries, Hitler acquired the nimbus of a man
+unique in his century. Only a German who lived in Germany during
+the past few years and did not view Germany through a telescope
+from abroad, is competent to report on the historical facts of an
+almost impenetrable method of secrecy, the psychosis of fear, and
+the actual impossibility of changing the regime, and thus to comply
+with Ranke’s demand of historians to establish “how it was.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Ought the artisans, peasants, merchants, or housewives categorically to have
+asked Hitler or Himmler for a change? I would be quite willing to let the
+Prosecution answer this, as I am of the opinion that there are living in my country
+no fewer idealistic and heroic people than in any other country.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It will never be possible to ascertain how large a number of Germans knew
+and approved of concentration camps, their terror and such like. Only if one
+could establish knowledge and approval in the soul of every individual German,
+considering general and particular conditions prevailing in the Germany of the
+last 12 years, which it is not now the moment to discuss, these, and only these,
+could be considered guilty.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Therefore I do not think it just to put, to a larger or smaller extent, the
+principle of collective guilt in the place of individual responsibility, as it is held
+valid in all civilized nations; it was unfortunately similarly applied by the
+National Socialist regime to a whole people, and almost led to its complete extermination.
+May there be no repetition of Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles,
+that portentous document of the twentieth century.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Let me say a few words about that secrecy. This Trial has shown
+clearly that the State itself managed to suppress such facts as would
+lower its prestige and betray its real intentions. Even the men
+<span class='pageno' title='43' id='Page_43'></span>
+indicted here, who have been termed conspirators, have been the
+victims of that carefully devised system of secrecy, or most of them
+at least.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A special place in that system of secrecy is reserved to the
+plan—ordered by Hitler and executed by Himmler, Eichmann, and
+a circle of the initiated—for the biological destruction of the Jewish
+people, the ghastly aim of which was for years concealed by the
+term “final solution”—a term not immediately self-explicable. The
+problem of the Jewish question ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann, it seems to the Tribunal a
+very long preamble to the defense of the Defendant Kaltenbrunner,
+who has not been named at all yet in what you have said. Is it
+not time that you came to the case of the defendant whom you
+represent? We are not trying a charge against the German people.
+We are trying the charges against the defendant. That is all we
+are trying.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, in the next few sentences I
+would have concluded that; but I ask you to appreciate that the
+important word “humanity” forms the core of my case. I believe
+that I am the only defense counsel who intends to go more deeply
+into that subject; and I request permission to make these few statements.
+I shall come to the case of Kaltenbrunner very soon.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: On Page 8 you have a headline which is,
+“The Development of the History of the Intellectual Pursuit in
+Europe.” That seems rather far from the matters which the Tribunal
+have got to consider.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, may I remind you that
+this question was discussed by the Prosecution, and especially by
+M. de Menthon. I do not believe that I can carry out my task if
+I take these tremendous crimes only as facts. Some German must
+have an opportunity of giving a short description of the development—and
+it is very short. At the end of a few pages I return
+to the case of Kaltenbrunner; and my plea will in any case be the
+shortest one presented here.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann, the Tribunal proposes, as far
+as it can, to decide the cases which it has got to decide in accordance
+with law and not with the sort of very general, very vague and
+misty philosophical doctrine with which you appear to be dealing
+in the first 12 pages of your speech, and, therefore, they would very
+much prefer that you should not read these passages. If you insist
+upon doing so, there it is; but the Tribunal, as I say, do not think
+that they are relevant to the case of the Defendant Kaltenbrunner.
+They would much prefer that you would begin at Page 13, where
+you really come to the defendant’s case.
+<span class='pageno' title='44' id='Page_44'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, it is, of course, extremely
+difficult for me to present a plea which is already very much condensed,
+and now to disrupt it even more. It is really difficult. I
+hope that the Tribunal will appreciate that.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, Dr. Kauffmann; there has been nothing
+condensed in what you have read up to the present. It has been
+all of the most general type.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: In that case may I at least read a few sentences
+below the headline with regard to the defense? It starts ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Can you not summarize the general nature
+of what you wish to say before you come to the Defendant Kaltenbrunner?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Yes, I shall try. I shall read only a few sentences,
+for the sake of better understanding, from the short chapter
+dealing with the task of the Defense. I say there that the defense
+has been established by the Charter and ask how in the face of such
+excesses a defense can still identify its task. I then go on to say:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this Trial, error and truth are mysteriously mixed, probably
+more so than ever before in any great trial. To try to find the truth
+raises the counsel for the defense to the dignity of an assistant of
+the Court. Not only does it entitle the Defense to doubt the
+credibility of the witnesses but also that of the documents, in particular
+of the Government reports. It entitles the counsel for the
+defense to state that such reports, although they may be admitted
+by the Charter in evidence, can only be accepted under protest,
+because none of the defendants, defendants’ counsel, or neutral
+observers could have any influence on the way in which they originated.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These testimonies were certainly made within the framework of
+the law, but also within the framework of power.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The people, or a large part of the people, in their aspirations
+toward peace and happiness elevated the representative of a heretical
+doctrine to the position of their Führer, and this Führer abused
+the faith of his followers so that the people, no longer possessing
+the strength to offer a timely and open resistance, were engulfed
+in the gigantic abyss of the annihilation of their entire racial, political,
+spiritual, and economic existence. All of this is tragic in the
+truest sense of the word. Had the individual man in the street, the
+mother at home, and her sons and daughters, been asked to choose
+between peace or war, they would never voluntarily have chosen
+war. The unsatisfactory element in this Trial is the absence of
+the man ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are you reading now from some part of your
+document?
+<span class='pageno' title='45' id='Page_45'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: I am reading a few sentences, Mr. President.
+This is at Page 7 of the German text.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Can you not summarize the argument you
+are presenting?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, I would appreciate it if I
+could be told once more whether the Tribunal does not wish me to
+throw any light at all on the ideological background in the interests
+of an understanding of these crimes against humanity and peace. If
+the Tribunal states that it does not desire me to make any such
+statements, then of course I shall follow the wishes of the Tribunal.
+But such a phenomenon ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, Dr. Kauffmann, if you think it is necessary
+for you to read this passage you can do so; but, as I have
+indicated to you, the Tribunal think it is very remote indeed from
+any question which they have to consider.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Thank you very much. Then I shall skip a
+few pages and shall present only 4 or 5 pages, which will be very
+condensed, on the subject which I have just mentioned. That begins
+with the heading, “Outline of Intellectual Development.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The rise of Hitler, and his downfall, unique in its extent and
+consequences, may be viewed from any side—from the perspective
+of the historical spectacle afforded by the course of German history,
+the course of economic forces supposedly governed by irresistible
+laws, the sociological divisions of the nation, the peculiarities of
+race and character of the German people, or the mistakes committed
+in the political sphere by the other brothers and sisters of the
+family of nations living in the same house.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All this certainly completes the picture of the analysis, but
+it brings to light only partial knowledge and partial truth. The
+deepest, and the fatal, reason for the Hitler phenomenon lies in the
+metaphysical domain.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the final analysis the second World War was unavoidable.
+Anyone, however, who regards the world and its phenomena only
+from the standpoint of economics may arrive at the conclusion that
+both world wars could have been avoided if the resources of the
+earth had been reasonably distributed. Economic factors alone can
+never change the face of the earth; therefore, the change in the
+German people’s standard of living, and the demoralization of the
+national soul by the Treaty of Versailles, inflation, serious unemployment,
+and other factors formed a foundation for the advent of
+Hitler. It is possible that catastrophes may be delayed for years
+or decades, if certain external living conditions make the relationship
+between different nations and peoples ostensibly happier. At
+<span class='pageno' title='46' id='Page_46'></span>
+no time, however, can a misguided idea be destroyed through economic
+measures alone, and deprived of its power to injure the
+individual and the nation, unless mankind can overcome such ideas
+and replace them by better ones.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“In the way in which the name of God is used by the peoples
+and nations,” says the famous Donoso Cortes, “lies the solution of
+the most-feared problems.” Here we have the explanation of the
+providential mission of the separate nations and races, the great
+changes in history, the rise and fall of empires, conquests and wars,
+the different characteristics of the nations, and even their changing
+fortunes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>M. de Menthon has tried to make an intellectual analysis of
+National Socialism. He speaks of the “sin against the spirit,” and
+sees the deeper causes of this system in estrangement from Christianity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I wish to add a few words. Hitler was not a meteor, the fall of
+which was incalculable and unpredictable. He was the exponent of
+an ideology which was in the last resort atheistic and materialistic.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There is every reason to reflect that, although National Socialism
+is eliminated through the complete defeat of Germany, and although
+the world is now free of the German threat as proclaimed by all
+nations, there has been no decisive change for the better. No peace
+has filled our hearts, no rest has come to any corner of human
+existence. It is true that the collapse of a powerful state with all
+its physical and spiritual forces will be felt for a long time, just
+as the sea is stirred into motion when a rock is thrown into calm
+water. But something much more is happening at present in Europe
+and in the world—something quite different from the mere ebbing
+away of such a wave of events.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To retain the comparison, the waves rise anew from the deep;
+they are fed by mysterious forces which constantly emerge anew.
+They are those restless ideas, aiming at the disaster of nations, of
+which I spoke. And nothing can disprove the truth of my words
+when I maintain that victor and vanquished alike live in the midst
+of a crisis which disturbs the conscience of individuals and of
+nations like a monstrous and apparently inevitable nightmare, and
+which causes us to look beyond the punishment of guilty individuals
+toward those ways and means which can spare humanity an even
+greater catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the <span class='it'>Confessions of a Revolutionary</span> the clear-sighted socialist
+Proudhon wrote the memorable words: “Every great political problem
+contains within itself a theological one.” He coined this phrase
+one hundred years ago. It is most timely that the American General
+MacArthur, at the signing of the Japanese capitulation, is said to
+have repeated the essential meaning of these profound words by
+<span class='pageno' title='47' id='Page_47'></span>
+saying: “If we do not create a better and greater system, death
+will be at our door. The problem is, fundamentally speaking, a
+religious one.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>History is made by changes in religious values. They constitute
+the strongest motive power in the cultural progress of humanity.
+Permit me to show you in a few bold outlines the intellectual and
+historical forebears of National Socialism.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann, it is 1 o’clock, and I must say
+that the last two pages which you have read seem to me to have
+absolutely nothing to do with Crimes against Humanity, or with
+any case with which we have got to deal. I suggest to you that the
+next pages, headed “Renaissance, Subjectivism, French Revolution,
+Liberalism, National Socialism” are equally completely unlikely to
+have any influence at all upon the minds of the Tribunal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will now adjourn.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal recessed until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<h2><span class='pageno' title='48' id='Page_48'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KAUFFMANN: Mr. President, I am going to leave out the
+section headed “Renaissance, Subjectivism, French Revolution,
+Liberalism, National Socialism.” The gist of those remarks can be
+summarized in two or three sentences and I merely beg you to
+take cognizance of them. I have pointed out that the course of all
+these disastrous movements is the spiritual attitude which Jacques
+Maritain described as anthropocentric humanism.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The clamor of the great struggle between the Middle Ages and modern times
+has filled the last centuries until this very hour. Its victims include since 1914,
+for the first time, the women; since 1939, for the first time, the children. The
+apocalyptic battle is in full progress for the 2,000-year-old meaning of the
+Occident, the motherland of the material as well as the personal culture of
+humanity. Its object is the steadily growing anthropocentric humanism which
+makes the human being the measure of all things, the secularization of religion.
+It announces itself in the Renaissance, becomes completely clear in the enlightenment
+of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and in the intellectual movements
+of the nineteenth century. However good the reasons and motives were, the
+way over the Renaissance and the schism of the sixteenth century proved to be
+wrong. At its very end stands, for the present, the ideology of National
+Socialism. In the heads of its most extreme champions National Socialism culminated
+in the radical demand for the fight unto death against Christianity.
+Therefore this ideology was in its last analysis a philosophy without love; and
+because of this, it extinguished the light of reason in those addicted to it. To that
+extent the head himself of this heresy proclaimed a truth.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Goethe expressed this problem by saying: “World history is the struggle
+between belief and unbelief.” And I maintain, based on the declarations of the
+greatest minds in all camps of religious faiths, that the history of the nations,
+just as previously it was a struggle for the natural divine right of man, for
+2,000 years has been a striving of human intellect for the Christian soul in man.
+These precepts are in fact such that one may not doubt them even for a short
+moment without the mind beginning to reel and vacillate helplessly between truth
+and error. It is cause for reflection that Hitler rejected the wonderful characteristic
+of a truly kind man that we call humility because he had decided in favor of
+Machiavelli and Nietzsche and that now the fate of the Germans is humiliation
+without precedent. One may also reflect upon the fact that Hitler denied the virtues
+of pity and mercy and that now millions of women and children wail with sorrow,
+while the law, seemingly extinct, again assumes enormous proportions, whereas
+Hitler surrounded himself with lawlessness. The real and last root of these calamitous
+modern movements which threaten state, society, and Christianity, is rootless
+liberalism in the meaning of that anthropocentric humanism, as Maritain calls it.
+Man and his autonomous reason become the criterion of everything. The question
+should impose itself upon every thinking person, why from the turn of the
+nineteenth century until the present such catastrophes of humanity have occurred
+which in history, I should almost like to say, find their parallel only in cosmic
+catastrophes. Two world wars, with revolutions in their wake, are never an
+accidental development but rather a predetermined evolution of the human race
+founded on some intellectual-religious error. Coming from England, rationalism
+found its way to France and on arrival there changed its physiognomy. I believe
+that the paganism of the ancient times knew hardly anything like Voltaire. No
+sooner had rationalism become the state religion of France, when the French
+Revolution burst into flames and wrote the idea of the emancipated human rights
+with flaming letters into the sky of Europe. In spite of the proclamation of the
+human rights, mankind waded through blood as if this was the way to freedom.
+Sarcastic and scornful laughter at everything sacred went through the raving
+masses. When the French Revolution had put into practice its state founded on
+reason, the new institutions did not prove quite so reasonable. The “brotherhood”
+was, compared with the glamorous promises of the rationalists, a bitterly disappointing
+caricature. Soon these ideas also conquered Germany; for Germany
+<span class='pageno' title='49' id='Page_49'></span>
+looked with amazement and awe toward France in this century. The manifestation
+of religion became a religion of pure humanity. The last step was taken
+by Kant; he drew the last consequence from the principle of free science. Hegel
+abolished the personal God and replaced him by the absolute reason. The state
+is everything; it is God, its will is God’s will, in all relations to it there are no
+natural rights; it creates religion, law, and morality by virtue of its own
+sovereignty. Hitler once more placed the sovereignty in the people as a race.
+Hegel’s disciples destroyed the last vestige of the moral fundaments of society,
+state, and law. Only the genius of a man like Leibnitz, in whom the intellect
+of the German nation seemed to concentrate for the last time, stood alone in a
+sea of the rational ideology. Voltaire ridiculed the German thinker, not only in
+France, but also in Berlin. The last stages are connected with the names of
+Nietzsche and others. Nietzsche has, as no other modern man, reasoned modern
+ideologies out to the end and proclaimed with dauntless logic whither the present
+development would inevitably lead. Thus the road leads from Caligula and Julian
+Apostate through many a genius, glorified by the whole world but truly
+destructive in their effects, directly to Hitler.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Ancient paganism or modern paganism, which of them is worse? As Donoso
+Cortes so wisely puts it, there will be no more hope for a society which has
+exchanged the stern cult of Christian quest of truth for the idolatry of reason.
+After the sophisms come the revolutions, and behind the sophist walk the executioners.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">When Hitler, returning from the first World War, decided, as he said, to
+become a politician, he declared that he had found the powers which could free
+Germany with its national and social elements from its misery. But fundamentally
+his ideology was only another step along the well-worn road to complete
+autonomy of so-called natural common sense, to which he so often referred.
+Naturally he had his teachers. The apotheosis of his own people traces back to
+Fichte, the ideal of the master-man to Nietzsche, the relativity of morals and
+right to Machiavelli, the cult of race to Darwin. We have witnessed their practical
+effect; for this road leads straight into the concentration camps, to the
+destruction of other races, to the persecution of Christians. But the outside
+enemies of National Socialism succumbed to the same ominous idea of “natural
+common sense” by killing with their bombs millions of noncombatant women
+and children and destroying so many dwellings in German villages and cities.
+The victor, even in a defensive war, must not try to excuse these events with
+“military necessities” in the meaning of the Charter. The cultural values of this
+very city in which this Tribunal is sitting, or of Dresden, Frankfurt, and many
+other cities, were the cultural property of the entire Occident. All this, and the
+terrible misery of the flood of refugees from the East, and the fate of the prisoners
+of war, is part of the theme of the intellectual and cultural analysis of National
+Socialism.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the midst of this whole spiritual situation stands the figure
+of the Defendant Dr. Kaltenbrunner. The fatherland was already
+bleeding from a thousand wounds dealt at its sensitive soul and its
+gigantic power. Is this man guilty? He has denied his guilt and
+yet admitted it. Let us see what the truth is.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As I have already emphasized, up to the year 1943 Kaltenbrunner
+was, by comparison with the other defendants at this Trial,
+hardly known in Germany; at any rate, he had hardly any associations
+with either the German public or the high officials of the
+regime. In those days, when the military, economic, and political
+fate of the German people was already swinging with great velocity
+toward the abyss, hate and abhorrence of the executive powers
+were at their peak, the more so as the paralyzing sensation of the
+hopelessness of any resistance against the terror of the regime
+began to disappear, for people had by then finally turned away from
+<span class='pageno' title='50' id='Page_50'></span>
+the legend of invincibility preached by propaganda. Up to that point
+Kaltenbrunner had led a retired life and, in spite of the Austrian
+Anschluss, his record was clear of offenses against international law.
+I should like to say here that he was an Austrian—I might almost
+say, a bona fide Austrian. Suddenly, so to speak, and not on account
+of any special aptitude, much less through any efforts of his own,
+he was drawn into the net of the greatest accomplices of the greatest
+murderer. Not of his own free will; on the contrary, he repeatedly
+attempted to resist and to have himself transferred to the fighting
+front.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I can well understand that I might be told that I should, in view
+of the sea of blood and tears, refrain from illuminating the physiognomy
+of this man’s soul and character. But deep in my heart—and
+I beg you not to misunderstand me—while exercising my profession
+as counsel, even of such a man, I am moved by the universal thesis
+of the great Augustine, which is hardly intelligible to the present
+generation: “Hate error, but love man.” Love? Indeed, insofar as it
+should pervade justice; because justice without this virtue becomes
+simple revenge, which the Prosecution explicitly disavows. Therefore,
+for the sake of justice, I must show you that Kaltenbrunner
+is not the type of man repeatedly described by the Prosecution,
+namely, the “little Himmler,” his “confidant,” the “second Heydrich.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I do not believe that he is the cold-hearted being which the witness
+Gisevius described in such unfavorable terms, although only
+from hearsay. The Defendant Jodl has testified before you that
+Kaltenbrunner was not among those of Hitler’s confidants who
+always gathered around him after the daily situation conferences
+in the Führer’s headquarters. The witness Dr. Mildner, on the basis
+of direct observation, made the following statement, which was not
+shaken by the Prosecution:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“From my own observation I can confirm this: I know the
+Defendant Kaltenbrunner personally. His private life was
+irreproachable. In my opinion he was promoted from Higher
+SS and Police Leader to Chief of the Security Police and of
+the SD because Himmler, after the death of his principal
+rival Heydrich in June 1942, did not want any man near him
+or under him who might have endangered his own position.
+The Defendant Kaltenbrunner was no doubt the least dangerous
+man for Himmler. Kaltenbrunner had no ambition to
+bring his influence to bear through special deeds and ultimately
+to push Himmler aside. He was not hungry for
+power. It is wrong to call him the ‘little Himmler.’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The witnesses Von Eberstein, Wanneck, and Dr. Hoettl have
+expressed themselves in a similar manner.
+<span class='pageno' title='51' id='Page_51'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And yet this man took over the Reich Security Main Office;
+indeed, he took it over to the fullest extent, despite his agreement
+with Himmler. I know that today this man is suffering a great
+deal in thinking of the catastrophe that has overtaken his people
+and from the uneasiness of his conscience; nothing is more understandable
+than that Dr. Kaltenbrunner, knowingly, can no longer
+face the fact that he actually was in charge of an office under the
+burden of which the very stones would have cried out if that had
+been possible. The personality and character of this man must be
+judged differently from the way the Prosecution has judged it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the psychologist the question arises how a man, with, let
+us say, a normal citizen’s virtues, could take under his control an
+office which became the very symbol of human enslavement in the
+twentieth century, as far as Germany is concerned. Yet there may
+have been two reasons for taking over this office, nevertheless.
+One is based on the fact that Dr. Kaltenbrunner, although closely
+connected with the political and cultural interests of his Austrian
+homeland, supported National Socialism in its larger sense. For
+before he turned into the side path with its secrets, he marched
+with thousands and hundreds of thousands of other Germans, who
+desired nothing else than delivery from the unstable conditions
+prevailing at that time, on that wide road into which the eyes of
+the entire world had insight. Therefore, for example, he was without
+a doubt a disciple of anti-Semitism, however, only in the sense
+of the necessity of putting an end to the flooding of the German
+race with alien elements; but he condemned just as emphatically
+the mad crime of the physical annihilation of the Jewish race, as
+Dr. Hoettl definitely assures us.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Certainly Kaltenbrunner also admired Hitler’s personality as
+long as it did not, little by little, give expression to its absolutely
+misanthropic and therefore un-German nature. Also, he approved
+in principle, as he himself admitted during his interrogation, of
+measures which implied more or less severe compulsion, for example,
+the organization of labor training camps. For this reason no sensible
+person will want to question the fact that he deemed the
+establishment of concentration camps fundamentally quite proper,
+at least as a provisional measure during the war, as had been the
+case for a long time beyond the German borders. <span class='it'>Sine ira et studio.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The establishment of concentration camps, or whatever one
+wishes to call those places at the mention of which the listener
+involuntarily is reminded of the words of Dante, is unfortunately
+not unknown in many states. History knows of their existence in
+South Africa some decades ago, in Russia, England, and America
+during this war, for the admission, among others, of persons who
+for reasons of conscience do not want to serve with arms. In
+<span class='pageno' title='52' id='Page_52'></span>
+Bavaria, in the land in which the Tribunal at present sits, this sort
+of camp is also known; also known is the so-called “automatic
+arrest” category for certain groups of Germans. Under the heading
+“Political Principles,” in Point B-5 of the text of the mutual declaration
+of the three leading statesmen on the Potsdam Conference of
+17 July 1945, the statement is contained that, among others, all
+persons who are a threat to the occupation or its aims shall be
+arrested or interned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The apparent necessity for camps of this sort is thereby recognized.
+I myself detest those institutions of human slavery; but
+I state openly that these institutions also lie on the road which, when
+followed to the end, can and does bring suffering to persons holding
+different views to those desired by the state. By this the crimes
+against humanity in the German concentration camps are not in
+the least to be minimized.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As far as Kaltenbrunner is concerned, this man, in view of his
+character and attitude as apparent since 1943, according to my conviction
+and as can be affirmed by many witnesses, is basically a
+National Socialist leader who noted only with repugnance the
+general trend of the continually growing wave of terror and
+enslavement in Germany. For this reason I deem it important to
+point to the statement of the witness Eigruber to the effect that
+the claim of the Prosecution that Kaltenbrunner established Mauthausen
+is wrong.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The second reason lies in the subject of the two conversations
+with Himmler, about which Kaltenbrunner testified. According to
+that Kaltenbrunner was prepared to take over the offices of the
+Domestic and Foreign Intelligence Service in the Reich Security
+Main Office with the promise of Himmler that he would be allowed
+to expand this service into a central agency, with the aim of absorbing
+the Political Intelligence Service and joining it with the
+hitherto military one of Admiral Canaris. No doubt it is true, as
+the witnesses Wanneck, Dr. Hoettl, Dr. Mildner, and Ohlendorf, and
+also the defendant himself have testified, that Himmler, with Kaltenbrunner’s
+wish in mind, after the murder of Heydrich, intervened
+in the executive realm so that nothing of any importance took place
+in any executive field in Germany without Himmler having the
+final word and thus issuing the decisive order.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The witness Wanneck confirmed the subject of those two conversations
+of Kaltenbrunner with Himmler in the following words,
+which I shall quote because of their importance:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“When material problems arose Kaltenbrunner frequently
+remarked that he had come to an understanding with Himmler
+to work rather in the field of the Foreign Political Intelligence
+Service and that Himmler himself wanted to exert
+<span class='pageno' title='53' id='Page_53'></span>
+more influence in executive functions. To my knowledge
+Himmler agreed to these adjustments all the more since he
+believed that he could depend on Kaltenbrunner’s political
+instinct in foreign affairs, as was apparent from various
+remarks made by Himmler.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Various witnesses have testified that Kaltenbrunner, predominantly
+and from inner conviction, did dedicate himself to the
+Domestic and Foreign Intelligence Service and more and more
+approached the influence on domestic and foreign politics he was
+hoping for. I call attention again to Wanneck and Dr. Hoettl, and
+then also to the Defendants Jodl, Seyss-Inquart, and Fritzsche.
+Dr. Hoettl testified:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In my opinion Kaltenbrunner never was completely master
+of the large Reich Security Main Office and, from lack of
+interest in police and executive problems, occupied himself
+far more with the Intelligence Service and with exerting
+influence on politics as a whole. This he considered his real
+domain.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From the testimony by General Jodl I stress the following
+sentences:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Before Kaltenbrunner took over the Intelligence Service
+from Canaris he already sent to me, from time to time, very
+good reports from the southeastern territory, through which
+I first noticed his experience in the Intelligence Service ...
+I had the impression that this man knew his business; I now
+received constant reports from Kaltenbrunner, just as earlier
+from Canaris; not only the actual reports from agents, but
+from time to time he sent to me, I might almost say, a political
+survey on the basis of his individual reports from agents.
+I noticed these condensed reports on the entire political situation
+abroad especially, because they revealed, with a frankness
+and sobriety never possible under Canaris, the seriousness of
+our entire military position.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The results therefore, which I must deduce from the evidence,
+are as follows: Kaltenbrunner, on the basis of the separation of the
+Intelligence Service from the executive police function in the Reich
+Security Main Office as desired by him, actually held a position,
+the main interest of which was the Intelligence Service and its continuous
+development. I should add that this Intelligence Service
+covered more than Europe; it went from the North Cape to Crete
+and Africa, from Stalingrad and Leningrad to the Pyrenees. Kaltenbrunner
+was the most zealous of all those in Germany who wished
+to feel the pulse of the enemy nations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That was the lifework of this man as he himself wished it to
+be for the duration of the war. Personally he lived in modest
+<span class='pageno' title='54' id='Page_54'></span>
+circumstances, and it is the truth when I say that he leaves the
+stage of political life just as poor as when he first entered it. The
+witness Wanneck once quoted a statement by Kaltenbrunner which
+is characteristic of him: That he, Kaltenbrunner, would retire completely
+from office after the war and return to the land as a farmer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Only with deep regret will the spectator see that under the
+pressure of political and military events this man did not observe
+the limitations desired by himself. His obedience to Hitler, and
+therefore also Himmler, submitted to the apparent necessity, in the
+years 1943-45, of guaranteeing the stability of conditions inside Germany
+through police compulsion. Thereby he became involved in
+guilt; for it is clear that he might count on a milder judgment on
+his guilt before the conscience of the world only if he could produce
+evidence that he actually effected a sharp separation from the unholy
+Amt IV of the Secret Police, if he had in no way participated
+in the ideas and methods, which I believe, eventually led to the
+institution of this whole Trial. I cannot deny that he did not undertake
+this separation. Nothing is clearly proved in this direction;
+even his own testimony speaks against him. Thus his statement at
+the beginning of his examination before the Tribunal may be explained,
+which I should like to define as the thesis of his guilt:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Question: ‘You realize that a very special accusation has
+been brought against you. The Prosecution accuses you of
+Crimes against Peace as well as of your role of an intellectual
+principal or of a participant in committing Crimes
+against Humanity and against the rules of war. Finally the
+Prosecution has connected your name with the terrorism of
+the Gestapo and with the cruelties in the concentration
+camps. I now ask you: Do you assume responsibility for these
+points of accusation as they are outlined and familiar to
+you?’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And Kaltenbrunner answers:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“First of all I should like to state to the Court that I am
+fully aware of the serious nature of the accusations brought
+against me. I know that the hatred of the world is directed
+against me, since I am the only one here to answer to the
+world and to the Court, because a Himmler, a Müller, a Pohl
+are no longer alive ... I want to state at the very beginning
+that I assume responsibility for every wrong which from the
+time of my appointment as Chief of the Reich Security Main
+Office was committed within the jurisdiction of that office
+as far as it occurred under my actual command, and I thus
+knew or should have known of these occurrences.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus the duty of the Defense is automatically delineated by
+asking the questions:
+<span class='pageno' title='55' id='Page_55'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) What did Kaltenbrunner do, good and evil, after his appointment
+as Chief of the Reich Security Main Office on 1 February 1943?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) To what extent is the statement justified that in the essential
+points he did not have sufficient knowledge of all the Crimes
+against Humanity and against the rules of war?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) In how far can his guilt be established from the viewpoint
+that he should have known about the serious crimes against international
+law in which Amt IV of the Reich Security Main Office
+(Secret State Police) was directly or indirectly involved?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What has Kaltenbrunner done? In this connection I am passing
+over the accusation brought against him by the Prosecution for his
+participation in the events surrounding the occupation of Austria
+and Czechoslovakia, for no matter with what energy he followed
+his goal of seeing his Austrian homeland incorporated into the
+German Reich and used the SS forces under his command for the
+realization of this end, this aim cannot have been a criminal one
+according to the world’s conscience. Just as little could one reach
+a verdict of criminal guilt because of the forcible means employed
+at that time to accomplish the annexation of Austria, which was
+the outcome of history and desired by millions. Kaltenbrunner was
+still much too insignificant a man for that. Economic distress—Anschluss
+movement—National Socialism: That was the path followed
+by the majority of the Austrian people, not the National Socialist
+ideology; for Hitler himself was, from the standpoint of Austrianism,
+a spiritual and political renegade. Yet the Austrian Anschluss movement
+was a people’s movement before National Socialism had
+reached any importance in Germany. Austria wanted to protect
+herself against the Versailles and St. Germain ruling, which forbade
+the Anschluss, by holding a plebiscite in each province. After
+90 percent had voted in Tyrol and Salzburg, the victorious powers
+threatened to discontinue the shipment of food supplies. Hitler’s
+seizure of power paralyzed the desire for Anschluss among those
+not sympathizing with the Party, but the distress in Austria became
+still more acute and isolated the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg regime. Incorporation
+into the economic sphere of Greater Germany, where
+the removal of mass unemployment seemed to be the source of hope,
+appeared to the greatly distressed Austrian people as the only way
+out. The wave of enthusiasm which on 12 and 13 March 1938 went
+through all Austria was real. To try to deny this today would be to
+falsify history. The Anschluss, not the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg Government,
+was based on democracy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Just as little can one, I believe, according to the reasons mentioned
+above, reach a verdict of guilt for Kaltenbrunner because
+of his alleged activity in the question of Czechoslovakia. In my
+opinion, the question of guilt and expiation arises only for the time
+<span class='pageno' title='56' id='Page_56'></span>
+after 1 February 1943. The indignation of the German people over
+one of the most infamous terroristic measures, the imposition of
+protective custody, had already become immense before this date.
+Is it correct to say that Kaltenbrunner himself, of whom many
+orders for protective custody bearing his signature are in evidence
+before the Court, inwardly abhorred this type of suppression of
+human liberties?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May I refer to just a few sentences from his interrogations:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Question: ‘Did you know that protective custody was at all
+permissible and was used frequently?’</p>
+
+<p>“Answer: ‘As I have stated, I discussed the idea of “protective
+custody” with Himmler already in 1942. But I believe that
+already before this time I had corresponded quite extensively
+on this subject with him, as well as once also with Thierack.
+I consider protective custody as applied in Germany only in a
+smaller number of cases to be a necessity of state, or better,
+a measure such as is justified by war. For the rest I often
+voiced my opinion, well founded in legal history, against this
+conception and against the application of protective custody
+in principle. I had several discussions about it with Himmler
+and with Hitler also. I publicly took my stand against it at
+a meeting of public prosecutors, I think in 1944, because I
+have always been of the opinion that a man’s freedom is one
+of his highest possessions and only the lawful sentence of a
+regular court of justice founded on the Constitution may limit
+or take away this freedom.’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Here the same man expresses the right principles, the observance
+of which would have spared the German people and the
+world untold suffering, and the nonobservance of which constitutes
+the guilt of this man who in spite of his right views, suited his
+actions to the so-called necessity of state. He thereby, against his
+own will and knowledge, became subject to the principle of hatred,
+which sooner or later will always shake or shatter the foundations
+of the strongest state. “Right is what benefits the people,” Hitler
+had proclaimed. I well know that Kaltenbrunner today deeply
+regrets having adhered too long to that false maxim without putting
+up sufficient resistance ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Although the Prosecution has not been able to produce even one
+single original signature of Kaltenbrunner in connection with orders
+for protective custody, and I do not think it incredible when Kaltenbrunner
+deposes that he himself never put into effect such an order
+for protective custody by his signature, nevertheless, in view of the
+tragic results due to so many of these orders, I do not need to say
+even one word as to whether he is entirely blameless or is much
+less to blame because these orders had perhaps been signed without
+<span class='pageno' title='57' id='Page_57'></span>
+his knowledge; although of course the question arises immediately
+how this was possible in an office however large. Be that as it
+may; in affairs of such depth and such tragic outcome one’s feelings
+are inclined to make hardly any distinction between knowledge and
+ignorance due to negligence, because one wants to hold everyone
+occupying a post in an office responsible for what happens there.
+This recognition is also the meaning of Kaltenbrunner’s statement,
+cited above, regarding his fundamental responsibility. Where the
+happiness and fate of living men are involved, it is impossible to
+retreat under the pretext of ignorance in order to avoid punishment;
+at best mitigation of sentence can be asked for. The defendant
+knows this too. Orders for protective custody were the ominous
+harbingers of the concentration camp. And I am not revealing a
+secret when I say that the responsibility for issuing orders for protective
+custody includes the beginning of responsibility for the fate
+of those held in the concentration camps. I could never admit
+that Dr. Kaltenbrunner may have known of the excesses suffered
+by the thousands who languished in the camps; for, as soon as the
+gates of the concentration camps were closed, there began the exclusive
+influence of that other office, the frequently mentioned Central
+Office for Economy and Administration. Instead of referring to
+many statements of witnesses regarding this point, I refer only to
+the one of the witness Dr. Hoettl who, when asked about subordination
+in rank replied:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The concentration camps were exclusively under the command
+of the SS Central Office for Economy and Administration,
+hence not under the Reich Security Main Office, and therefore
+not under Kaltenbrunner. In this sphere he had no
+authority of command and no competency.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Other witnesses have said that of necessity Kaltenbrunner should
+have had knowledge of the sad conditions in the concentration
+camps, but there is no doubt that the commandants of the concentration
+camps themselves deliberately concealed criminal excesses
+of the guards even from their superiors. It is furthermore a fact
+that the conditions found by the Allies upon their arrival were
+almost exclusively the results of the catastrophic military and
+economic situation during the last weeks of the war, which the
+world mistakenly identified with general conditions in former times
+as well. The above statement is fully verified by the statements of
+the camp commandant of Auschwitz, Hoess, who because of his later
+activity in the Concentration Camp Department of the Central Office
+for Economy and Administration, had an accurate over-all picture.
+Hoess has no ulterior motive whatsoever to give false testimony.
+A person like him, who sent millions of men to their deaths, no
+<span class='pageno' title='58' id='Page_58'></span>
+longer comes under the authority of human judges and considerations.
+Hoess stated:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The so-called ill-treatment and tortures in the concentration
+camps were not, as assumed, a policy. They were rather
+excesses of individual leaders, subleaders, and men who laid
+violent hands upon the inmates.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These people themselves were, according to the statement of
+Hoess, taken to task for that. I believe I need not go into any more
+details of how, according to various witnesses, visitors to concentration
+camps were impressed and surprised by the good condition,
+cleanliness, and order in the camps; and therefore no suspicion was
+aroused as to special sufferings of the inmates. But it would be in
+the worst taste if I contested the fact that a chief of the Intelligence
+Service, if only on the basis of foreign news of atrocities,
+should not have felt a responsibility, in the interest of humanity,
+to clear up any doubts arising in that sphere.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The lack of knowledge seems to be confirmed by the statement
+of Dr. Meyer of the International Red Cross, since the permission
+to allow the International Red Cross to visit the Jewish Camp at
+Theresienstadt and to allow food and medical supplies to be sent
+in, coming from Kaltenbrunner, seems to be proof of the bad conditions
+in the camps during the last months of the war; nobody,
+however, would allow neutral or foreign observers to have insight
+into the camps if it had been known that crimes against humanity
+were, so to speak, scheduled daily in the camps, as is asserted by
+the Prosecution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In no case, therefore, do I come to the conclusion that Kaltenbrunner
+had full knowledge of the so-called “conditions” in the
+concentration camps, yet I do conclude that it was his duty to
+investigate the fate of those who were imprisoned. Kaltenbrunner
+might have found out then that a considerable number of the inmates
+were sent to the camps because they were criminals and that
+a much smaller portion was there because of their political or ideological
+viewpoints or because of their race but that he would then
+have found out about those primitive offenses against humanity,
+about those excesses and all the distress of these people—that I contest,
+in agreement with Kaltenbrunner.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The way to arrive at the truth was immensely complicated in
+Germany, and even the Chief of the Reich Security Main Office
+found nearly insurmountable obstacles in the hierarchy of jurisdiction
+and authority of other offices and persons. The alleviation
+of the sad lot of the internees was, after 1943, a problem which
+could have been solved only through the dissolution of such camps.
+A Germany of the last 12 years without any concentration camps
+<span class='pageno' title='59' id='Page_59'></span>
+would, however, have been a utopia. On the whole, Kaltenbrunner
+was but a small cog in this machinery.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Earlier I spoke about the orders for protective custody and of
+their effect. Dr. Kaltenbrunner has affirmed the necessity for work
+education camps, owing to—as stated by him during his examination—the
+conditions then prevailing in the Reich, to the shortcomings
+of the labor market, and to other reasons. And if I am not mistaken,
+no convincing proof was submitted of ill-treatment and cruelties in
+such camps. The reason may well lie in the fact that these camps
+were in some respects only related to, but not on equal footing
+with, concentration camps.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With all available means of evidence, Kaltenbrunner has opposed
+the accusation of having confirmed orders of execution with his
+signature. The witnesses Hoess and Zutter stated that they saw such
+orders in isolated cases. The Prosecution, however, does not seem
+to me to have proved that any such orders were issued without
+judicial sentence or without reasons justifying death, with the exception
+of a particularly serious case reported from hearsay by the
+witness Zutter, adjutant of the camp commandant of Mauthausen.
+According to him, a teletype signed by Kaltenbrunner is said to have
+authorized the execution of parachutists in the spring of 1945. An
+original signature by Kaltenbrunner is entirely lacking. I add that
+Kaltenbrunner has contested having any knowledge or information
+about this matter. I think I may safely claim that he did not sign
+any such orders concerning life and death, because he was not
+authorized to do so. Dr. Hoettl as a witness stated:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“No, Kaltenbrunner did not issue such orders and could not,
+in my opinion, give such orders”—for killing Jews—“on his
+own initiative.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And Wanneck explicitly asserted the following:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is known to me that Himmler personally decided over
+life and death and other punishment of inmates of concentration
+camps.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus the exclusive authority of Himmler in this sad sphere may
+be considered proved. I am not seriously disposed to deny the
+guilt of Kaltenbrunner completely on this point. If such orders were
+carried out against members of foreign powers, for example, based
+on the so-called “Commando Order” of Hitler of 18 October 1942,
+then there arises the question of the responsibility of that person
+whose signature was affixed to these orders, because misuse of his
+name by subordinates was possible. It is certain that Kaltenbrunner
+never exerted the least influence in originating the “Commando
+Order.” It can, however, hardly be doubted that this decree constituted
+a violation of international law. The development of the
+<span class='pageno' title='60' id='Page_60'></span>
+second World War into a total war inevitably created an abundance
+of new stratagems. Insofar as genuine soldiers were employed in
+their execution, even a motive of bitterness, humanly quite understandable—and
+I am now speaking about the conduct of the Commando
+troops concerned in violation of the laws of warfare and
+other things—could not justify the order. Fortunately but very
+few people fell victims to this order of Hitler, as the Defendant
+Jodl has testified.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Perhaps one might ask me whether it is my duty, or whether
+I am permitted, to reiterate such points of incrimination as I have
+just done, since this seems to be the task of the Prosecution. To
+this I reply: If the Defense is so liberal as to admit the negative
+side of a personality, it surely is apt to be heard more readily when
+it approaches the Tribunal with the request to appraise the positive
+side in its full significance. However, is there a positive side at all
+in the case before us? I believe that I may answer that question
+in the affirmative. I already pointed out several facts which are
+connected with the time of the assumption of office by Kaltenbrunner.
+During his short 2 years of activity this man has made
+himself a bearer of decidedly fortunate and humane ideas. I wish
+to remind you of his attitude toward the lynch order of Hitler with
+respect to enemy aviators who were shot down. The witness, General
+of the Air Force Koller, described the decent conduct of Kaltenbrunner,
+which led to a total sabotage of this order. After first
+describing the contents of Hitler’s order and Hitler’s threat, pronounced
+during the situation conference at that time, namely, that
+any saboteur of this order should himself be shot, Koller goes on
+to repeat the statements of Kaltenbrunner. Permit me to quote a
+few sentences of the deposition of Koller. Koller says that Kaltenbrunner
+said:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The tasks of the SD are always given a wrong interpretation.
+Such matters are not the concern of the SD. Moreover, no
+German soldier will do what the Führer commands. He does
+not kill prisoners; and if a few fanatic partisans of Herr Bormann
+try to do so, the German soldier will interfere ... Furthermore,
+I myself, too, will do nothing in this matter ...”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Koller and Kaltenbrunner, therefore, were fully agreed on that
+matter. This positive action of Kaltenbrunner, important for the
+judgment of the actual nature of his personality, does not stand
+alone. Dr. Hoettl confirmed the fact that, in questions of the future
+fate of Germany, Kaltenbrunner went, if not beyond, at least up
+to the borderline of high treason. This witness, for example, confirms
+that Kaltenbrunner in March 1944 caused Hitler to moderate
+the plans concerning the Hungarian question and succeeded in preventing
+the entry of Romanian units into Hungary, that with his
+<span class='pageno' title='61' id='Page_61'></span>
+support also the planned Hungarian National Socialist Government
+was not set up for a long time.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Dr. Hoettl then says literally:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Since 1943 I told Kaltenbrunner that Germany must attempt
+to end the war by a peace at any price. I informed him of
+my connections with an American authority in Lisbon. I also
+informed him that I had taken up new contacts with an
+American authority abroad by way of the Austrian resistance
+movement. He declared that he was prepared to go to
+Switzerland with me and there to take up personally negotiations
+with the American representative, in order to prevent
+further useless bloodshed.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The depositions of the witness Dr. Neubacher run along the same
+lines. But over and beyond that, this witness testified to a significant
+humane deed of Kaltenbrunner. Upon being questioned
+whether Kaltenbrunner had assisted the witness in moderating, as
+much as possible, the terror policies in Serbia, Dr. Neubacher answered;
+and I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Yes, in this field I owe much to the assistance of Kaltenbrunner.
+The German Police agencies in Serbia knew from
+me and from Kaltenbrunner that in his capacity as Chief of
+the Foreign Intelligence Service he uncompromisingly supported
+my policies in the southeastern territory. Thereby I
+succeeded in exerting influence on the police offices. Kaltenbrunner’s
+assistance was of value in my efforts to abolish the
+then prevailing system of collective responsibility and reprisals
+with the aid of intelligence officers.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I further mention the relief work of the Geneva Red Cross, which
+is due to the initiative of Kaltenbrunner. The activity of the
+defendant with respect to this was portrayed by the witnesses
+Professor Burckhardt, Dr. Bachmann, and Dr. Meyer. As a consequence
+many thousands were able to exchange their captivity for
+liberty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should like to draw your attention to a few words stated by the
+Defendant Seyss-Inquart on two points. He mentioned that Kaltenbrunner
+advocated the complete autonomy of the Polish state as
+well as the reintroduction of the independence of both Christian
+Churches, and I might add that Dr. Hoettl testified that Kaltenbrunner
+defended his activity very energetically and met with most
+bitter resistance by Bormann. Kaltenbrunner tried to realize his
+humane intentions not only in this field. Therefore, it seems to me
+to be of significance also to point out his efforts to make the
+Austrian Gauleiter understand that any resistance against the
+troops of the Western powers would be senseless and that in view
+<span class='pageno' title='62' id='Page_62'></span>
+of this, irresponsible orders for resistance were not to be issued.
+This was confirmed by the witness Wanneck. The Prosecution held
+Kaltenbrunner responsible for the evacuation and planned destruction
+of certain concentration camps. I believe this evidence may
+not only be considered as inconclusive, but that the contrary has
+in fact been proved. Upon the question, addressed to Dr. Hoettl,
+whether Kaltenbrunner had instructed the commandant of the concentration
+camp Mauthausen to surrender the camp to the advancing
+troops, Dr. Hoettl answered:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is correct that Kaltenbrunner issued such an order. He
+dictated it in my presence for transmission to the camp
+commandant.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As a supplement Kaltenbrunner, during his personal examination,
+declared very logically: If the camp of Mauthausen, filled with
+criminals, could not be evacuated by his orders, an order to evacuate
+Dachau would have been devoid of any basis by reason of its—compared
+with Mauthausen—harmless inmates. According to the
+testimony of Freiherr Von Eberstein, the destruction of the concentration
+camp Dachau with its two secondary camps was the goal
+of the then Gauleiter of Munich, Giesler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally the witness Wanneck confirmed the fact that such an
+order of Kaltenbrunner had not become known to him; that, however,
+due to his position with Kaltenbrunner, he would have known
+if such an order had been issued by the latter or even the issuance
+of such an order considered. Who actually issued these orders can
+no longer be established with certainty. The witness Hoess, in his
+examination, mentioned an order of evacuation by Himmler, as well
+as one directly by Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection it seems appropriate to me to refer to Kaltenbrunner’s
+participation in the sad case of Sagan as charged by the
+Prosecution. With reference to Kaltenbrunner’s statement, confirmed
+by the examination of the witness Wielen, it appears to me to
+be a proven fact that this matter came to Kaltenbrunner’s attention
+for the first time only several weeks later, after the conclusion of
+this tragedy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It also appears doubtful to me whether the so-called Einsatzgruppen,
+introduced on the basis of Hitler’s “Commissar Order” of
+1941, were still in existence and functioning after the appointment
+of Kaltenbrunner. Some facts speak for it, others against it. Kaltenbrunner
+denied the existence of these groups during his term as
+Chief of the Reich Security Main Office. I do not want to lose
+myself in details, but I should like to draw the attention of the
+Tribunal to these doubts. The same applies, for example, to the
+so-called “Bullet Decree.” Document 1650-PS confirms that it was
+<span class='pageno' title='63' id='Page_63'></span>
+not Kaltenbrunner but Müller, the infamous Chief of Amt IV, who
+issued the instructions involved, while Document 3844-PS mentions
+personal signatures of the defendant. It appears to me that the first
+document deserves preference. May I finally draw your attention
+to those documents which are of less value as evidence because they
+are based upon indirect observation. I believe that the Tribunal
+possesses sufficient experience in evaluating evidence so that I need
+not argue this any further.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have thus far openly conceded the negative, so that I may be
+the more justified in emphasizing the positive in Kaltenbrunner’s
+personality. How far, however, shall I be justified in stating that
+Kaltenbrunner had actually insufficient knowledge of many War
+Crimes and Crimes against Humanity which were committed with
+some kind of participation of Amt IV in the course of the last 2
+years of the war? Would such a defense offer the prospect of essentially
+exculpating the Chief of the Reich Security Main Office?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Dr. Kaltenbrunner admitted during his examination that it was
+only very late, in some cases as late as 1944 or 1945, that he obtained
+knowledge of orders, instructions, and directives, despite the
+fact that they originated much earlier—in some instances several
+years before he took office. And here I add—and I wish to
+emphasize this particularly at this point—that these orders, which
+are contrary to international ethics and humanity, all go back to a
+time during which Dr. Kaltenbrunner was still in Austria.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I will not at this moment try to prove in detail all these statements
+of Kaltenbrunner’s. The Prosecution is interested exclusively
+in whether such orders, decrees, directives, and so forth, were also
+executed during the period of time in which the defendant was in
+office as Chief of the Reich Security Main Office. It is also often
+very difficult for a defense counsel to follow a defendant along the
+secret channels of his knowledge or his ignorance. Perhaps the
+defense counsel also sometimes lacks the necessary distance for a
+free and just judgment, in view of the hecatombs of victims spread
+out across a whole continent, and he is unfair to his client. Thus
+he leaves the nature of the defendant’s character to the later judgment
+of history, for even the defense counsel is not infallible when
+it comes to drawing a picture of the soul of his own client.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During his examination before the Tribunal Kaltenbrunner once
+explained the difficult position he was in when he took over his
+office on 1 February 1943, and I hope that nobody will misjudge
+this situation. The Reich was still fighting, and even in 1943 was
+still dangerous for any adversary colliding with it. But it was
+already a fight for a goal obviously remote and out of reach.
+Whoever tries to hold back the spokes of the wheels on a vehicle
+rolling into an abyss at top speed will perish all too easily. Coupled
+<span class='pageno' title='64' id='Page_64'></span>
+with these conditions, from which there was no way of escaping,
+there was an uncreative officiousness, caused by nervous insecurity,
+in all areas of private and public life. Kaltenbrunner said with
+regard to this situation:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I beg you to put yourself into my situation. I came to Berlin
+in the beginning of February 1943. I began my work in May
+1943, except for a few complimentary calls. In the fourth year
+of the war the orders and decrees of the Reich also in the
+execution sector had piled up by the thousands on the tables
+and in the filing cabinets of the civil service. It was quite
+impossible for a human being to read through all that, even
+in the course of a year. Even if I had felt it to be my duty,
+I could never possibly have made myself acquainted with all
+these orders.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In connection with this I remind you respectfully that, according
+to the evidence given by the witness Dr. Hoettl and others, the Reich
+Security Main Office in Berlin had 3,000 employees of all categories
+when Kaltenbrunner was in office and that according to the statement
+of the same witness Kaltenbrunner never controlled this office
+completely.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nobody will be able to deny that the question is justified whether
+it was not Kaltenbrunner’s duty to have himself informed in the
+shortest possible time at least about the most essential proceedings in
+all the departments of the Reich Security Main Office and whether
+he would not then very soon have obtained knowledge of, for example,
+Himmler’s and Eichmann’s anti-Jewish operation and many other
+serious terrorist measures. I may remind you that Kaltenbrunner
+declared repeatedly and emphatically, in answering my questions
+before this Tribunal, that he protested regularly every time he heard
+of such occurrences, addressing himself to Himmler and even to
+Hitler, but that he had but little success, and this only after a long
+while. The defendant, for example, traces back the cessation of the
+extermination of Jews, by an order of Hitler in October 1944, to his
+personal initiative. However difficult it may be to judge whether
+the power and influence of a single person would have been sufficient
+to bring about the suspension of a program of the extermination
+of a race, already in its final phase, I believe I may say
+without being open to correction that many tens of thousands of
+Jews owe it to this man that they escaped the hell of Auschwitz and
+can still see the light of the sun. From the statements of Dr. Bachmann
+and Dr. Meyer of the International Red Cross it appears that
+Kaltenbrunner asked the International Red Cross to organize relief
+shipments to a large Jewish nonpolitical camp at Unskirchen
+near Wels.
+<span class='pageno' title='65' id='Page_65'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Wanneck has characterized Kaltenbrunner’s attitude toward the
+question of Himmler’s Jewish policy as follows. He says:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In the daily haste of our joint labors and discussions on
+foreign policy, we no longer dwelt upon the problem of
+Jewish policy. At the time Kaltenbrunner came into office
+this question was already so far advanced that Kaltenbrunner
+could not have had any more influence on it. If Kaltenbrunner
+expressed himself at all on the subject, it was to the
+effect that mistakes had been made here that could never be
+made good.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This witness then finally confirmed the fact that this operation
+was conducted independently through a direct channel of command
+from Himmler to Eichmann and said that the position of Eichmann,
+which already had been a dominating one when Heydrich was still
+alive, had increased steadily, so that eventually he had acted completely
+independently in the entire Jewish sphere.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And here I add that, according to the statement of Hoess, the
+only man left alive who is familiar with this question, it is established
+that only about 200 or 300 people knew of that dreadful order
+of Himmler’s which was given during a conference which lasted
+for 10 or 15 minutes, on the basis of which more than four million
+people were exterminated. And I add that a large nation of 80 million
+had learned little or probably nothing about these things which
+happened in the Southeast of the Reich during the war. Professor
+Burckhardt states that Kaltenbrunner, when discussing the Jewish
+question, declared:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is the greatest nonsense; all the Jews should be released,
+that is my personal opinion.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But in spite of all this, the fundamental question is raised for the
+problem of guilt: May a high official and the director of an influential
+office, whose subordinates in a far-reaching hierarchy continually
+commit crimes against humanity and against the rules of international
+law, assume such an office at all or remain in such an
+office, although he condemns these crimes? Or is it perhaps a
+different case if this man has the intention of doing all that is
+humanly possible to break the chain of crimes and thereby finally
+to become a benefactor of humanity? The last question is generally
+to be answered in the affirmative. It is to be appraised solely from
+the standpoint of the highest ethical principles.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My further thought in this connection is the following: He who
+invokes such a philanthropic intention is free of guilt if from the
+first day of his taking over such an office he refuses to take any
+active part in the actual commitment of the crime, and, beyond this,
+avails himself of every conceivable possibility, even seeks it out, to
+<span class='pageno' title='66' id='Page_66'></span>
+achieve the elimination of evil orders and their execution through
+his never-ending resistance and every form of human cunning.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The defendant himself has also sensed and clearly recognized
+all these things. On account of the importance of the question I
+should like to refer to his interrogation:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Question: ‘I ask you whether there was a possibility that you
+might have brought about a change after having gradually
+learned the conditions in the Secret State Police and in the
+concentration camps, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>. If this possibility existed, will
+you then say that an alleviation, that is, an improvement, was
+brought about in the conditions in these fields due to your
+remaining in office?’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Kaltenbrunner says:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I repeatedly applied for service at the front. But the most
+burning question which I had to decide for myself was
+whether the conditions would be thereby improved, alleviated,
+or changed. Or was it my duty to do everything possible
+in this position to change all the conditions that have been so
+severely criticized here? Since my repeated demands to be
+sent to the front were refused, all I could do was to make a
+personal attempt to change a system, the ideological and legal
+foundations of which I could no longer change, as has been
+illustrated by all the orders presented here from the period
+before I was in office; I could only try to moderate these
+methods in order to help eliminate them for good.</p>
+
+<p>“Question: ‘And so, did you consider it consistent with your
+conscience to remain in spite of this?’</p>
+
+<p>“Answer: ‘In view of the possibility of constantly using my
+influence on Hitler, Himmler, and other people, I could not in
+my opinion reconcile it with my conscience to give up this
+position. I considered it my duty to take a personal stand
+against injustice.’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As you see, the defendant refers to his conscience and you have
+to decide whether this conscience, taking into consideration duty
+toward one’s own country but also toward the community of mankind,
+has failed or not. The duty which I have just mentioned, to
+resist the orders of evil, exists in itself for every human being,
+regardless of his position. This duty is expressly affirmed by
+Kaltenbrunner also. He who holds a state office must in the first
+place be able to prove that he contributed toward abolishing the
+gigantic injustice which occurred in Europe as soon as he learned
+of it, if he does not want to become guilty. Has Dr. Kaltenbrunner
+presented sufficient proofs? The answer to this question I leave to
+your judgment. But one thing I should like to express as my
+opinion: This man was no conspirator; rather was he exclusively a
+<span class='pageno' title='67' id='Page_67'></span>
+person acting under orders and under compulsion. Himmler’s order
+was, despite all previous agreement, for him to take over the Reich
+Security Main Office. Is it right that an order should change the
+fundamental aspect of the problem? This question is of the highest
+importance. According to the Charter of this Tribunal one cannot
+plead higher orders for the purposes of avoiding punishment. The
+reasons given for this by the American chief prosecutor proceeded
+from the presumed knowledge of the crimes or their background
+in the minds of the higher leaders which, therefore, precluded them
+from pleading the existence of orders. Like a red thread the fact
+runs through this Trial that hardly one high official, in whatever
+position of public life he may have been, was put into office without
+the order of the highest representative of official authority; for in
+the last 3 years of the war the already clearly discernible
+inevitable destiny of the Reich meant for the holder of a high office
+the renunciation of that part of life which many people say makes
+life worth living. For the duration of the war, orders tied the office
+holder to his position. Also there is no doubt that he who refused
+to obey an order, especially in the last years of the war, risked his
+own death, and possibly the extinction of his family.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From whatever side we approach the problem of orders in Germany
+after 1933, the invocation of the above-mentioned state of
+duress ought not to be denied to a defendant, because that principle
+of duress which exists in the German criminal code, as no doubt it
+does in the criminal codes of all civilized nations, is based on that
+freedom of the individual being which is necessary for the affirmation
+of any guilt.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the perpetrator is no longer free to act, because another
+person deprives him of this liberty through direct immediate danger
+to his life, then, on principle, he is not guilty. I do not want at this
+instant to examine whether in the German world of reality of the
+last years such a direct immediate danger for one’s own life always
+existed; but an encroachment upon the freedom of the man receiving
+orders did exist to a smaller or larger extent without any doubt.
+It seems certain to me that Himmler would have interpreted a
+refusal of Kaltenbrunner to take over the direction of the Reich
+Security Main Office as sabotage and would, as a necessary conclusion,
+have eliminated him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler, according to the revelations at this Trial, was one of the
+greatest lawbreakers that world history has ever known. Many
+even admit it to be a duty to kill such a monster, so as to guarantee
+to millions of human beings the right of freedom and life. At this
+Trial the most varied points of view with regard to the “Putsch,”
+especially the killing of the tyrant, have been proffered by witnesses
+and defendants. I cannot recognize the duty, but the right
+is certainly not contestable. If the oppression of human freedom
+<span class='pageno' title='68' id='Page_68'></span>
+occurs by means of a clearly unjust order based on misanthropy,
+the scales in the now ensuing conflict between obedience and
+freedom of conscience will be weighted on the side of the latter.
+Even the so-called oath of allegiance could not justify a different
+point of view because, as everybody feels, the obligation to
+allegiance presupposes duties of both partners, so that he who
+treads under foot the obligation to respect human conscience in the
+person of his subordinates loses at the same moment the right to
+expect obedience. The tortured conscience is freed and breaks the
+ties which the oath had created. Perhaps some people will not agree
+with my point of view on this problem and will point out the
+necessity of orderliness in the community, and the salutary effects
+of obedience in the very interest of this orderly state, or they will
+point to the wisdom of those in command and at the impossibility
+of understanding and evaluating all such orders as well as the
+person in command does; they will point to patriotism and other
+aspects. And though all that may be correct, there yet remains an
+absolute obligation to resist an order the purport of which, clearly
+recognizable to a subordinate, amounts to the materialization of evil
+and obviously violates the healthy sentiments which aim at
+humanity and peace among people and individuals. The phrase “in
+a life-and-death struggle of a nation there can be no legality” is
+an untrue thesis not thought out to the end, no matter who expresses
+it. Even immediate danger to the life of the person receiving the
+order could not induce me to change my conviction. Dr. Kaltenbrunner
+would not deny that he who stands at the head of an office
+of great importance to the community is obliged to sacrifice his
+life under the above-mentioned conditions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Whereas even direct and imminent danger to his own life and
+that of his family cannot excuse him, it does diminish his guilt,
+and Kaltenbrunner only means to point to this moral and legal
+evaluation of his position. Thus he emphasizes a fact, historically
+proven, which was one of the deeper reasons for the collapse of the
+Reich; for no living man can bring to a community liberty, peace,
+and welfare, who himself bears his chains reluctantly and has lost
+that freedom which is the decisive characteristic of all human beings.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I believe Kaltenbrunner would like to be reborn, and I know
+that he would fight for that freedom with his life’s blood. Kaltenbrunner
+is guilty; but he is less guilty than he appears in the eyes
+of the Prosecution. As the last representative of an ominous power
+of the darkest and most anguish-laden period of the Reich’s history
+he will await your judgment, and yet he was a man whom one could
+not meet without a feeling of tragedy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn now.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='69' id='Page_69'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Dr. Thoma.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. ALFRED THOMA (Counsel for the Defendant Rosenberg):
+May it please the Tribunal, Mr. President, the documentary film
+which was shown in this room and which was to illustrate the “Rise
+and Fall of National Socialism,” begins with a speech delivered by
+Rosenberg concerning the development of the Party up to the
+assumption of power. He also describes the Munich insurrection
+and says that on the morning of 9 November 1923 he saw police
+cars with machine-guns assembling in the Ludwigstrasse in Munich
+and he knew what the march to the Feldherrnhalle implied.
+Nevertheless he marched in the first lines. Today also, my client
+takes the same position in face of the Indictment formulated by the
+prosecutors of the United Nations. He does not want to be pictured
+as though nobody paid any attention to his books, his speeches, and
+his publications. Even today he does not want to appear as a person
+other than what he was once before, a fighter for Germany’s strong
+position in the world, namely, a German Reich in which national
+freedom should be linked to social justice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg is a German, born in the Baltic provinces, who
+learned to speak Russian as a young boy, passed his examination
+in Moscow after the Technical College in Riga moved to Moscow
+during the first World War, took an interest in Russian literature
+and art, had Russian friends, and was puzzled by the fact that the
+Russian nation, defined by Dostoievsky as “the nation with God in
+its heart,” was overcome by the spirit of materialistic Marxism. He
+considered it inconceivable and unjust that the right of self-determination
+had indeed often been promised but never voluntarily
+granted to many nations of Eastern Europe which had been conquered
+by Czarism even in the nineteenth century.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg became convinced that the Bolshevik revolution was
+not directed against certain temporary political phenomena only
+but against the whole national tradition, against the religious faith,
+against the old rural foundations of the Eastern European nations,
+and generally against the idea of personal property. At the end of
+1918 he came to Germany and saw the danger of a Bolshevistic
+revolution in Germany too; he saw the whole spiritual and material
+civilization of the Occident endangered and believed to have found
+his lifework in the struggle against this danger as a follower of
+Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was a political struggle against fanatical and well-organized
+opponents who had at their disposal international resources and
+international backing and who acted according to the principle:
+“Strike the Fascists wherever you can.” But as little as one can
+deduce from that slogan that the Soviets entertained intentions of
+military aggression against Fascist Italy, just as little can one say
+<span class='pageno' title='70' id='Page_70'></span>
+that the struggle of the National Socialists against Bolshevism
+meant a preparation for a war of aggression against the U.S.S.R.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To the Defendant Rosenberg a military conflict with the Soviet
+Union, especially a war of aggression against the latter, seemed as
+likely or as unlikely as to any German or foreign politician who
+had read the book <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>. It is not correct to maintain that
+he was initiated in any way into plans of aggression against the
+Soviet Union; on the contrary, he publicly advocated proper
+relations with Moscow (Document Rosenberg-7b, Page 147). Rosenberg
+never spoke in favor of military intervention against the
+Soviet Union. However, he did fear the entry of the Red Army
+into the border states and then into Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When, in August 1939, Rosenberg learned about the conclusion
+of the Non-Aggression Pact between the Reich and the Soviet
+Union—he was as little informed about the preliminary discussions
+as he was about the other foreign political measures taken by the
+Führer—he might have gone to see the Führer and protested against
+it. He did not do it, and he did not object to it with a single word,
+which the witness Göring confirmed as being a statement of Hitler’s.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the witness box Rosenberg himself described (session of
+16 April 1946) how he was then suddenly called to Hitler, at the
+beginning of April 1941, who told him that he considered a military
+clash with the Soviet Union inevitable. Hitler offered two reasons
+for it:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) The military occupation of Romanian territory, namely,
+Bessarabia and North Bukovina.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) The tremendous increase of the Red Army, along the line of
+demarcation and on Soviet Russian territory in general, which had
+been going on for a long time.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These facts were so striking, he said, that he had already issued
+the appropriate military and other orders, and he said that he
+would appoint Rosenberg in some form as a political adviser. As
+he further stated in the witness box, he thus found himself confronted
+with an accomplished fact, and the very attempt to discuss
+it was cut short by the Führer with the remark that the orders had
+been issued and that hardly anything could be changed in this
+matter. Thereupon Rosenberg called some of his closest collaborators
+together, because he did not know whether the military
+events would take place very soon or later on; and he made, or had
+made, some plans concerning the treatment of political problems.
+On 20 April 1941 Rosenberg received from Hitler a preliminary
+order to establish a central office to deal with questions concerning
+the East and to contact the competent highest Reich authorities
+with respect to these matters (Document Number 865-PS, USA-143).
+<span class='pageno' title='71' id='Page_71'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If this statement made by Rosenberg is not in itself sufficient
+to refute the assertion made by the Prosecution, according to which
+Rosenberg is “personally responsible for the planning and execution
+of the war of aggression against Russia” (Brudno, in the session
+of 9 January 1946) and was aware of the “aggressive predatory
+character of the imminent war” (Rudenko, in the session of 17 April
+1946)—if, above all, it is not accepted that Rosenberg was convinced
+of an imminent aggressive war to be waged by the Soviet Union
+against Germany, then I would like to bring up four more points in
+order to prove the correctness of the statements made by the
+defendant.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) Rosenberg was not called to the well-known conference at the
+Reich Chancellery on 5 November 1937 (“Hossbach Document,”
+Document Number 386-PS, USA-25), when Hitler disclosed for the
+first time his intentions of waging war. This was at the time when
+Rosenberg still had political influence, or at least seemed to have
+it. If ever, he should have played the part of the intimate political
+“inspirator” then.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) Lammers, as a witness, stated before this Tribunal that Hitler
+made all important decisions quite alone; thus also the decision
+concerning war against Russia.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) To my question about Rosenberg’s influence on Hitler’s
+decisions concerning foreign policy, Göring replied before this
+Tribunal on 16 March 1946:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I think that after the accession to power, the Führer did not
+consult the Party Office of Foreign Affairs a single time about
+questions concerning foreign policy and that it was created
+only as a center for dealing with certain questions concerning
+foreign policy which came up within the Party. As far as I
+know, Rosenberg was certainly not consulted about political
+decisions after the accession to power.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This was also confirmed by the witness Von Neurath on 26 June
+1946 in this courtroom.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(4) Finally, I would further like to refer to the “brief report
+concerning the activity of the Office of Foreign Affairs of the
+NSDAP” (Document Number 003-PS, USA-603). Brief mention is
+made in it of the “Near East” in such a harmless manner that no
+word need be said about it. In the confidential reports 004-PS and
+007-PS nothing is said either about any preparations against the
+Soviet Union.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Administration in the East.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It would be an easy, too superficial, and therefore, unjust procedure
+if one were to say that firstly the Eastern Territories were
+occupied in a war of aggression, and therefore anything the German
+administration did there was criminal; and secondly, that as Reich
+<span class='pageno' title='72' id='Page_72'></span>
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, Rosenberg was the
+responsible minister, and therefore he must be punished for all
+crimes which have occurred there, at least for what happened
+within the scope of the jurisdiction and authority of the administrative
+bodies. I will have to demonstrate that this conception is
+not correct for legal and factual reasons.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg was the organizer and the highest authority of the
+administration in the East. On 17 July 1941 he was appointed Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories. Acting on instructions,
+he had performed preparatory work before that time on
+questions concerning Eastern Europe by contacting the Reich
+agencies concerned (Document Number 1039-PS; US-146). He
+planned and set up his office for dealing centrally with questions
+concerning Eastern Europe (Document Number 1024-PS; US-278).
+He had provisional instructions for the Reich Commissioners drawn
+up (Document Number 1030-PS; US-144); he delivered the programmatical
+speech of 20 June 1941 (Document Number 1068-PS;
+US-143); above all, he took part in the Führer conference of 16 July
+1941 (Document Number L-221; US-317).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the presence of Rosenberg, Lammers, Keitel, and Bormann,
+Hitler said at that time that the real aims of the war against Russia
+should not be made known to the whole world, that those present
+should understand clearly that “we will never withdraw from the
+new Eastern Territories; whatever opposition appears will be exterminated;
+never again must a military power develop west of the
+Urals; nobody but a German shall ever bear a weapon.” Hitler
+proclaimed the subjection and the exploitation of the Eastern Territories,
+and in making these statements he placed himself in opposition
+to what Rosenberg had told him before—without being
+contradicted by Hitler—concerning his own plans for the East.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus Hitler probably had a program of enslavement and
+exploitation. Nothing is so natural, and nothing easier than to say:
+Even before Rosenberg took over his ministry he knew Hitler’s aims
+for the East; namely, to rule it, to administer it, to exploit it.
+Therefore he is not only an accomplice in a crime of conspiracy
+against peace; he is also jointly responsible for the Crimes against
+Humanity perpetrated in the Eastern Territories, since Rosenberg
+held the complete power, the highest authority in the East.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall deal later, <span class='it'>de jure</span> and <span class='it'>de facto</span>, with the question of
+Rosenberg’s automatic responsibility in his capacity as supreme chief
+of the Eastern Territories. First I would like to consider the question
+of his individual responsibility. One might deduce it from two
+reasons:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>First, because he allegedly participated in the preparation of
+the war of aggression against the Soviet Union; I have already
+<span class='pageno' title='73' id='Page_73'></span>
+stated that this assertion is not correct; Rosenberg has neither
+ideologically nor actually participated in the preparations of the
+war of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Secondly, because he supported Hitler’s plan of conquest by
+making plans, delivering speeches, and organizing the administration.
+When a minister or general, following the instructions of the head
+of the State, elaborates plans or takes preparatory measures of an
+organizational nature, for later eventualities, this activity cannot
+be considered as criminal even when the interests of other countries
+are affected thereby and even when the plans, preparations, and
+measures are intended for war. Only when the minister or general
+in question directs his activity toward things which have to be
+considered as criminal according to sound common sense and an
+international sense of decency and justice can he be held individually
+responsible. Rosenberg has consistently proved by word and
+deed that the traditional conceptions of right are his conceptions
+also and that he desired to enforce them. But his position was
+particularly difficult since his supreme chief finally exceeded all
+limits in his ideas, aims, and intentions and since other strong
+forces like Bormann, Himmler, and Gauleiter Erich Koch were also
+involved, who frustrated and sabotaged Rosenberg’s good and fair
+intentions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus we witness the strange spectacle of a minister in office who
+partly cannot understand or approve, partly is totally unaware of
+the intentions of the head of the State; and on the other hand that
+of the head of a state who appoints a minister to take office, who
+is certainly an old and loyal political fellow combatant, but with
+whom he has no longer any spiritual contact whatsoever. It would
+be wrong to judge such a situation simply according to democratic
+conceptions of the responsibility of a minister. Rosenberg could
+not simply resign, yet he felt inwardly the duty of fighting for the
+point of view which appeared to him right and decent.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his speech of 20 June 1941 Rosenberg said that it was the
+duty of the Germans to consider that Germany should not have to
+fight every 25 years for her existence in the East. He by no means,
+however, desired the extermination of the Slavs, but the advancement
+of all the nations of Eastern Europe and the advancement, not
+the annihilation, of their national independence. He demanded
+(Document Number 1058-PS; Exhibit USA-147) “friendly sentiments”
+toward the Ukrainians, a guarantee of “national and cultural
+existence” for the Caucasians; he emphasized that, even with a war
+on, we were “not enemies of the Russian people, whose great
+achievements we fully recognize.” He advocated “the right of self-determination
+of people”—one of the first points of the whole Soviet
+revolution. This was his idea, tenaciously defended till the end. The
+<span class='pageno' title='74' id='Page_74'></span>
+speech in question also contains the passage which the Prosecution
+holds against him in particular, that the feeding of the German
+people during these years will be placed at the top of German
+demands in the East and that the southern territories and the North
+Caucasus would have to make up the balance in feeding the
+German people. Then, Rosenberg continues literally:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“We do not see at all why we should be compelled to feed
+the Russian people also from these regions of surplus. We
+know that this is a bitter necessity which lies beyond any
+sentiment. Without a doubt extensive evacuation will be
+necessary, and there are very hard years ahead for the
+Russians. To what extent industries are to be kept up there
+is a question reserved for future decision.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This passage comes quite suddenly and all by itself in the long
+speech. One feels distinctly that it has been squeezed in; it is not
+Rosenberg’s voice; Rosenberg does not proclaim here a program of
+his own but only states facts which lie beyond his will. In the
+directives of the eastern ministry (Document Number 1056-PS) the
+feeding of the population, as well as supplying it with medical
+necessities, is described as being especially urgent.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the contrary, the true Rosenberg emerges in the conference
+of 16 July 1941 when, regarding Hitler’s plans, he called attention
+to the University of Kiev and to the independence and cultural
+advancement of the Ukraine and when he took a stand against
+the intended full power of the Police and above all against the
+appointment of Gauleiter Erich Koch in the Ukraine (Document
+Number L-221).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One will contend: What is the use of opposition and protests,
+what is the use of secret reservations and of feigned agreement
+with Hitler’s intentions—Rosenberg did co-operate all the same.
+Therefore he is responsible too. Later on I will outline in detail
+how and to what extent Rosenberg took part in the policy in the
+East, what things he did not do and how he opposed them, what he
+planned and desired himself in order to defend himself against the
+grave charge of being responsible for the alleged exploitation and
+enslavement of the East. Here I would only like to point out the
+following: It was in no way a hopeless task to begin by accepting
+even Hitler’s most passionate statements without contradiction in
+the hope and with the intention of nevertheless attaining a different
+result later on. In opposition to Hitler’s statement: “No other than
+a German may ever bear weapons in the East,” it was not long,
+for example, before, on Rosenberg’s recommendation, legions of
+volunteers were formed from the peoples of the East; and in opposition
+to Hitler’s wish, an edict of tolerance was issued at the end
+of 1941 for the churches of the East (Document Number 1517-PS).
+<span class='pageno' title='75' id='Page_75'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If, at first, Rosenberg could achieve nothing for the autonomy
+of the eastern nations, he still adhered to his plans for the future
+in this respect too. First he took care of the urgent agrarian question.
+An agrarian program was drawn up, which it was possible
+to present to the Führer on 15 February 1942, and which was
+authorized by him in unchanged form. It was not an instrument of
+exploitation, but an act of liberal formation of the agrarian constitution
+in the midst of the most terrible of wars. Right in the
+middle of the war the eastern countries not only received a new
+agrarian constitution but also agricultural machinery. The witness
+Professor Dencker, in his affidavit, has borne witness to the following
+deliveries to the occupied Soviet territories, including the former
+border states:</p>
+
+<table id='tab2' summary='' class='center'>
+<colgroup>
+<col span='1' style='width: 13em;'/>
+<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
+<col span='1' style='width: 4em;'/>
+</colgroup>
+<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle2'>Tractors, 40-50 HP</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>about</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle1'>7,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle2'>Threshing machines</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>about</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle1'>5,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle2'>Agricultural implements</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>about</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle1'>200,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle2'>Gas generators for German and Russian tractors</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>about</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle1'>24,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle2'>Harvesters</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle4'>about</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle1'>35,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tab2c1 tab2c1-col3 tdStyle2' colspan='3'>Total Cost: about 180,000,000 marks.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I do not think one can say that these deliveries were made with
+a view to exploitation. So in this, too, Rosenberg accomplished a
+piece of constructive work that was really a blessing. In the
+following I will first treat the question of Rosenberg’s automatic
+responsibility as minister for the Eastern Territories; that is,
+the question of his criminal liability on the grounds of his official
+position.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 17 July 1941, Rosenberg was appointed Reich Minister for
+the Occupied Eastern Territories. Two Reich Commissariats were
+set up as supreme territorial authorities: “Ostland” (Esthonia,
+Latvia, Lithuania, and White Ruthenia) under Reich Commissioner
+Lohse, and “Ukraine” under Reich Commissioner Koch. The Reich
+Commissariats were divided into general districts and regions. Right
+from the beginning the eastern ministry was not conceived as an
+administrative authority built on a large scale but as a central
+office, a supreme authority which was to confine itself to over-all
+instructions and fundamental directives and in addition was to
+insure the supply of material and personnel. The actual governing
+was the duty of the Reich Commissioner; he was the sovereign in
+his territory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, it is of special importance that Rosenberg, as minister
+for the East, was not at the head of the whole eastern administration,
+but that several supreme authorities existed at the same time.
+Göring, as Delegate for the Four Year Plan, was responsible for the
+<span class='pageno' title='76' id='Page_76'></span>
+control of the economy in all occupied territories and in this respect
+had authority over the minister for the East, for Rosenberg could
+only issue economic decrees with Göring’s agreement. The Chief
+of the German Police, Himmler, was solely and exclusively
+competent for police security in the Occupied Eastern Territories;
+there was no police division at all in the ministry for the East, nor
+in the Reich Commissariats. Rosenberg’s competence was furthermore
+undermined by Himmler as Reich Commissioner for the
+Preservation of German Nationality and by Speer, on behalf of
+whom a Führer decree detached all technical matters from the
+eastern administration. It was further weakened by Goebbels who
+claimed for himself the control of propaganda in the Occupied
+Eastern Territories as well. Later on I shall come to the important
+question of labor mobilization, which was put under the authority
+of Sauckel. Nevertheless, Rosenberg was the minister responsible
+for the Occupied Eastern Territories. In view of this, the following
+must be emphasized:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this Trial Rosenberg is not made responsible from the political
+standpoint, since the High Tribunal is no parliament; neither is he
+made responsible from the point of view of constitutional law, for
+the High Tribunal is not a supreme court of judicature. The liability
+of the defendant with respect to civil law is not in question either,
+but only his criminal liability, his responsibility for his own alleged
+crimes and for the crimes of others. I do not need to outline in
+more detail the fact that in order to establish criminal liability and
+to condemn it, it must be proved that the defendant illegally committed
+acts punishable by law and that he may only be punished
+for failure to act, that is, for an omission, if he had the legal
+duty to act and if it was due to his inactivity that the crime
+occurred, always assuming that the actual possibility existed of his
+preventing the crime.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact seems to me of decisive importance that Rosenberg
+although Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, was not a
+supreme ruler. Supreme rulers were the Reich Commissioners of
+the gigantic territories “Ostland” and “Ukraine.” The lines along
+which these territories were to be constitutionally remodeled were
+not yet visible, but one thing was certain: The Reich Commissioner
+was the highest authority. For instance, it was he who, on the most
+important measures—like shooting of inhabitants of a region for
+acts of sabotage—had the right to make the ultimate decision. I
+should like to insert that in practice in these cases the Police had
+exclusive competence. The Reich, that is, other authorities, had the
+right to fundamental legislation and over-all supervision. By a
+slight change in the well-known remark of Benjamin Constant, the
+French professor of constitutional law, “<span class='it'>Le roi règne, mais il ne
+<span class='pageno' title='77' id='Page_77'></span>
+gouverne pas</span>,” one may define in the following way Rosenberg’s
+position as Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories: “<span class='it'>Le
+ministre gouverne, mais il ne règne pas.</span>” As in certain dominions
+of the British Empire, there existed a sovereignty of the Reich
+Commissioner with a central over-all supervision by the minister
+for the East. Today nobody would think of summoning the competent
+British minister before a tribunal because a governor in India
+had allowed a native village to be bombed and burned down.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And so I come to my conclusion that in Rosenberg’s case there
+exists no automatic criminal responsibility for the nonprevention of
+crimes in the East, if only because, although he had authority of
+supervision, he was not sovereign; the two Reich Commissioners had
+the supreme authority.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The question must furthermore be asked and briefly examined
+whether the defendant is individually guilty of the criminal exploitation
+and enslavement of the nations of the East and perhaps of
+further crimes. What was his attitude, what were the general lines
+and general trends of his policy, what did he do positively, and
+what did he prevent or at least try to prevent?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the Baltic countries, national administrations or directorates
+were installed under German supervision. The German administration
+was compelled by the Reich Minister for the Occupied
+Eastern Territories to show great understanding for all desires
+which could be fulfilled and strive for good relations with the Baltic
+countries; the Baltic countries had a free legal, educational, and
+cultural system and were only limited with respect to questions
+concerning politics, economy, and the police. After the war of
+1914-18 agrarian reform in the Baltic states was carried out almost
+exclusively at the expense of the 700-year-old German holdings.
+Nevertheless Rosenberg, as minister for the East, made a law
+returning to private ownership the farms which had been made
+collective by the Soviet Union since 1940 and, by this restitution
+of soil which had originally been taken away from German
+proprietors, showed the greatest possible good will of the German
+Reich. This, as well as the already-mentioned agrarian program,
+has been expressly confirmed by the witness Riecke.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the General District of White Ruthenia independent administration
+was initiated under Reich Commissioner Kube. The White
+Ruthenia Central Committee was founded, as well as a White
+Ruthenian relief system and a White Ruthenian youth organization.
+When a White Ruthenian youth delegation returned from a visit
+to Germany, Kube said that he would continue to act as a father
+to White Ruthenian youth; the following night he was murdered,
+yet this policy was not changed.
+<span class='pageno' title='78' id='Page_78'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should like to observe here in passing that the actual Russian
+territories between Narva and Leningrad and around Smolensk
+remained all the time under military administration; likewise the
+districts around Kharkov and the Crimea.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As far as the Ukraine is concerned, Rosenberg intended to give it
+extensive central self-administrative sovereignty, as soon as possible,
+similar to the directorates in the Baltic states and combined with
+a pronounced advancement of the cultural and educational needs of
+the people. After Rosenberg had originally considered himself entitled
+to assume that Hitler agreed with this idea, another conception
+later came to prevail, namely, that all forces should be directed
+toward the war economy. Rosenberg managed to achieve and carry
+through one thing only: The new agrarian program of 15 February
+1942, which provided for a transition from the collective economy
+of the Soviet Union to private enterprise and then to ownership by
+the farmers. On 23 June 1943 the property decree was issued as a
+complement to this. At first it was not possible to carry this out
+because of Reich Commissioner Koch’s opposition, and then military
+events brought everything to an end. A further fundamental decree
+was based on a general adjustment of the school system, which
+Rosenberg had ordered to be worked out because the Reich Commissioner
+of the Ukraine declined to do it himself. Rosenberg provided
+for elementary schools and higher technical schools; the Reich
+Commissioner protested against this. On account of the conflict,
+which became more and more acute, between Rosenberg and Reich
+Commissioner Koch, Hitler in June 1943 issued the following written
+instruction: The Reich Commissioner had no right to make any
+obstructions, but the Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern
+Territories should confine himself to essential questions, and when
+issuing any orders should make it possible for the Reich Commissioner
+of the Ukraine to express his opinion beforehand, which
+practically meant Koch’s co-operation beside Rosenberg.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During his examination of 8 April 1946 the witness Lammers
+described Rosenberg’s peculiar constitutional position as Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories and his political
+position, which became constantly weaker. I would like to emphasize
+the following striking and especially important declarations made
+by the witness: The authority of the Reich Minister for the Occupied
+Eastern Territories was detracted from by the Armed Forces, by
+Göring as the Delegate for the Four Year Plan, by Himmler as
+Chief of the German Police, by Himmler as Reich Commissioner for
+the Preservation of Germandom (resettlement measures), by Sauckel
+as Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor, by Speer
+in the field of armaments and engineering, and finally, through
+differences of opinion, by Propaganda Minister Goebbels.
+<span class='pageno' title='79' id='Page_79'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Furthermore, Rosenberg was limited by the fact that two Reich
+Commissioners, Lohse and Koch, were appointed for the Occupied
+Eastern Territories. The Higher SS and Police Leader was “personally
+and directly” subordinated to the Reich Commissioner; but,
+as Lammers has declared, in technical respects he could not take
+any orders from Rosenberg or from the Reich Commissioner but
+only from Himmler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Lammers said furthermore: Rosenberg always wished to pursue
+a moderate policy in the East; he was without any doubt against
+a policy of extermination and against a policy of deportation, which
+were widely advocated in other quarters. He made efforts to rebuild
+agriculture through the agrarian program, to put the educational
+system, church affairs, the universities and schools in order. Rosenberg
+had great difficulty in asserting himself, for especially the Reich
+Commissioner for the Ukraine simply did not follow Rosenberg’s
+orders. Rosenberg favored instituting a certain degree of independence
+in the eastern nations; he particularly had at heart the
+cultural interests of the latter. The differences of opinion between
+Koch and Rosenberg, says Lammers, could have filled volumes of
+files. Hitler called Rosenberg and Koch to him and decided that
+they should meet each month in order to consult each other.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The witness Lammers said, quite rightly, that of Rosenberg as
+the superior minister it was asking too much to have to come to an
+agreement in each case with his subordinate, the Reich Commissioner.
+Subsequently it was shown that in spite of the meetings
+they came to no agreement, and finally it was Herr Koch who was
+right in the eyes of the Führer. As Lammers says it was about the
+end of 1943 that Rosenberg was received for the last time by the
+Führer, and even before that time he had always had great difficulties
+in reaching the Führer. There had been no more Reich
+Cabinet sessions since 1937.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler’s ideas tended more and more in the direction of Bormann-Himmler.
+The East became the ground for experiments.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To this group—as it is quite clear today, for the first time—it
+seemed hopeless to look for understanding on the part of Rosenberg
+as to the development of the Reich as they wished it. Rosenberg had
+no idea of the extent of the fight waged against him. His quarrel
+with Reich Commissioner Koch, the exponent of Himmler and Bormann,
+is proof of this ignorance; but it is also complete proof of
+Rosenberg’s integrity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 14 December 1942 Rosenberg issued a set of instructions to
+the Reich Commissioner of the Ukraine (Document Number 19-PS);
+his other instructions have unfortunately not been found. In this,
+Rosenberg requested the administrative chiefs to preserve decent
+attitudes and views; he demanded justice and human understanding
+<span class='pageno' title='80' id='Page_80'></span>
+for the population, which had always seen in Germany the supporter
+of legal order (Document Number 194-PS); the war had brought
+terrible hardships, but every offense should be fairly examined and
+judged, and should not be punished to excess. It is also inadmissible
+that German authorities meet the population with expressions of
+contempt. One can only show one is the master through correct
+manner and actions, not by ostentatious behavior; our own attitude
+must bring others to respect the Germans; those administrative
+chiefs who have shown themselves unworthy of their tasks, who
+have misused the authority they were given, and who by their
+obnoxious behavior have shown themselves to be unworthy of our
+uniform, must be treated accordingly and summoned before a court
+or removed to Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The echo which such decrees called forth in Koch is shown in
+his memorandum of 16 March 1943 (Document Number 192-PS).
+Koch writes that “it is a strange thought that not only must a
+correct attitude be displayed toward the Ukrainians, but that we
+must even be amiable to them and always ready to help.” Furthermore
+Rosenberg demanded esteem for the highly-developed consciousness
+of the Ukrainian people and, according to Rosenberg, a
+high degree of cultural self-administration was desirable for the
+Ukraine; nations as big as the Ukraine could not be kept in permanent
+dependence, and the eastern campaign was a political
+campaign and not an economic raid. Here Koch, addressing Rosenberg,
+refers in a cynical manner to the climax reached in the
+relations of his organization with Ukrainian emigration. There are
+other decrees of Rosenberg’s which are criticized by Koch. One of
+these is the decree of 18 June 1942 concerning the acquisition by
+Rosenberg of Ukrainian schoolbooks for a total of 2.3 million Reichsmark
+to be charged to the budget of the Reich Commissariat without
+his previously even getting in touch with Koch. One million
+primers, one million spelling charts, 200,000 schoolbooks, 300,000
+language books, and 200,000 arithmetic books were to be provided at
+a time when there was hardly even the most necessary paper for
+German school children.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Koch goes on to say:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is not necessary to point out repeatedly in the decrees
+issued by your ministry and in telephone communications that
+no coercion may be used in recruiting laborers and that the
+eastern ministry even demands to be informed of every
+instance in which compulsion has been used.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In a subsequent decree Koch says he is blamed for having caused
+the closing of vocational schools; and he also says that Rosenberg
+ordered the General Commissioners to adopt a different school
+policy, thereby overstepping his authority as Reich Commissioner.
+<span class='pageno' title='81' id='Page_81'></span>
+Koch then concludes with a veiled threat that to him, as a veteran
+Gauleiter, the way to the Führer could not be barred. So much
+challenging criticism of Rosenberg, so much unintentional praise,
+and so much proof of the absolute decency of his behavior and the
+far-sighted and statesmanlike direction of his office as chief of the
+eastern administration!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One last document in the fight of Rosenberg against Koch is the
+report regarding Reich Commissioner Koch and the timber region of
+Zuman of 2 April 1943 (Document Number 032-PS), regarding which
+Rosenberg gave exhaustive information as a witness. In this very
+matter Rosenberg displayed his conscientiousness particularly
+clearly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And now we have again to unroll another scene before our eyes,
+because the Prosecution attached specific importance to it: In July
+1942, Bormann wrote a letter to Rosenberg; Rosenberg replied, and
+a third party, Dr. Markull, an associate of Rosenberg in his ministry,
+wrote a commentary regarding it. According to Dr. Markull’s
+representation the contents of Bormann’s letter, the original of
+which is not extant, was the following: the Slavs should work for
+us; if of no use to us, they ought to die; health provisions were
+superfluous; the fertility of the Slavs was undesirable, their education
+dangerous; it would do if they could count up to one hundred.
+Every educated person is a potential enemy. We could leave them
+their religion as an outlet. As sustenance they should receive only
+the barest necessities; we are the masters and we come first.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To that letter by the closest collaborator of Hitler there could be
+only one reply by Rosenberg: feigned consent and feigned compliance.
+In the inner circle of the eastern ministry there arose considerable
+apprehensions regarding this significant change in the attitude of
+its chief, apprehensions which were expressed in Dr. Markull’s
+memorandum of 5 September 1942. Rosenberg as a witness has
+stated that there cannot exist any doubt, when that document is
+read impartially, that he agreed only for the sake of pacifying Hitler
+and Bormann. Rosenberg wanted to insure himself against an attack
+from the Führer’s headquarters, which he anticipated with certainty
+because he allegedly did more for the eastern population than for
+the German people, because he required more physicians than there
+were available for sick Germans, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Markull memorandum is the truest possible bona fide reflection
+of Rosenberg’s personality and influence, since it shows the
+anxious subordinate trying to conjure up the spirit of his minister
+as he had come to know and to love him in his work, and to dispel
+an alien phantom who seemed to have taken his place. It is stated
+there that such a train of thought conformed with the policy of
+Reich Commissioner Koch, but not with the decrees of the Reich
+<span class='pageno' title='82' id='Page_82'></span>
+Minister and the conception of at least 80 percent of the District
+Commissioners and specialists who were counting on their minister
+and who considered that the eastern population should be treated
+decently and with understanding, for it evinced a surprisingly high
+capacity for culture, its efficiency in work was good, and we were
+about to waste a precious stock of gratitude, love, and confidence.
+The controversy between the minister and the Reich Commissioner
+was well known among the high authorities of the Reich, and it
+was no secret that the ministry was unable to carry out its policies
+in opposition to the Reich Commissioners, who considered the eastern
+ministry as entirely superfluous; the writings of Bormann would
+disavow the entire policy of the eastern minister up to now, and
+one was given the impression that Koch had been backed by Hitler
+in his opposition to the minister. Since its foundation the ministry
+had had to register an ever-increasing loss of power. The Higher
+SS and Police Leaders refused to render to the General Commissioners
+the normal honors such as reports, et cetera. One jurisdiction
+of the eastern minister after another was being taken away by
+other highest Reich offices; in the offices in Berlin it was openly said
+that the remodeling of the ministry into a mere operations staff was
+to be expected. On the other hand, the Reich Ministry for the
+Occupied Eastern Territories, due to the personality of its leader,
+enjoyed the exceptional esteem of the public.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Dr. Markull implores the minister to stand by his original ideas,
+saying that the unfortunate master complex should be as much
+avoided as the opinion that the intelligentsia were alien to the
+masses. The influence of spiritual forces should be taken into consideration.
+Germany should prove a “righteous judge,” acknowledging
+the national and cultural rights of nations. Such had been the
+ideas of the minister before, and such they should remain.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg’s attitude did not in fact change, since at that very
+time he was working on the great School Program (Schulverordnung).
+Later on he effected the reopening primarily of the medical
+faculties in colleges. And then came the conflict with the Führer
+in May 1943.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 12 October 1944 Rosenberg tendered his resignation through
+Lammers to the Führer (Document Number Ro-14), because German
+eastern policy in general and the political psychological treatment
+of eastern nations in particular, were still contrary to the point of
+view which he had had from the very beginning, namely, his plan
+of autonomy for the eastern nations and the cultural development
+of their capacities as part of an all-European conception of a family
+of nations on the continent. He now inwardly broke down at seeing
+a great statesmanlike program destroyed. All he could do in regard
+to the policy of enslavement and looting which was going on in his
+<span class='pageno' title='83' id='Page_83'></span>
+country was merely to accept memoranda from his colleagues in
+the ministry, or at best indulge in a futile paper war with people
+like Koch. He had not been strong enough against the plans which
+benighted forces wanted to carry out in the East; and he was
+powerless against their influence, being in addition totally unaware
+at that time of all the police and military orders which were
+presented here to the Tribunal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When Rosenberg once reminded Hitler of the creation of a
+university in Kiev, Hitler apparently agreed; after Rosenberg had
+left and he was alone with Göring, Hitler said, “This fellow has too
+many worries. We have more important matters on our minds than
+universities in Kiev.” No episode can illustrate better than all the
+documents the one theme: Rosenberg and the reality in the East,
+and the other theme: Rosenberg as the alleged inspirer of Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As Rosenberg did not receive any reply to his request for resignation,
+he tried many times to talk to Hitler personally. It was all
+in vain.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 11 December 1945 Mr. Dodd said:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The system of hatred, barbarism, and denial of personal
+rights which the conspirators had elevated to the national
+philosophy of Germany followed the National Socialist
+masters when they overran Europe. Foreign workers became
+the slaves of the master race, being deported and enslaved in
+millions.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And on 8 February 1946 General Rudenko said:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In the long line of ruthless crimes committed by the German-Fascist
+troops of occupation, the forcible deportation of
+peaceful citizens into slavery and bondage in Germany takes
+a particularly important place.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He said that Göring, Keitel, Rosenberg, and Sauckel were particularly
+responsible for the inhuman and barbaric instructions, directives
+and orders of the Hitler Government, whose purpose was the
+carrying out of the deportation of Soviet people into German slavery.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have already spoken of the formal and individual responsibility
+of Rosenberg as Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories.
+I have already explained, too, that in the field of labor employment
+it was not Rosenberg but Sauckel who, as Plenipotentiary General
+for the Allocation of Labor, was the highest authority and the
+responsible person, by virtue of the Führer’s decree of 21 March
+1942 (Document Number 580-PS). Thus Sauckel in this field was
+Rosenberg’s superior.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He wrote to Rosenberg on 3 October 1942 (Document Number
+017-PS):</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The Führer has drawn up new and most urgent armament
+programs which require the speediest employment of two
+<span class='pageno' title='84' id='Page_84'></span>
+million additional foreign workers. For the execution of his
+decree of 21 March 1942 the Führer has given me more
+authority for my further tasks, particularly empowering me
+to use my own judgment in taking all measures in the Reich
+and in the Occupied Eastern Territories in order to insure the
+organized employment of labor for the German armament
+industry under all circumstances.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his Program for the Allocation of Labor of 24 April 1942
+(Document Number 016-PS), he emphasized that the state and local
+labor offices are in charge of all technical and administrative matters
+in connection with labor employment which come under the
+exclusive competence and responsibility of the Plenipotentiary
+General for the Allocation of Labor. The defense of Sauckel is not
+my task. But may I point out that he also did not take over his
+great and difficult task with a feeling of hatred and intentions of
+enslavement. In his Program for the Allocation of Labor just
+mentioned he says, for instance:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Everything has to be avoided which, beyond the shortages
+and hardships caused by war conditions, would aggravate and
+even cause unnecessary suffering to foreign male and female
+workers during their stay in Germany. It stands to reason
+that we should make their presence and their work in Germany,
+without any loss for ourselves, as bearable as possible.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='noindent'>On that point Sauckel and Rosenberg shared the same opinion.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Neither is it my task to state and to prove that many hundreds
+of thousands of foreign workers found good conditions in Germany,
+that in fact numberless persons were better off here than in their
+fatherland. I am only concerned with the bad conditions which
+have been charged to the Defendant Rosenberg.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I come now to the “Central Agency for Nationals of the Eastern
+Territories.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen of the Tribunal, several days ago I read the affidavit
+of Dr. Albert Beil. Essentially it contains an authoritative statement
+of whatever can be said about that subject. Therefore, I should like
+to omit this subject, “Central Agency for Nationals of the Eastern
+Territories,” and ask the Tribunal to consider it as having been
+presented.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">2. Central Office for Nationals of the Eastern Territories.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">As the war became more and more intensified in regard to totality and
+brutality, the German workers, and the Germans altogether, did anything but
+live in a grand style; they too, as far as they had not been drafted for the Army,
+were assigned to labor duties, had to do heavy work for long hours, were
+separated from their families, had frequently to be content with second-rate
+billets—especially because of the increasing number of houses damaged by air
+attacks—and they, too, were severely punished for refusal to work or defaulting.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The fact that the foreign workers were likewise victims of this totality and
+brutality of the war and, admittedly, in some respects even more so, does not
+incriminate Rosenberg either legally or morally. He established, within his
+<span class='pageno' title='85' id='Page_85'></span>
+ministry, the Central Office for Nationals of the Eastern Territories, which had
+neither police tasks nor any other competencies of an administrative nature but
+was concerned solely with the welfare of nationals of the Eastern Territories
+and which employed trustees taken from among the eastern nations. In the
+report of 30 September 1942 (Document Number 084-PS, US-199) this office points
+out several inadequacies: That the accommodation, treatment, food, and pay of
+the Eastern Workers called forth strong criticism; that, though actually the
+situation was much better now (deadline 1 October 1942), the conditions for
+Eastern Workers were on the whole still far from being satisfactory. Rosenberg
+is therefore asked to discuss the matter with Hitler in order to have Hitler
+himself take energetic measures; Himmler was to be made to rescind his general
+regulations concerning the treatment of Eastern Workers; the Party Chancellery
+and the Party to be reminded of their historical responsibility for the millions
+of former Soviet citizens now guided by Germany and instructed to co-operate
+in all matters concerning Eastern Workers in the Reich with the Reich Minister;
+finally it was suggested to extend the scope of the Central Office for Nationals
+of the Eastern Territories as quickly as possible, so as to enable it efficiently to
+look after the interests of the aliens from the occupied territories living in the
+Reich, being, so to speak, the projected arm of the East ministry and the
+representative of these people. In this sense, namely, in the sense of social care
+and humane welfare, the eastern ministry was active for the Eastern Workers.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To refute the charge that Rosenberg was active as protagonist of
+the system of hatred and barbarism, of denying human rights, and
+of enslavement, I must add the following. Rosenberg received
+further unfavorable reports, one being the report of 7 October 1942
+about the bad treatment of Ukrainian skilled workers (Document
+Number 054-PS, US-198). Abuses in recruiting and during transportation
+were pointed out; the workers were frequently dragged
+out of their beds at night and locked up in cellars until the time of
+their departure; threats and blows by the rural militia were a
+matter of course; food brought from home was often taken by the
+militia; during transportation to Germany neglect and transgressions
+on the part of the escorting units occurred, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg had no authority whatsoever to intervene in those
+matters, yet he tried to do so in a letter of 21 December 1942 to
+Sauckel; Rosenberg first emphasized his fundamental accord with
+Sauckel; but after a few tactical and polite <span class='it'>clichés</span>, he complained
+seriously and urgently about the methods used in the employment
+of labor. I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I must emphatically request, in view of my responsibility
+for the Occupied Eastern Territories, that in supplying the
+required quotas methods should be avoided which might one
+day cause me or my associates to be charged with connivance
+and with being responsible for the consequences.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg further states that he empowered the Reich Commissioner
+for the Ukraine to make use, so far as required, of his
+sovereign rights and to give attention to the elimination of recruiting
+methods which were running counter to the interests of warfare and
+war economy in the occupied territories. He, Rosenberg, and the
+Reich Commissioners could not help being surprised that in
+numerous instances measures, which should have been previously
+<span class='pageno' title='86' id='Page_86'></span>
+agreed upon with the civilian authorities, were first learned of
+through the police or other offices. Without co-ordination of their
+mutual wishes Rosenberg was unfortunately unable to accept the
+joint responsibility for consequences resulting from these reported
+conditions. In conclusion Rosenberg expressed the wish to put an
+early end to such conditions for the sake of their common interest.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg also tried personal consultations with Sauckel and got
+Sauckel to promise that he would do everything to bring about a
+fair solution of all these questions (conference of 14 April 1942). It
+was beyond Rosenberg’s power and authority to do more. His secret
+opponent, supported by higher authorities, was Reich Commissioner
+Koch, who was indeed one of the chief culprits responsible for the
+cruel methods of recruiting and employment of Eastern Workers,
+and whose influence Rosenberg was unable to counteract.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When the prosecutor (Brudno, on 9 January 1946) charges the
+defendant with protesting against these methods not for humanitarian
+reasons but out of political expediency, I can only say that in
+my opinion one cannot, without some sound reasons, simply maintain
+that the Defendant Rosenberg is devoid of any human qualities.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As an example of the defendant’s particular bestiality, the
+so-called “Hay Action” has been repeatedly pointed out by the
+Prosecution (Document Number 031-PS). It concerned the intention
+of Army Group Center to evacuate 40,000 to 50,000 juveniles from
+the area of operations, as they represented a considerable burden to
+the area of operations and were besides, for the most part, without
+any parental supervision. Villages for children were to be established
+behind the front lines under native supervision; one of these
+villages had already proven its value. It was hoped that through
+the Organization Todt, being a particularly appropriate organization
+due to its technical and other possibilities, the juveniles might, in
+the main, be placed at the disposal of German handicraft as apprentices,
+in order to employ them as skilled workers after 2 years’
+training. At first Rosenberg, as Reich Minister for the Occupied
+Eastern Territories, was against this because he feared that the
+action might be considered as a deportation of children, while on the
+other hand, the juveniles did not represent a considerable increase
+of military strength. The chief of the political operations staff
+approached Rosenberg again, stating that Army Group Center
+attached particular importance to the fact that the children should
+enter the Reich, not by authority of the Plenipotentiary General for
+the Allocation of Labor, but through the agency of the Reich
+Minister for the East, as it was felt that only then could they be
+assured of correct treatment. The Army Group wanted the action
+to be carried out under the most correct conditions and asked for
+special regulations to be issued with regard to mail facilities
+<span class='pageno' title='87' id='Page_87'></span>
+between them and their parents, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>. In the event of a possible
+reoccupation of the territory the eastern ministry could then let the
+children go back. Together with their parents they would certainly
+form a positive political element during the subsequent reconstruction
+of the territory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally, as reason for the second request addressed to the
+minister, it was stated in addition that the children, to be sure,
+would not essentially contribute to strengthening the military power
+of the enemy but that the important factor in this case was the
+long-range weakening of his biological strength; not only the Reichsführer
+SS but also the Führer had expressed themselves to this
+effect. Rosenberg finally gave his consent to this action.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With regard to this it may be said: This concerned a field which
+was not at all within the jurisdiction of Rosenberg’s administration;
+he did not want to destroy a foreign element, even if biological
+weakening was given him as a reason—a reason which he himself
+did not recognize. Instead he wanted to have the children educated
+and trained and bring them and their parents back to their homes
+later on. That is virtually contrary to the crime with which the
+defendant is charged. Later on, in the late summer of 1944, Rosenberg
+visited the Junkers plant in Dessau where approximately 4,700
+young White Ruthenian craftsmen were employed and also visited
+a White Ruthenian children’s camp. The clothing of the workmen
+was irreproachable; they were industrious, enjoyed the best treatment,
+and got along very well with the German workers. As Rosenberg
+was able to see for himself, the young people were taught
+languages and mathematics by Russian teachers. The children were
+cared for in their forest camp by White Ruthenian mothers and
+women teachers. The figure of 40,000 moreover, was never attained,
+in fact, barely half of it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The attempt of the Prosecution in this instance to appeal
+especially to considerations of humanity in order to discredit the
+defendant cannot be successful in my estimation. For this very
+example compels me to point out the following in particular: We
+were in the midst of a war which was being conducted with terrible
+intensity on both sides. Is not war in itself “monstrous bestiality”?
+The “weakening of the biological strength of nations” is truly a
+fitting expression for the goal and purpose of the whole war, for
+that is what the thoughts and efforts of both belligerent parties are
+aimed at. It would surely be unthinkable that one should forget
+this in judging the actions of the defendants and that one should
+wish to hold the defendants responsible not only for unleashing the
+war, but in addition, for the fact that war in its very essence constitutes
+a great crime on the part of mankind, both against itself and
+against the laws of life.
+<span class='pageno' title='88' id='Page_88'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution contends that Rosenberg is guilty also insofar
+as it was he who issued the inhuman and barbaric decrees which
+aimed at carrying out the deportation of Soviet people into German
+slavery. This causes me to discuss the question as to whether the
+compulsory labor decree of 19 December 1941 and Rosenberg’s
+other decrees concerning compulsory labor for the inhabitants of
+the Eastern Territories, were contrary to international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Eastern Territories administered by Rosenberg were militarily
+occupied during the war. Through this occupatio bellica Germany
+realized complete domination and had the same sovereignty as over
+her own territory. While according to previous conceptions of international
+law the occupying power could act arbitrarily without
+consideration of rights and laws, the recent evolution of international
+law eliminated the principle of force and brought victory
+to the principles of humanity and culture. Therefore the formerly
+unlimited might of the occupying power was altered to limited
+rights. The Hague Rules of Land Warfare stipulated in particular
+the legal obligations of the occupying power.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the other hand, it is not true to say that the Rules of Land
+Warfare specify only certain privileges for the occupying power.
+They merely set a limit to the basically unlimited right of the
+occupying power to exercise all powers deriving from territorial
+sovereignty over an occupied territory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would that be a convenient time to
+break off?</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 10 July 1946 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' title='89' id='Page_89'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>ONE HUNDRED<br/> AND SEVENTY-FIFTH DAY</span><br/> Wednesday, 10 July 1946</h1></div>
+
+<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will sit in closed session this
+afternoon and will not sit in open session after 1 o’clock.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Mr. President, may it please the Tribunal, with
+regard to the question of the justification of the decree concerning
+the compulsory labor service of the inhabitants of the Eastern
+Territories, I should like to continue on Page 33.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus the following principle recognized by international law is
+indicated:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Measures undertaken by an occupying power in occupied territory
+are legal as long as they are not in opposition to a proven
+stipulation of the international rules of warfare. The occupying
+power is therefore assumed to be entitled to the full exercise of
+all powers derived from territorial sovereignty over an occupied
+territory. According to the uniform opinion of experts on international
+law the occupying power acts by virtue of an original law
+of its own, guaranteed and defined as to content solely by international
+law, in the interest of its own conduct of the war as well
+as for the protection of the civil population in the occupied territory.
+I quote Heyland from <span class='it'>Handbuch des Völkerrechts</span>.</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The inhabitants of the occupied territory no longer have a
+duty of allegiance to the enemy sovereign but only to the
+occupying power; the will of the occupying power rules and
+decides in the occupied territory; the occupying power is the
+executor of its own will; its own interests alone are decisive
+for the exercise of its sovereign rights and, therefore, it is
+at liberty to act against the interest of the enemy state.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In view of Article 52 of the Hague Rules of Land Warfare the
+right to conscript labor in the occupied territory is acknowledged.
+It is stipulated here that labor services may be demanded from the
+inhabitants of the occupied territory; the demand must be limited
+to the requirements of the occupation forces; it must be in proportion
+to the resources of the country and must be of such a nature
+as not to compel the population to participate in military operations
+<span class='pageno' title='90' id='Page_90'></span>
+against their own country. In these stipulations I cannot discern
+any prohibition of labor conscription in occupied territories; on the
+contrary, I consider that an approval of compulsory labor service
+can be clearly deduced from them. The employment of such labor
+in war industry is undoubtedly in accordance with the requirements
+of the occupation forces and, in my estimation, it is equally
+beyond doubt that this constitutes no commitment to military
+operations. The Rules of Land Warfare contain no stipulations as
+to whether labor service may be demanded only in the home
+country or whether the conscript may be transported into the native
+land of the occupying power for the purpose of rendering labor
+services there. Thus, the general principle holds good that the
+occupying power is assumed to be entitled to exercise to the utmost
+extent all powers deriving from territorial sovereignty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If one takes the correct view that the international rules of
+warfare should tend to humanize war by limiting the rights of the
+belligerents and that the trend in this direction should be continued,
+one must consider on the other hand that the stern reality
+of war tends toward the opposite direction.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, the Tribunal would like to know
+whether it is your contention that the Hague Rules authorize the
+deportation of men, women, or children to another country for the
+purpose of labor service.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Mr. President, I propose to speak about the interpretation
+of the Hague Rules of Land Warfare and I am dealing
+here with the question as to whether it is permissible to transport
+inhabitants of the country in order to meet the requirements of the
+occupying forces. I have stated my position here that laborers can
+also be transported into the country of the occupying power. About
+children, of course, I have said nothing. I did not say anything
+about Jews either. I only spoke about persons able to work, who
+were required to work in accordance with the necessities of the
+occupying power, and I said it was admissible for them to be transported
+into the home country of the occupying power. I leave this
+problem to the discernment of the Tribunal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal would like to have any authorities
+in international law which you have to cite for that proposition.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Mr. President, I shall mention some more quotations,
+more detailed scientific quotations concerning this problem.
+I have already quoted in that regard. I have repeatedly quoted
+Heyland’s <span class='it'>Handbuch des Völkerrechts</span>, published by Stier-Somlo,
+and I shall give more quotations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Will you tell me what language that book
+is in?
+<span class='pageno' title='91' id='Page_91'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: In German, Mr. President; it is the <span class='it'>Handbuch des
+Völkerrechts</span>, published by Stier-Somlo, 1923.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Present-day warfare is no longer what it was in 1907. War has
+developed into total war, a life-and-death struggle of annihilation,
+in which the very last physical and moral forces of the nation are
+mobilized, and the loss of which, as is shown by the example of
+Germany, means unconditional surrender and the total destruction
+of her existence as a State.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Can one maintain, in view of this fact, that Germany, in this
+struggle of life and death, should not have been granted the basic
+right of self-preservation recognized by international law?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I refer to Strupp, <span class='it'>Handbuch des Völkerrechts</span>, published by
+Stier-Somlo, Stuttgart 1920, Part III, “Violations of International
+Law,” Page 128 <span class='it'>et sequentes</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There is no doubt that the very existence of the State was at
+stake; that is, it was an emergency which justified the compulsory
+employment of labor, even if it had not been permissible according
+to international law. It is inherent in that great anomaly called
+war that, as soon as the state of war has been proclaimed, international
+law is in a large measure set aside in the interest of the
+objective of the war, the overpowering of the enemy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I quote Strupp, as above, Page 172.</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The development of civilization has seen a progressive
+moderation of the conception according to which everything
+is permissible in war until the enemy is destroyed; nevertheless
+the rules of warfare constitute even today a compromise
+between the demands of unrestrained military
+necessity and progressive humanitarian and civilized views.</p>
+
+<p>“One thing, at any rate, is certain, namely, that the existence
+of a genuine emergency may be pleaded, even under the
+stipulations of the Hague Rules of Land Warfare. During
+the negotiations preceding the formulation of Article 46 of
+the Hague Rules, the following was stated literally and without
+opposition in the plenary session of the Conference:</p>
+
+<p>“ ‘The restrictions might affect the liberty of action of the
+belligerents in certain extreme emergencies,’ indicating that
+for extreme contingencies, therefore, a state of emergency
+may be pleaded. It is recognized international law that even
+an aggressor must not be denied the right of pleading a state
+of emergency in case his existence is directly threatened.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In connection with the chapter concerning the eastern administration,
+I should like, without pointing out specifically all that the
+defendant has said during his testimony concerning accusations of
+<span class='pageno' title='92' id='Page_92'></span>
+the Soviet Prosecution, in particular the reports of the state commissions
+and the Molotov reports (Documents USSR-39, 41, 51, 89,
+and record of 16 April 1946), to express a hope that the factual
+corrections made by the defendant will be duly evaluated by the
+Tribunal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now I come to a new subject: Contrary to the assumption of the
+Prosecution, Rosenberg was in no instance the instigator of a persecution
+of Jews, any more than he was one of the leaders and originators
+of the policy adopted by the Party and the Reich, as the
+Prosecution claims (Walsh, on 13 December 1945, Volume III,
+Page 539). Rosenberg was certainly a convinced anti-Semite and
+expressed his conviction and the reasons for it both verbally and in
+writing. However, in his case anti-Semitism was not the most outstanding
+of his activities. In his book <span class='it'>Blood and Honor</span>, speeches
+and essays between 1919 and 1933, out of 64 speeches, for example,
+only one had a title referring to Jewry. The same applies to the
+other two volumes of his speeches. He felt his spiritual ancestors
+to be the mystic Meister Ekkehart, Goethe, Lagarde, and Houston
+Stewart Chamberlain; anti-Semitism was for him a negative element,
+and his chief and most positive efforts were directed toward the
+proclamation of a new German intellectual attitude, and a new
+German culture. Because he found this endangered after 1918, he
+became an opponent of Jewry. Even such different personalities as
+Von Papen, Von Neurath, and Raeder now confess to their belief
+that the penetration of the Jewish element into the whole of public
+life was so great that a change had to be brought about. It strikes
+me as very important, however, that the nature of Rosenberg’s anti-Semitism
+was intellectual above all. For example, at the Party
+Rally of 1933 he explicitly mentioned a “chivalrous solution” of the
+Jewish question. We never heard Rosenberg use expressions like
+“We must annihilate the Jews wherever we find them; we shall
+take measures that will insure success. We must abandon all feelings
+of sympathy.” The Prosecution itself quotes the following as an
+expression of the program Rosenberg set up for himself (Volume III,
+Page 529):</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“After the Jews have been ousted as a matter of course from
+all official positions, the Jewish question will find a decisive
+solution through the setting up of ghettos.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>GENERAL R. A. RUDENKO (Chief Prosecutor for the U.S.S.R.):
+Mr. President, rather reluctantly I interrupt counsel for the defense,
+and I do not like to take the time of the Tribunal, but what I just
+heard is going beyond any permissible limits. When the defendants
+sitting in the dock tried to express their Fascist views, this was
+deemed inappropriate and cut short by the Tribunal.
+<span class='pageno' title='93' id='Page_93'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I think that it is absolutely inadmissible that defense counsel
+should use this place to promote antihuman propaganda; I cannot
+understand the contention of the lawyer who alleges the existence
+of a noble, spiritual anti-Semitism which Rosenberg advocates and
+that Rosenberg’s belief in gathering all Jews in ghettos was
+chivalrous. Please note that the lawyer is not quoting any Nazi
+leader but expresses his own opinion, and I protest against the use
+of the International Military Tribunal for the spreading of Fascist
+propaganda. I ask the Tribunal to consider this objection of mine
+and to take appropriate action.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: May it please the Tribunal—may I make an
+answer to that?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, we don’t think it is necessary to
+trouble you. The Tribunal thinks—there may be, of course, differences
+of opinion as to the use of words in the course of your
+argument, but they see no reason for stopping you in the argument
+that you are presenting to the Tribunal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Thank you, My Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal, after what General Rudenko has
+said, I should like to make one statement. In my speech I have
+tried to argue upon the statements of the Prosecution and nothing
+else. I would like to say something else. The words “chivalrous
+solution of the Jewish question” were not my expression; I just
+quoted that as a statement made by Rosenberg a long time before
+he came into this Court. The Prosecution quotes the following as
+Rosenberg’s statement of a program: “The Jewish question...” and
+so on; I have already read that.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was not a mere question of chance that Rosenberg did not
+take part in, the boycotting of Jews in 1933, that he was not called
+upon to work out the laws against the Jews in 1933, 1934, 1935, and
+so on (expatriation, prohibition of marriages, withdrawal of the
+right to vote, expulsion from all important positions and offices).
+Above all, he never took part in the action of 1938 against the Jews,
+nor in the destruction of synagogues, nor in anti-Semitic demonstrations.
+Neither was he the instigator in the background who sent
+out, or ordered, lesser people to commit certain actions. To be sure,
+Rosenberg was a true follower of Hitler, who took up Hitler’s
+slogans and passed them on. For example, the motto, “The Jewish
+question will be solved only when the last Jew has left Germany
+and the European continent,” and once the slogan of “Extermination
+of Jewry.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Exaggerated expressions were always part of the National
+Socialist weapons of propaganda. A Hitler speech was hardly
+imaginable without insults to his internal or external political
+<span class='pageno' title='94' id='Page_94'></span>
+opponents, or without threats of extermination. Every one of
+Hitler’s speeches was echoed a million times by Goebbels down to
+the last speaker of the Party in a small country inn. The same
+sentences and words which Hitler had used were repeated, and not
+only in all the political speeches, but in the German press as well,
+in all the editorials and essays, until, weeks or months later, a new
+speech was given which brought about a new echo of a similar kind.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg was no exception. He repeated, as everyone did, all
+of Hitler’s slogans, including that of the “solution of the Jewish
+question,” and once also that of the “extermination of Jewry.”
+Apparently, like Hitler’s other supporters, he gave as much or as
+little thought to the fact that in reality none of those phrases were
+clear but that they had a sinister double meaning and, while they
+might have meant real expulsion, they might also have implied the
+physical annihilation and murder of the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May I remind the Tribunal at this point that Rosenberg, during
+his testimony, made a reference to a speech of the British Prime
+Minister in the House of Commons in September 1943, in which
+speech it was stated that Prussian militarism and National Socialism
+had to be exterminated root and branch. No German interpreted
+that literally, and I believe no one interpreted it to mean that
+German soldiers and the National Socialism had to be exterminated
+physically.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Aside from the knowledge and will of the German people, and
+aside from the knowledge and will of the majority of the leadership
+of the Party—that is to say, known only to Bormann, Himmler,
+and Eichmann—there was hatched and carried out, from 1941
+onward, a mass crime which surpassed all human concepts of reason
+and morality. The “Jewish question” was developed even further
+and brought to a so-called “final solution.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will have to decide the question whether Rosenberg,
+the specially characteristic exponent of the Party, the Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, is also responsible
+for the murder of the Jews, and particularly for the murder of
+Jews in the East; that is, is he a murderer of Jews? Or must it be
+recognized and admitted that, although he stands but a hair’s
+breadth from the abyss, it was, after all, external circumstances
+which led up to it all, and that these circumstances were outside
+his sphere of responsibility and guilt?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I believe I can say that Rosenberg never aimed, either openly
+or in secret, at the physical extermination of the Jews. His reserve
+and moderation were certainly no mere tactics. The slipping of
+anti-Semitism into crime took place without his knowledge or will.
+The fact in itself that he preached anti-Semitism justifies his punishment
+as the murderer of Jews as little as one could hold Rousseau
+<span class='pageno' title='95' id='Page_95'></span>
+and Mirabeau responsible for the subsequent horrors of the French
+Revolution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Furthermore, no matter how much the first impression might
+lead to it, criminal guilt on his part cannot be deduced from his
+position as Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories. As
+already stated, the “responsible minister” cannot simply be held
+responsible for criminal acts committed in his sphere or his territory.
+Criminal responsibility, according to the German Penal Code,
+Paragraph 357, exists only if an official knowingly assents to the
+criminal actions of his subordinates, and if—the commentaries
+furnish this supplement—the superior is in a position to prevent the
+action.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should like to take up the question of his responsibility on the
+grounds of the documents submitted for this purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) The action taken against the Jews at Sluzk (Document Number
+1104-PS).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 27 October 1941, a horrible slaughter of Jews took place in
+Sluzk, committed by the four companies of a police battalion,
+because the commander received an order from his superior to clear
+the city of all Jews without exception. The district commissioner
+immediately made vigorous protests, demanded that the action be
+stopped at once, and gun in hand kept the police officers in check
+as far as he was able. He reported to the General Commissioner
+of White Ruthenia, Kube, at Minsk, and the latter suggested to the
+Reich Commissioner Ostland, Lohse, that the officers implicated be
+punished for this “unheard-of bestiality.” He in turn reported to
+the Reich Minister for the East, with the request that immediate
+measures be taken at higher levels. The Reich Minister for the
+Occupied Eastern Territories sent the entire report to Heydrich, the
+Chief of the Security Police and of the SD, requesting further action.
+Due to an ingenious system according to which the Police were not
+responsible to the competent administrative chief and were not even
+obliged to report, Rosenberg could not take any further steps either
+in this or in similar cases. He was not head of the Police, and could
+only hope that the transmission of the report to Heydrich would be
+sufficient to stop what he considered to be regional excesses of the
+Police.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It can be seen from the indignation of all the administrative
+offices over the reported incidents that none of them knew that it
+was no question of excesses, but of an action ordered by Heydrich
+and Himmler. Even though Rosenberg violently disliked Heydrich
+and Himmler, not even he could suspect anything of this kind.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) Also from October 1941 dates Document 3663-PS in which
+the Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, for whom
+Dr. Leibbrandt signed, calls for a report by the Reich Commissioner
+<span class='pageno' title='96' id='Page_96'></span>
+Ostland, because a complaint has been made by the Reich Security
+Main Office that the Reich Commissioner Ostland had prohibited
+executions of Jews in Libau. To this the addressee replied:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I prohibited the execution of Jews in Libau because there
+was no justification for the way in which it was carried out.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This is followed by a request for further instructions. Regarding
+this document—which is signed by the departmental chief Leibbrandt,
+and which in no way points to any knowledge on the part
+of the Defendant Rosenberg—I wish to make the following provisional
+brief statement:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is not conceived as a reproach by the Reich Minister for the
+East because the executions of Jews were discontinued, but it
+simply represents the transmittal of a complaint by the Reich
+Security Main Office, adding a request to report. It is to be
+presumed that the reason for the complaint was that the Reich
+Commissioner Ostland encroached on the competency of the Reich
+Security Main Office and the demand for a report was presumably
+issued in that sense. In a letter of 18 December 1941, the Reich
+Minister, in a letter also signed “By order: Bräutigam,” asked the
+Reich Commissioner Ostland to settle directly any questions which
+might arise with the Higher SS and Police Leader.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To identify the letter “R” as Rosenberg’s initial, because the
+Prosecution obviously was more than doubtful about Rosenberg’s
+knowledge of matters, turned out to be equally unfortunate. This
+“R” is not Rosenberg’s.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) Document Number 3428-PS concerns a letter of the General
+Commissioner for White Ruthenia to the Reich Commissioner for
+the East. It is a shocking document about the mass extermination
+of Jews in White Ruthenia; however, there is nothing of interest in
+it for the case against Rosenberg, because those horrible events
+could be attributed to him only if he knew of them, and in neglect
+of his duty failed to intervene. There is no actual proof to found
+a supposition of such knowledge. The claim that these documents
+were found in Rosenberg’s possession cannot be in accordance with
+the actual facts, for they show the Reich Commissioner in Riga as
+the addressee.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(4) In the “Memorandum for the Führer of 18 December 1941”
+(Document Number 001-PS) the defendant suggested the following,
+which I must quote literally:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The assaults against members of the German Armed Forces
+have not stopped, but have gone on. It seems to be an obvious
+plan to disturb German-French co-operation, to force Germany
+to take measures of retaliation, thereby bringing about
+a new defensive attitude on the part of the French against
+<span class='pageno' title='97' id='Page_97'></span>
+Germany. My suggestion to the Führer is that instead of
+killing 100 Frenchmen, he should have 100 or more Jewish
+bankers, lawyers, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, shot.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is not my task here to discuss how far it is admissible to shoot
+hostages, but one thing is certain, that Rosenberg was convinced
+such a measure was admissible. In that case, however, his suggestion
+must be considered in that light, and can by no means be judged as
+an independent incitement to murder. Besides, the suggestion had
+no results. In his reply of 31 December 1941, Lammers, acting on
+behalf of the Führer, merely referred to the suggestion of utilizing
+the furniture and fittings from Jewish houses, and not to the
+shooting of hostages. Therefore, Rosenberg made no more reference
+to it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At this point I should like to interpolate the following: The
+French prosecutor charged Rosenberg, when the latter was in the
+witness box, with the fact that this was murder. Gentlemen of the
+Tribunal, it was not murder, because no execution took place. But
+neither was it incitement to murder. One can only incite someone
+who still has to be persuaded. However, if the man who commits
+the act is already prepared for anything, is an <span class='it'>omni modo facturus</span>,
+then he can be incited no more, and there only remains the offense
+of a suggestion of a criminal act, which, according to German law,
+must be judged as an offense to receive only slight punishment,
+because it has had no consequence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Just at this point I should like to recall that Rosenberg testified
+as a witness that on one occasion a court sentenced a district commissioner
+in the East to death for having extorted valuables from
+a Jewish family, and that that sentence was carried out. Please do
+not consider it an improper argument of the defense when I say:
+Does that not prove that Rosenberg abhorred criminal acts against
+the Jews?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(5) Document Number Rosenberg-135, Exhibit Number USSR-289,
+refers to the report of the General Commissioner of White Ruthenia
+in Minsk, dated 1 June 1943, on the subject of what happened in
+the prison of Minsk as regards gold fillings. This was addressed to
+the Reich Commissioner Ostland, who forwarded the report on
+18 June 1943 with the utmost indignation. At his hearing before the
+Tribunal on 16 April 1946 the defendant already made a statement
+on this point. I should like to repeat this briefly now: The defendant
+had returned on 22 June 1943 from an official visit to the Ukraine
+and found a pile of notices about conferences, a number of letters,
+and above all the Führer decree from the middle of June 1943, in
+which Rosenberg was instructed to limit himself to the fundamentals
+of lawmaking and not to bother about details. Herr Rosenberg did
+not read the letter concerned, but he has to surmise—he cannot
+<span class='pageno' title='98' id='Page_98'></span>
+remember this—that the letter was explained to him by his office,
+and presumably in the course of the reading he was informed of
+many documents and learned that there was again serious trouble
+between the Police and the civilian administration, and it is probable
+that Rosenberg said: Turn that over for investigation to Gauleiter
+Meyer or to the liaison officer. Otherwise the terrible details would
+certainly have remained in Rosenberg’s memory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nobody doubts for a moment that the horrible crimes shown in
+these documents and all the other frightful things not covered in
+the documents, but which actually happened, call for atonement.
+Nobody doubts that not only the lesser henchmen acting on higher
+orders shall be punished, but also above all those who issued the
+orders, and those responsible for the crimes. Rosenberg did not
+issue an order to murder Jews; that much is clear. Is he, in spite of
+this, responsible for the frightful murders?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There is no trace of the defendant’s handwriting on any of the
+murder documents. Nor has it been determined in any case that he
+knew anything about what went on. Can we condemn Rosenberg
+on the basis of his presumed and probable knowledge? Rosenberg
+has by no means the intention of playing a false and cowardly game
+of hide-and-seek behind his advisers and officials. But let us
+remember how cunningly the so-called executions of the Jews were
+kept secret, not only from the public, but even from Hitler’s closest
+collaborators.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Is it not possible, and even credible, that they were playing a
+game of hide-and-seek even with Rosenberg? The thoughts and
+intentions of none of the other NSDAP leaders were revealed so
+openly and clearly to all the world as particularly those of the
+author Rosenberg. Of none other could one be so sure that he would
+turn with indignation from inhuman and criminal acts.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But let us go one step further and assume that Rosenberg had
+full knowledge of this greatest crime. It is not proved, but one
+could imagine it and surmise it. Is he then responsible, too? Peculiar,
+even subtle, as we well know, was the departmental authority, and
+the responsibility which went with it, in the eastern countries. The
+entire police system had been taken from Rosenberg’s sphere of
+influence, at the highest level of which was Himmler, and under him
+Heydrich. Of their orders and measures Rosenberg naturally had
+no knowledge and no idea.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The lower echelons of police leaders and police agencies were in
+effect subordinate and responsible to their police superiors and no
+one else. It was quite immaterial whether or not Rosenberg knew
+anything of the measures taken by the Police; he could change them
+as little as any other of his fellow citizens in the Third Reich. One
+might say: Yes, he could have remonstrated with Himmler or Hitler;
+<span class='pageno' title='99' id='Page_99'></span>
+he could have resigned. Of course, he could have done so. The
+decisive point, however, is not whether he could have done it; the
+question is whether he would have achieved anything by doing so—that
+is to say, whether he could have prevented the execution; for
+only in such a case could his responsibility be affirmed on the basis
+of his failure to act, and only in such a case could one speak of
+causality without which criminal responsibility is unthinkable.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One might further claim, still under the assumption of Rosenberg’s
+knowledge of matters, that Rosenberg could at least have
+taken steps against the Reich commissioners, who were obviously
+involved in these matters. We know that the administrative organization
+and the dividing up of final authority in the East were vague,
+to say the least. The Reich commissioners were sovereign masters
+in their own territory, who had the final decision in the shooting of
+hostages and in other retaliatory measures of far-reaching consequence.
+And what was the actual extent of their authority? In
+case the Reich Commissioner was dissatisfied with Rosenberg—and
+mostly he was dissatisfied—he went to Hitler. Does anyone really
+believe that if Rosenberg disagreed with Koch as regards the
+execution of Jews, he would have been upheld by Hitler if he had
+approached him? Here again, there is a lack of that causality which
+is indispensable for a legal condemnation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I come now to the Einsatzstab Rosenberg, the Operational Staff
+Rosenberg.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>No less than three prosecutors have taken the stand in this Trial
+against Rosenberg, and have accused him of wholesale stealing of
+objects of art and science in the East and West (Storey, 18 December
+1945; Gerthoffer, 6 February 1946; Smirnov, 15 February 1946).
+First I must take exception to some obvious exaggerations and
+injustices, that is, the assertion that the activities of the special
+staff in the West extended to public and private property without
+distinction (Volume VII, Page 55), and that the objects of art Germany
+appropriated amount to more than the combined treasures of
+the Metropolitan Museum in New York, of the British Museum in
+London, of the Louvre in Paris, and of the Tretjakov Gallery.
+Further, I must declare the statement incorrect that the “looting
+program” of Rosenberg was intended to rob the occupied countries
+of their entire centuries-old possessions of art and science. Finally,
+the Prosecution contrasts Rosenberg’s actions to the looting of art
+treasures in former wars. It says that while egotism, conceit, taste,
+and personal inclination used to be the underlying motives of such
+looting, the National Socialists primarily had the criminal intention
+of storing up reserves of valuables (Volume VII, Page 65). I think
+it unnecessary to refer to the looting of art treasures in former times
+as far back as Napoleon, because the concepts of international law
+<span class='pageno' title='100' id='Page_100'></span>
+and regulations have changed in the meantime, but I should like to
+mention two things:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>First, how many of the most famous objects of art in the most
+famous galleries of the world got there through the channels of war
+and how many got there in a peaceful way?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Second, I am prepared to accept the fact that the Prosecution
+denies Rosenberg’s delight in art, or joy in the possession of art
+treasures as a possible motive for his actions, because Rosenberg
+was no robber, no plunderer, of art. He had no intention of appropriating
+the objects of art for himself or for someone else.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What were the actual facts? Rosenberg’s operational staff was
+active in the East and in the West. It had two tasks: First, to
+search libraries, archives, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, for material suitable for the
+proposed “university” of the Party, to confiscate this material and
+take it away for the purpose of research, and secondly, to seize
+objects of cultural value which were in the possession of or which
+belonged to Jews, or which had no owner or were of a doubtful
+origin. The Prosecution says: “The true and only motive, the true
+and only purpose of this ‘seizure’ was robbery and looting; there
+could be no question of intentions of mere ‘safeguarding.’ ”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 20 August 1941 Rosenberg wrote to the Reich Commissioner
+Ostland that he wished distinctly to prohibit the transfer of any
+kind of art treasure from any place whatsoever without the approval
+of the Reich Commissioner (Document Number 1015(c)-PS). On
+30 September 1942 the Commander-in-Chief of the Army issued an
+order (Document Number 1015(n)-PS) in agreement with Rosenberg
+to the following effect:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Apart from exceptional cases when it is urgent to safeguard
+endangered objects of cultural value, it is desired that for the
+time being such objects be left where they are.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Later on, it says:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The troops and all military commands within the operational
+area are now as before directed to spare valuable cultural
+monuments as far as possible and to prevent their destruction
+or damage.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the report of the Special Staff for Creative Arts (report on
+work carried out between October 1940 and 1944, Document Number
+1015(b)-PS) it is stated that in the Occupied Eastern Territories
+the activities of the Special Staff for Creative Arts were restricted
+to the scientific and photographic registration of official collections,
+and that the safeguarding and protection of these was carried out
+in co-operation with the military and civilian agencies. It says
+further that in the course of vacating the territories, several hundred
+valuable icons and paintings, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, were saved and, with
+the co-operation of the individual army groups, were brought to a
+<span class='pageno' title='101' id='Page_101'></span>
+place of safekeeping in the Reich. Finally, on 12 June 1942 Rosenberg
+sent out the following decree in a circular letter to the highest
+Reich authorities, which reads:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In the Occupied Eastern Territories a number of offices and
+individuals are engaged in the safeguarding of objects of
+cultural value. They work from various approaches to the
+subject and independently of each other. It is absolutely
+essential for the administration of these territories that a
+survey be made of the existing objects of cultural value.
+Furthermore it must be endeavored, as a general rule, to
+leave them where they are for the time being. To this end
+I have set up a central office for the registration and safeguarding
+of objects of cultural value in the East as a special
+division within my ministry.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus Rosenberg, as can be proved, proceeded from the point of
+view that objects of cultural value had to remain in the country
+and only through the retreat of the German troops were a few
+hundred valuable icons and paintings brought into Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In time of war, objects of cultural value, both mobile and
+immobile, are as exposed to the danger of destruction as are any
+other objects of value. Rosenberg stopped all unnecessary destruction,
+theft, and removal; he centralized the safeguarding of objects
+of cultural value and had all necessary actions taken through his
+operational staff in the East and the West (for example, see Abel’s
+report on the library at Minsk, Document Number 076-PS). It is
+quite in accordance with the conception of international law (I quote
+Scholz, <span class='it'>Privateigentum im besetzten und unbesetzten Feindesland</span>,
+Berlin 1919, Page 36) that care should be taken on the part of the
+occupying powers not only to protect, but to safeguard and salvage
+protected objects of art as far as the war situation permits. It is
+even considered a cultural duty for the occupying power to remove
+particularly valuable objects of art from the combat zone and place
+them in safety as far as possible. Under certain circumstances the
+concept of international law may render it the cultural duty of the
+occupying power to bring into his own country for reasons of
+salvage objects of special scientific and artistic value. This is not
+an inadmissible “seizure” (Article 56, Paragraph 2, Rules of Land
+Warfare), because this term could only apply to acts which are anti-cultural,
+not to acts which are procultural. (See Scholz, as above,
+Page 37).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally, I want to refer to Document Number 1109-PS, a report
+according to which scientific institutes that had been saved were
+ready to be taken back to the Ukraine immediately after the hoped-for
+re-entry of the troops. I consider it completely impossible to
+read anything about looting into this clear text.
+<span class='pageno' title='102' id='Page_102'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Certainly, in the East great quantities of cultural objects of considerable
+value were destroyed by direct military actions, or by
+wanton destruction, or looting. It would be a fundamental misconstruction
+of the true facts of the case, and a great injustice, if
+these losses should be charged to the account of the Einsatzstab and
+its chief, for his efforts went exactly in the opposite direction.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the West (I refer to the testimony of the witness Robert Scholz
+of 19 June 1946, Document Number Rosenberg-41), the case was
+different but, in my opinion, here also the defendant cannot be
+charged with looting and robbing objects of art. When in the
+summer of 1940 the inhabitants of Paris, with the exception of the
+Jews, had once more returned, somebody conceived the idea of
+searching the now ownerless apartments, houses, and palaces for
+books and libraries and of taking to Germany whatever of this
+scientific material was of interest. From various branches of the
+Armed Forces came the report that especially in Jewish-owned
+palaces there were collections of objects of art which one could not
+guarantee to remain intact in case of a long occupation. Thereupon,
+Rosenberg made the proposal that his Einsatzstab be allowed to
+direct its attention to objects of art and to take them into its
+custody, which was then ordered by Hitler. What did the Einsatzstab
+do with these objects of art? It set up an accurate card index
+containing the names of the particular owner of each picture, photographed
+the art objects, scientifically appraised them, repaired them
+expertly insofar as was necessary, packed them carefully and
+shipped them to the Bavarian castles of Neuschwanstein and Chiemsee.
+Because of the danger of air raids, they were then stored in an
+old Austrian mine. Rosenberg attached great importance to keeping
+separate the objects cared for by the Einsatzstab, and not to have
+them mixed with the large-scale purchases which Hitler made for
+the proposed gallery in Linz.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Was that looting, robbery, theft? Looting is the indiscriminate
+and wanton carrying-off of objects in situations involving general
+distress and danger. Robbery is carrying off by force. Theft is
+carrying off without force. In all cases intent must exist to
+appropriate the object illegally for oneself or somebody else.
+What intent did Rosenberg have? He never denied that he and
+his co-workers had hopes of the pictures remaining in Germany.
+Perhaps as compensation or as a security for the peace negotiations,
+but in any case his intent was only directed at confiscating
+and safeguarding the objects and it has been proved that the
+question of what should be done with the confiscated items was
+left open until the end and that no decision was made on it. It is
+absolutely certain that Rosenberg did not have the intention of
+<span class='pageno' title='103' id='Page_103'></span>
+appropriating the things for himself or anybody else. If Rosenberg
+had been a plunderer of objects of art, he certainly would not have
+had exact notations made concerning dates and place of confiscation
+and names of the owners. As a precaution, however, I should also
+like to point out that because of the flight of their owners the
+objects were virtually ownerless, and that the question of the lack
+of a possessor and of the legality of their acquisition by Rosenberg
+cannot be judged by normal circumstances, but must be judged
+according to the extraordinary circumstances of the war. If the
+Prosecution claims that public and private objects of art were stolen
+at random, I should like to reply to the statement that only Jewish
+possessions, and indeed the specified ownerless objects were confiscated.
+Above all it is not true that state-owned property was
+also touched. Finally he did not act on his own responsibility but
+in carrying out a governmental order, and I want to ask that the
+fact be not overlooked that Rosenberg acted without any egotistical
+motive. Not a single picture passed into his private possession; he
+did not gain a single Reichsmark from this transaction involving
+millions, and after all, all the artistic and cultural property has
+been found again. I would like to thank the French Prosecution for
+having acknowledged this fact here publicly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Göring supported the work of the Einsatzstab and, as he admits,
+“diverted” some objects for his own use, with the Führer’s approval.
+This disturbed Rosenberg because the Einsatzstab was in his name,
+and he declared that as a matter of principle he did not want to
+give anything even to the museums, that his task was purely one of
+registration and safeguarding. The Führer should have the final
+decision on these works of art. Rosenberg could not undertake anything
+against Göring, but he ordered his deputy Robert Scholz at
+least to make an accurate inventory of what was given to Göring,
+and to have the latter sign a receipt, which he did. Thus, most
+certainly it cannot be proved that Rosenberg had the intention of
+illegally appropriating the objects of art for himself or for somebody
+else. Furthermore, Robert Scholz confirmed that Rosenberg also
+forbade all his assistants to acquire any objects of art or culture
+even by virtue of an official appraisal (Document Number Rosenberg-41).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution says that with the Rosenberg Einsatzstab a gang
+of vandals broke into the European House of Art in order to plunder
+in a barbarous way. If one contemplates the tremendous work of
+drawing up an inventory, of cataloging, of restoration, and of
+scientific appraisal, and if one finally bears in mind that all these
+treasures were most carefully stored away, and certainly came
+through the war better than would have been the case if the
+<span class='pageno' title='104' id='Page_104'></span>
+German authorities had not taken care of them, then I believe that,
+objectively speaking, one can use any term but that of “vandalism.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think this would be a good time to break off.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Rosenberg is also especially charged with looting
+furniture. He allegedly ransacked the contents of 79,000 Jewish-owned
+homes, among them 38,000 in Paris, and took the loot to
+Germany. Unquestionably, these measures were taken for the benefit
+of air-raid victims; in the cities which had been destroyed by air
+warfare new homes were set up for the homeless. It was in line
+with National Socialist mentality and it must certainly be morally
+condemned that the confiscation was limited to Jewish property.
+The essential question, however, is whether the confiscation was at
+all legal. In all my statements I have avoided trying to excuse a
+weak legal position with a state of military emergency, and I do
+not wish to do it at this point either, for, as an expert on international
+law states, “The state of emergency is the lever by means
+of which the entire body of martial law can be torn from its hinges.”
+In this case, does not the justification of national and military
+necessity exist, did not air warfare bring intense and general
+distress to Germany?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One might object that such distress could have been ended by
+unconditional surrender. In my opinion, however, the above-mentioned
+justification cannot be denied to the defendant by this
+reference to unconditional surrender, entailing the Reich’s abandonment
+of its own existence, its independence, and its own vital
+interests. The appropriation of enemy private property took place
+in application of a right of requisitioning, which was extended
+beyond the legal terms of martial law and justified by the state of
+emergency. I venture to assert that his procedure of confiscating
+furniture, in view of the devastating effects of air warfare against
+Germany, was not contradictory to “the customs among civilized
+peoples,” “the laws of humanity,” and “the demands of the public
+conscience” (Marten’s clause in the preamble to the agreement concerning
+the Laws and Customs of Land Warfare; see Scholz, in the
+afore-mentioned book, Page 173).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the High Tribunal, I shall now pass on to the
+Norway operation. The Prosecution characterizes Rosenberg and
+Raeder as the most energetic conspirators in the Norway operation,
+and later in the same matter calls Rosenberg a “dealer in high
+treason.” The opinion of the Prosecution and also the assumption
+of the present Norwegian Government (Norwegian Report of
+13 October 1945, Document Number TC-56) are obviously to the
+<span class='pageno' title='105' id='Page_105'></span>
+effect that the Party’s Foreign Political Office, of which Rosenberg
+was the head, and Quisling had plotted the war against Norway in
+mutual conspiracy. I believe that of all the charges against Rosenberg
+hitherto dealt with, none has less foundation than this one.
+On the basis of the few documents which have been submitted to
+the Court, in my opinion the case could doubtlessly be cleared up
+in favor of the defendant.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There existed a Foreign Political Office of the Party, which had
+the task of informing foreign visitors about the National Socialist
+movement, of referring any suggestions to the official offices, and
+otherwise of functioning as a central office of the Party for questions
+of foreign policy. The special interest, and I may say the special
+sympathy, of the leading men of the Party and the State was
+directed toward the Scandinavian countries. It was specifically in
+this direction that the Foreign Political Office placed the main
+emphasis on the field of cultural policy. The already existing “Nordic
+Society” was expanded, the birthdays of great Scandinavian
+scientists and artists were observed in Germany, a great Nordic
+music festival was held, and so forth. The relations took on a really
+political note only with the appearance of Quisling, whom Rosenberg
+had seen for the first time in 1933 and who then, in 1939, 6
+years later, looked up Rosenberg again after the convention of the
+Nordic Society in Lübeck; the former spoke of the danger of
+European entanglements and expressed the fear that Norway was
+in danger of being drawn into them. He then feared above all a
+partitioning of his country in such a manner that the Soviet Union
+would occupy the northern and England the southern part of
+Norway.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Quisling again came to see Rosenberg in Berlin in December
+1939. The latter arranged for a conference with the Führer. Hitler
+declared that he would by far prefer to have Norway remain
+completely neutral and that he did not intend to extend the theater
+of war and involve more nations in the conflict, but he would know
+how to defend himself against a further isolation of Germany and
+further threats against her. In order to counteract the increasing
+activity of enemy propaganda, Quisling was promised financial
+support of his movement, which was based on the pan-Germanic
+idea. The military treatment of the questions now taken up was
+assigned to a special military staff; Rosenberg was to deal with the
+political aspect, and he appointed his assistant Scheidt to maintain
+liaison. Hagelin, a Norwegian confidential agent of Quisling’s, in
+January 1940 gave Rosenberg some more disturbing reports on the
+feared violation of neutrality by the Norwegian Government, and
+Rosenberg passed them on to Hitler. After the <span class='it'>Altmark</span> incident,
+Hagelin, who moved in Norwegian Government circles, intensified
+<span class='pageno' title='106' id='Page_106'></span>
+his warnings to the effect that the Allies had already begun to
+examine the Norwegian seaports for disembarkation and transportation
+possibilities; in any case, the Norwegian Government would be
+satisfied with protests on paper, and Quisling was indicating that
+any delay in undertaking a counteraction would mean an exceptional
+risk. Rosenberg again handed the reports immediately to
+Hitler. If he had not done so that would have been downright
+treason to his country. The German counterblow followed on 9 April
+1940, and Rosenberg learned about it from the radio and the newspapers
+like any ordinary citizen. After his above-mentioned report,
+which he made in the line of duty, Rosenberg, did not participate in
+either diplomatic or military preparations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Should there still be any doubt that in the Norwegian case
+Rosenberg was only an agent who forwarded information to Hitler,
+and not an instigator, conspirator, or traitor, I should like to refer
+to two documents. First, to Document Number C-65, Rosenberg’s
+file note concerning Quisling’s visit. Obviously, it is the information
+on Quisling which Hitler had requested from Rosenberg. If Rosenberg
+had been on closer terms with Quisling, he certainly would
+have been only too glad to inform Hitler about it. Rosenberg had
+only heard of a fantastic and impracticable plan of Quisling’s
+for a <span class='it'>coup d’état</span> (occupation of important central offices in Oslo by
+sudden action, supported by specially selected Norwegians who had
+been trained in Germany, afterward having the German fleet called
+in by a newly formed Norwegian Government). However, an earlier
+report of Quisling appeared less fantastic to Rosenberg; according
+to this—names being given—officers of the Western Powers traveled
+through Norway as consular officials, ascertained the depth of the
+water in ports of disembarkation, and made inquiries into the cross-sections
+and clearances of railway tunnels. This was the true and
+only reason for everything Rosenberg did in the Norwegian matter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The second document is the report concerning “The Political
+Preparation of the Norway Operation” (Document Number 004-PS,
+Exhibit Number GB-140), a report from Rosenberg to Hess of
+17 June 1940. In this interdepartmental report there is also nothing
+which deviates from Rosenberg’s own trustworthy statement and
+which would allow him to appear as an instigator of war and of
+high treason. Rosenberg was not called into any political or military
+discussion concerning Norway. Thus, what criminal act did Rosenberg
+commit? Was it criminal that he tried “to gain influence in
+Norway” (Document Number TC-56), or that with his knowledge
+the Foreign Office gave subsidies to Quisling? Finally, I should also
+like to point out that later on, after the operation had succeeded,
+Rosenberg was in no way entrusted with an office or function with
+<span class='pageno' title='107' id='Page_107'></span>
+regard to Norway; that even the appointment of a Reich Commissioner
+for Norway was carried out without consulting him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall not deal with the case of Minister Goga, which I have set
+forth in detail, but I ask the High Tribunal to consider it as having
+been dealt with. Now I turn to the topic: Persecution of the Church.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution maintains that Rosenberg, together with Bormann,
+issued the orders for religious persecutions and induced
+others to participate in these persecutions. However, not a single
+order of that kind is known. There were presented only letters by
+Bormann, partly to Rosenberg, partly to others, from which no
+charges against Rosenberg can be drawn. On the contrary Rosenberg
+was repeatedly reproached, as on one occasion when in the
+presence of Hitler he praised a book by Reich Bishop Müller
+(Document Number 100-PS); another time when Rosenberg gave
+Reich Bishop Müller instructions to work out directives for thoughts
+regarding religious instruction in schools (Document Number
+098-PS); once again when Rosenberg sponsored a strictly Christian
+work by General Von Rabenau.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As a witness Rosenberg himself declared (Volume XI, Page 461)
+that he had opposed propaganda advocating withdrawal from the
+Church and had never called for state and police measures against
+his opponents in the fields of theology and research, and particularly
+that he had never used the Police for suppressing those who
+were opponents of his book <span class='it'>The Myth of the 20th Century</span>. In
+December 1941, as Reich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories,
+he issued an edict for Church toleration (Documents
+Number 1517-PS and 294-PS). Rosenberg had nothing to do with
+arrests, the deportation of priests, and persecution of the Church.
+He had no part either in the negotiations with the Vatican over
+the Concordat or in the assignment of the Protestant Reich Bishop;
+neither did he take any part in measures which were hostile to the
+Church, and which were later carried out by the Police. He never
+participated in any other administrative or legislative anticlerical
+measures.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In my opinion it is quite impossible, for lack of documentary
+evidence, to construe from what Rosenberg thought and said about
+religious and philosophical matters—which I will quote presently—that
+he conspired toward a political suppression of religion by force.
+The only document (Number 130-PS) pointing in this direction was
+withdrawn by the American Prosecution itself before I was obliged
+to draw attention to its being a pamphlet directed against Rosenberg.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>His book <span class='it'>The Myth of the 20th Century</span>, which is allegedly
+written for the reshaping of the denominations in the direction of
+a Germanic Christianity, is moreover chiefly addressed to those who
+had already broken with the Church. “No consciously responsible
+<span class='pageno' title='108' id='Page_108'></span>
+German,” says Rosenberg at one place in it, “should suggest withdrawal
+from the Churches to those who are still believing members
+thereof” (Document Number Rosenberg-7, Document Book 1,
+Page 122), and once again: “Science would never have the power
+to dethrone true religion” (see as above, Page 125). His writings
+are not addressed to the faithful churchgoers of today in order to
+hinder them in the course of their chosen spiritual life, but to those
+who have already discarded their religious faith (Document
+Number Rosenberg-7, Document Book 1, Page 125). In his speeches
+he upheld the view that the Party is not entitled to establish norms
+in metaphysical matters which contest immortality, et cetera. After
+he had been assigned to supervise ideological education, he said
+explicitly in his Berlin speech of 22 February 1934: “No National
+Socialist is allowed to engage in religious discussions while wearing
+the uniform of his Movement,” and he declared at the same time
+that “all well-disposed persons should strive for the pacification of
+the entire political and spiritual life in Germany” (Document
+Number Rosenberg-7(a), Document Book 1, Page 130). That in this
+respect, too, things developed along different lines is not due to the
+desire or influence of Rosenberg.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, I need make only brief allusion to the fact that it is
+a question of the 1000-year-old problem of relations between the
+clerical and so-called temporal powers. The struggle of emperors,
+kings, and popes in the Middle Ages; the French Revolution with
+the shooting of priests; Bismarck’s clerical controversies; the secular
+legislation of the French Republic under Combes; all those were
+things, which from the standpoint of the Churches ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Mr. President, may I make a brief statement by way of explanation?
+I wanted to say that I have concluded this topic, that I do not
+wish to concern myself with the problem of Church persecutions
+any further. I have finished with it. I am coming to the topic of
+ideology and general politics.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Ideology and education have been nothing but a means of
+obtaining power and consolidating that power; uniformity of thinking
+has played an important part in the program of the conspiracy;
+the formation of the Armed Forces has only been possible in conjunction
+with the ideological education of the nation and Party—so
+says the Prosecution (Brudno, on 9 January 1946). And continuing
+its attacks against Rosenberg, the Prosecution proceeds by saying
+that Rosenberg’s ideas formed the foundation of the National
+Socialist movement, and that Rosenberg’s contribution in formulating
+and spreading the National Socialist ideology gave foundation
+to the conspiracy by shaping its “philosophical technique.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I think that one will have to take care, in judging Rosenberg’s
+case, not to yield to certain primitive ways of thinking and become
+<span class='pageno' title='109' id='Page_109'></span>
+a victim of them: First of all an exaggeration of the conception of
+ideology and the inexact use of that concept. At best it was a
+political philosophy which was hand in glove with Hitler’s political
+measures and which Hitler himself preached in his book <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>,
+but it was not an ideology in an all-embracing sense. It is true
+that National Socialism endeavored to create a spiritual philosophy
+and an ideology of its own, but it had not reached that stage yet
+by far. Rosenberg’s book <span class='it'>The Myth of the 20th Century</span> is an
+attempt in that direction, being a personal confession, without any
+suggestion of political measures. Therefore, his philosophy cannot
+have formed the ideological basis of National Socialism. In addition
+there is a total lack of proof that a straight spiritual line, a clear
+spiritual causal connection, exists between the conceptions of
+Rosenberg and the alleged and actual crimes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If one goes to the trouble of looking through the book, <span class='it'>The Myth
+of the 20th Century</span>, one will immediately observe that though there
+is some philosophizing in the National Socialist way, it would be,
+however, pure fiction to affirm that there is any dogmatic formulation
+of a tangible program in this book, or that it is a foundation
+for the activities of the responsible leaders of the Reich in this
+World War. Another mistake of National Socialism was perhaps
+the boundless unification and simplification: people were made
+uniform; thinking was made uniform; only one uniform type of
+German was left. There was also alleged to be only one National
+Socialist way of thinking, and only National Socialist ideology. But
+in spite of this, as we see today, the leaders were frequently of
+different opinions on essential questions. I will recall the question
+of the policy in the East. Here too, there seems to be danger of
+accepting this way of thinking, of observing everything through the
+spectacles of uniformity, and of saying: One idea, one philosophy,
+one responsibility, one crime, one punishment. Such a simplification,
+apart from its primitive nature, would certainly also constitute a
+great injustice toward the Defendant Rosenberg.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally, when one hears how the Prosecution attacks “Germanic
+Christianity,” the “heathen blood myth,” making much of Rosenberg’s
+expression, “the Nordic blood is the mystery which has
+superseded and overpowered the old sacraments,” one feels inclined
+to close one’s eyes for a moment and to picture oneself attending
+a session of the Inquisition in the Middle Ages where they are
+about to sentence Rosenberg to the stake as a heretic. Yet nothing
+must be farther from the Tribunal’s mind than to harbor thoughts
+of intolerance, since here, in spite of all attempts by some of the
+prosecutors, it is not ideologies but crimes which are involved.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the Defendant Rosenberg’s case it is a question of whether
+by his teachings he was guilty of preparing and promoting crimes.
+<span class='pageno' title='110' id='Page_110'></span>
+The Prosecution has brought forth arguments to this end, but have
+not proved it, while I can prove the opposite merely by pointing to
+Rosenberg’s activities in the East. Had he been the bearer and
+apostle of a criminal idea, he would have had an opportunity, such
+as no criminal has ever yet had in world history, to indulge in
+criminal activities. I have stated explicitly that in his case it was
+just the opposite. So when the bearer and apostle of an idea himself
+has the greatest of opportunities and yet in practice himself behaves
+morally, then his teachings cannot be criminal and immoral either.
+Above all, he cannot then be punished as a criminal on the basis
+of his teachings. What criminally degenerate persons practiced as
+alleged National Socialism cannot be laid to the charge of Rosenberg.
+Moreover, Rosenberg’s speeches in three volumes, which
+express what he taught in the course of 8 years, bear witness to
+the honorable nature of his endeavors.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus, if we relinquish the false conception of uniformity: One
+party, one philosophy, one ideology, one crime—and we will have
+to, in view of the indisputable fact that Rosenberg himself never
+pursued a policy of extermination, destruction, and enslavement in
+the East—we shall have to admit that the facts of the terrible
+central executive orders and of Rosenberg’s philosophy are not
+identical, and on these grounds alone the conclusions of the Prosecution
+are invalid.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Karl Marx teaches that historical events and political social
+reality are conditioned by the mere casual play of materialistic
+forces. Whether Marx in addition acknowledges the independent
+influence of man and ideas on history is at least doubtful. On the
+other hand, Rosenberg stresses emphatically the influence and the
+necessity of the highest ideas in the history of peoples. But Rosenberg
+does not overlook the fact that every event in history is the result
+of a totality of acting forces. The will, the passions and the intelligence
+of the people involved work together to form a historical
+process which cannot be calculated in human terms. It has already
+been pointed out that, just as little as Voltaire’s and Rousseau’s
+ideas can be recognized as the causes of the French Revolution, and
+the slogans of “Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity” be taken as the
+cause of the Jacobinic terror, as little as one can say that Mirabeau
+and Sièze had wanted or plotted such a blood bath, so little can
+one ascribe to Rosenberg as his moral or even criminal guilt that
+which National Socialism became during its development through
+the decades. In other words, I believe it is as unjust as it is unhistorical
+to ascribe today, in retrospect, the negative aspects of
+National Socialism, which were connected with the terrible collapse,
+to a plan desired from the outset and emanating from Rosenberg’s
+ideas.
+<span class='pageno' title='111' id='Page_111'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Therefore, in considering Rosenberg’s work the mistake of a
+standardization which does not correspond to reality is added to
+the further mistake of mechanization; there is neither a mechanical
+man nor mechanical history. And, finally, the construction of the
+Indictment is also an absolutely negative one; it views the defendant
+from the standpoint of political polemics and is impressed by
+the excitement of people in these excited times. I must briefly take
+exception to this distortion of the defendant’s mental traits.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The spiritual state of the period after the first World War and
+even of the preceding period, which gave birth to the defendant’s
+ideas, are known to all of us only too well: The turmoil in the spirit
+and soul of man brought about by the technical age, his hunger
+and thirst for a new spirit and a new soul; liberty was the slogan
+and a “new beginning” the impulse which directed the will of youth.
+Its longing and enthusiasm were aimed at nature. The thoughts
+and wishes of this generation were led into political paths by the
+contrast between rich and poor, which youth considered unjust and
+sought to bridge through socialism and the fellowship of the people.
+In Germany the development along political lines was given further
+impetus by the national misfortune of 1918-19 and the Treaty of
+Versailles, which was likewise felt to be unjust. The idea of building
+German history through the union of nationalism and socialism
+glowed unconsciously in the hearts of millions, as the undisputed
+tremendous success of National Socialism proves. The spiritual
+foundation was the desire for external and internal self-assertion
+and love for one’s fellow countrymen and for the people themselves,
+who had had to suffer so much torment and misery in history.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The desire for self-assertion and love for one’s own people,
+together with the whole system of National Socialist ideas, then
+developed in an inexplicable manner into a furious conflagration.
+The most primitive considerations of common sense were eliminated
+just as in a delirium; in complete delusion everything was risked
+and everything was lost.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The searching questions which present themselves to Rosenberg
+time and time again are whether he could have done more for what
+he thought and upheld as just and worthy; where he neglected
+essential things; where he fell short of requirements; what negative
+symptoms, insofar as he had knowledge of them, he should have paid
+more attention to. Can such questions, which every person asks
+when he is crushed by disaster, be considered as evidence for his
+objective guilt? I do not think so. On 17 January 1946 the French
+Chief Prosecutor, M. de Menthon, stated the following, which I
+quote (Volume V, Pages 378, 379):</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“We are rather facing systematic criminality which directly
+and necessarily derives from a monstrous doctrine with the
+<span class='pageno' title='112' id='Page_112'></span>
+full will of the leaders of Nazi Germany. The crime against
+peace, which was undertaken, is immediately derived from
+the National Socialist doctrine.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To refute this assertion I must briefly present this doctrine. I
+have classified the National Socialist ideology—in accord, I believe,
+with scientific opinions—under the so-called new romanticism.
+This trend, which was grounded in fate and the necessities of history,
+had gone through the whole civilized world since the turn of the
+century as a reaction against rationalism and the technical age. It
+differs from the old romanticism in that it adopts the naturalistic
+and biological consideration of man and history. It is borne up by a
+confident faith in the value and meaning of life and the whole of
+reality. It does not glorify sentiment or intellect, but the innermost
+motives of man—heart, will, and faith. This philosophy receives its
+National Socialist stamp through the emphasis which is placed upon
+the mysterious importance of peoples and races for all human
+experience and activity. It is in the people, in the common possession
+of blood, history, and culture, that the real roots of strength
+are thought to be found. Only by participating in the movements
+of a people and its strength does the individual serve himself and
+his generation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg’s scientific contribution to the racial ideology consists
+in his description of the rise and fall of great historical figures,
+who sprang from races and peoples and set up definite standards
+in all spheres: language, custom, art, religion, philosophy, and
+politics. According to Rosenberg the efforts of the twentieth century
+to establish a form for itself are a struggle for the independence of
+the human personality. In Rosenberg’s opinion, its essence is the
+consciousness of honor. The myth of national honor is at the same
+time the myth of blood and race, which produce and support honor
+in its highest form. Therefore, the struggle for honor in its highest
+form is also a spiritual struggle with other systems and their
+maximum values. Thus, intuition stands against intuition, will
+against will.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg expresses this thought in the following manner (<span class='it'>The
+Myth of the 20th Century</span>, Introduction, Pages 1 and 2):</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“History and the task of the future no longer mean a struggle
+between classes, no longer a struggle between Church dogma
+and dogma, but the dispute between blood and blood, race
+and race, people and people. And this means: A struggle
+between psychologies.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Consequently, Rosenberg had, in any case, no ideas of genocide
+as Raphael Lemkin expounds in <span class='it'>Axis Rule in Occupied Europe</span>,
+Page 81, where he ends the above quotation after the words “race
+<span class='pageno' title='113' id='Page_113'></span>
+and race, people and people,” but he believed in a struggle between
+psychologies, in other words, spiritual controversy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I mention this spiritual trend in order to explain the peculiar
+fact in National Socialism that political considerations born of the
+intellect often gave way before the pathos of will and faith. In
+Rosenberg’s case this danger did not appear so much since in
+making everything revolve around the “soil,” that is, the fatherland,
+and its history and peasantry as the force from which springs
+the essence of a race, he remains in the sphere of life’s realities.
+Perhaps unaware of it himself, he was nevertheless borne upward
+by this current. The question arises as to what effects this ideology
+had on political life.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is clear that the emphasis on will and faith gave special
+weight to political demands. After the Treaty of Versailles the
+political demands of Germany were aimed at recovering freedom
+and equality among the peoples as a still fettered great power. This
+had been the objective of German statesmen even before Hitler.
+The other great powers had certain misgivings about recognizing
+Germany again as such. Rosenberg fought to remove these misgivings.
+His weapon was his pen. The Tribunal has allowed me to
+present in evidence a group of excerpts from Rosenberg’s speeches
+and writings. I submitted it in my Document Book 1, Volume II.
+In view of the quantity of material and of my intention to submit
+only the most important matter, I depend on the Court’s being
+familiar with my document book.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the first place I wish to call attention to the effect which these
+works had on German youth. I may recall the witness Von
+Schirach’s testimony. I repeat verbally:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“At conventions of youth leaders, at which he spoke once a
+year, Rosenberg chiefly chose educational, character-building
+subjects. I remember, for instance, that he spoke on loneliness
+and comradeship, personality and honor, and so forth.
+At these conventions of leaders he did not deliver any
+speeches against Jews. As far as I remember, he did not
+touch on the religious problem of youth either, in any case
+not to the best of my memory. Mostly I heard him talk on
+such subjects as I have just mentioned before.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The attitude of youth was actually better than before the taking
+over of power. Idleness, the root of all evil, had ceased and had
+been replaced by work, the fulfillment of duty, the aiming at ideals,
+patriotism, and the will to get ahead. It was a fatality here too,
+that through Hitler’s policy these values were directed in the wrong
+manner.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The charges by the Prosecution that Rosenberg was the advocate
+of a conspiracy against peace, of racial hatred, of the elimination
+<span class='pageno' title='114' id='Page_114'></span>
+of human rights, of tyranny, of a rule of horror, violence, and
+illegality, of unbridled nationalism and militarism, of a German
+master race, I could already refute by pointing to the excerpts from
+<span class='it'>The Myth of the 20th Century</span>, which the Prosecution itself has
+submitted as evidence for the truth of its assertions. In reply to
+this, in order to refute this assertion by the Prosecution, I want to
+point in particular to the following facts: To prove Rosenberg’s
+honest struggle for the peaceful existence of nations side by side
+I wish to refer to his speech in Rome in November 1932 before the
+Royal Academy of Rome (reproduced in <span class='it'>Blood and Honor</span>, Document
+Book 1, Page 150). In his speech in Rome Rosenberg pointed
+to the fateful significance of the four great powers and proclaimed—I
+quote his words:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Therefore he who strives in earnest to create a Europe which
+shall be an organic unit with a pronounced multiplicity of
+form and not merely a crude summation, must acknowledge
+the four great nationalisms as given to us by fate and must,
+therefore, seek to give fulfillment to the force radiating from
+their core. The destruction of one of these centers by any
+power would not result in a ‘Europe,’ but would bring about
+chaos in which the other centers of culture would also have
+to perish. In reverse it is only the triumph of the radiations
+in those directions where the four great forces do not come
+into conflict with each other which would result in the most
+dynamic force of creative being and organic peace, not an
+explosive forced situation such as prevails today, whereby
+it would guarantee to the small nations more security than
+appears possible today in the struggle against elementary
+force.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To this line of thought Rosenberg, as Chief of the Foreign
+Political Office of the Party, remained true. Unfortunately, he
+could only work for it through his words. No witness could confirm
+in this courtroom that Rosenberg had any influence on actual
+foreign policy, whether it was directed by Neurath, Ribbentrop,
+Göring, or Hitler himself. Neither in the Austrian, nor in the Czech,
+nor in the Polish, nor in the Russian subject matter has his name
+been mentioned in connection with the charge of participation in
+aggressive wars. Everywhere he was placed before accomplished
+facts. In the war against the Soviet Union he received his orders
+only when the war against Russia had already been established as
+an acute possibility. He did not stir up the Norwegian campaign,
+but passed on personal information in accordance with his duty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, as regards Rosenberg’s speeches and writings on the
+problems of general foreign policy, he advocated the Anschluss of
+the Austrians, who had been forcibly excluded from the Reich, as
+<span class='pageno' title='115' id='Page_115'></span>
+a demand born of the right to self-determination which had been
+proclaimed by the Allies themselves. The revision of Versailles was
+a postulate of justice against a violation of the Treaty of 11 November
+1918. To advocate the German Armed Forces was, in view of
+the nondisarmament of the other powers, a defense of the solemnly
+promised equality of rights.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall now take up the charge of racial hatred.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg’s opinions in regard to the race question were the
+result of racial research of international scientists. Rosenberg
+repeatedly asserts (I refer again to the opinion stated in Document
+Book 1, Volume II) that the purpose of his racial political demands
+was not contempt of race, but respect for it. I quote Page 70:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The leading moral idea of an approach to world history
+based on the laws of heredity belongs to our times and to
+our generation, being in full accord with the true spirit of
+the modern eugenics movement with regard to patriotism,
+that is, the upholding and expansion of the spiritually,
+morally, intellectually, and physically best hereditary forces
+for our fatherland: only in this way can we preserve our institutions
+for all future times.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These words embody the main theme of his demands, though
+their originator was not Rosenberg, but Henry Fairfield Osborn,
+Professor at Columbia University, who wrote them in discussion of
+the book by his colleague in science, Madison Grant, <span class='it'>The Decline of
+the Great Race</span>. This research, long before the existence of the
+Third Reich, led to eugenic legislation in other countries, in particular
+to the American Immigration Law of 26 May 1924, which was
+aimed at a strong reduction of immigrants from southern and
+eastern Europe while favoring those from the north and west of
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I do not think I have to say that I am not hereby defending
+the murders of those mentally diseased in Germany as an alleged
+eugenic measure. With this measure, too, Rosenberg did not have
+the slightest connection.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For Rosenberg it was a question of the spiritual strengthening
+and consolidation of the German nation, indeed of the Aryan race.
+He would like to have his ideology considered in that light, above
+all <span class='it'>The Myth of the 20th Century</span>. His preaching of the significance
+of race in history did not call—I stress this again—for race contempt,
+but for consideration and respect of race, and demanded the
+acknowledgment of the racial idea only by the German people, not
+by other nations. He considered the Aryan nations as the leading
+ones in history. And if in doing so he underestimated the significance
+of other races, as for instance the Semitic ones, he, in his
+praise of Aryan races, did not think of the German nation alone,
+<span class='pageno' title='116' id='Page_116'></span>
+but of the European nations in general. I refer to his speech in
+Rome of November 1932.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I am keeping within the framework of historical truth in pointing
+to the fact that anti-Judaism is not an invention of National
+Socialism. For thousands of years the Jewish question has been the
+minority problem of the world. It has an irrational character which
+can be understood to some extent only in connection with the Bible.
+Rosenberg was a convinced anti-Semite, who in writing and speech
+gave expression to his convictions and their foundations. I have
+already emphasized that even such different personalities as Von
+Papen, Von Neurath, and Raeder are still of the opinion that the
+predominance of the Jewish element in the entire public life had
+reached such proportions that a change had to come about in this
+respect. The concrete result of that predominance, the fact that the
+Jews in Germany when attacked knew how to repay in kind,
+sharpened the anti-Semitic fight before the accession to power.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I wanted to present to the Tribunal a selection of Jewish literary
+attacks on the national feeling at that time, but the Tribunal ruled
+that my application was irrelevant; as these writings were not
+introduced as evidence I cannot speak about them. It is, however,
+an injustice to Rosenberg to assert that blind hatred of the Jewish
+race had goaded him into that controversy. He had before his eyes
+concrete factual evidence of the disintegrating activities of Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It appeared as if the Party program of placing Jews under a
+generous law of aliens would be realized. It is true that Goebbels
+at that time arranged a one-day boycotting of Jewish stores. Rosenberg,
+however, in his speech of 28 June 1933, the anniversary of
+the Versailles Treaty, in the assembly hall of the Reichstag in the
+Kroll Opera House, declared that it was no longer necessary that
+in the capital of the Reich 74 percent of all lawyers should be Jews,
+and that 80 to 90 percent of the physicians in Berlin hospitals should
+be Jewish; about 30 percent of Jewish lawyers in Berlin would
+suffice amply. In his speech at the Party Rally in September 1933
+Rosenberg stated in addition, and I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In the most chivalrous way, the German Government has
+excluded from the percentage stipulations those Jews who
+have fought for Germany at the front, or who have lost a
+son or a father in the war” (Document Book 1, Page 153a).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his speech at the Kroll Opera House Rosenberg gave the
+reason for this measure, saying that there was no intention thereby
+to discriminate against a whole people, but that it was necessary for
+our younger German generation, who for years had had to starve
+or beg, now to be able to obtain bread and work too. But despite
+his strong opposition to the Jews he did not want the “extermination”
+of Jewry, but advocated as the nearest aim the political
+<span class='pageno' title='117' id='Page_117'></span>
+expatriation of Jews, that is, through classifying them by law as
+aliens and giving them protection as such. In addition, he granted
+to the Jews a percentage access to nonpolitical professions, which
+still by far exceeded the actual percentage of Jews in the German
+population. Of course, his final aim was the total emigration of the
+Jews from Aryan nations. He had no understanding and appreciation
+of how great a loss to the Aryan nations themselves such
+an emigration would be in cultural, economic, and political respects.
+But one will have to admit that he believed that such an emigration
+would prove useful for the Jews themselves, first, because they
+would be set free from all anti-Semitic attacks, and also, because
+in their own settlement area they might live unhampered and
+according to their own ways.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The dreadful development which the Jewish question took under
+Hitler, which he justified as being a reaction against the policy
+pursued by emigrants, was never more regretted by anyone than
+by Rosenberg himself, who blames himself for not having protested
+against the attitude of Hitler, Himmler, and Goebbels as firmly as
+he protested against Koch’s actions in the Ukraine. Nor does Rosenberg
+hesitate to admit that his suggestion to Hitler to shoot 100 Jews
+instead of 100 Frenchmen after the recurring murders of German
+soldiers was an injustice born of a momentary feeling—despite his
+belief in its formal admissibility—because, from the purely human
+standpoint, the real basis for such a suggestion was lacking, namely,
+the active participation of those Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have returned to this case again, as in my opinion it is the only
+instance where Rosenberg desired retribution by the death of Jews.
+On the other hand, one must insist with the greatest emphasis that
+there is no proof of Rosenberg’s having been aware of the extermination
+of five million Jews. The Prosecution accuses him of
+making preparations for an anti-Semitic congress as late as 1944,
+which did not take place only because of the course of the war.
+What point could such a congress have had, had Rosenberg known
+that the majority of the Jews in Europe had been exterminated
+already?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg had no faith in democracy, because in Germany it led
+to a splitting up into numerous parties and a constant change of
+government, and finally made the formation of an efficient government
+impossible. Another reason for his not having faith in democracy
+was that non-German democratic powers did not stand by
+their democratic principles in certain cases where they might have
+been of benefit to Germany, for instance in 1919, when Austria was
+willing to be incorporated in Germany, and later on at the plebiscite
+in Upper Silesia. But Rosenberg did not for that reason turn
+<span class='pageno' title='118' id='Page_118'></span>
+toward tyranny. In connection with Paragraph 25 of the Party
+Program he said in his comments, on Page 46:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“This central power”—referring in this case to the Führer’s
+power—“should have as advisers representatives of the people
+as well as those councils which had evolved in the course of
+time” (Document Book 3, Page 6).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And in his speech in Marienburg on 30 April 1934 on the state
+of the German Order, he said that the National Socialist State must
+be “a monarchy on a republican foundation.” I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“From that standpoint the State will not become a deified end
+in itself, neither will its leader become a Caesar, a God, or a
+deputy of God” (Document Book 1, Page 131).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his speech on German law of 18 December 1934, Rosenberg
+stressed:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“In our eyes the Führer is never a tyrannical commander” (Document
+Book 1, Page 135). Only in such terms was a protest against
+the development of tyranny possible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The development passed over Rosenberg and degenerated. Rosenberg
+himself learned this while acting as Minister for the East.
+Rosenberg was an idealist, but he was not the unscrupulous man
+who inspired the State and the Führer to commit crimes. I believe,
+therefore, that he should not be included in Mr. Justice Jackson’s
+Indictment (Page 8), where it says that Rosenberg belonged to those
+men in Germany who have been “the very symbols of race hatred,
+of the rule of terror and violence, of arrogance and cruel power.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In looking through Rosenberg’s writings one finds, on the contrary,
+statements and expressions which give a decided impression
+of tolerance. He says, for example, in his Myth, of the national
+Church which he aspired to:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The German Church cannot pronounce compulsory dogmas
+which every one of its followers is compelled to believe at the
+very risk of losing his everlasting salvation.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his speech on ideology and dogma at the University of Halle-Wittenberg,
+he called for tolerance toward all denominations with
+a demand for “inner respect for every genuine denomination.” In
+his speech on German intellectual freedom of 6 July 1935 he also
+spoke up for the freedom of conscience. No document was presented
+which contained a request by Rosenberg for criminal persecution of
+one of his numerous ideological opponents, although he might easily
+have been prompted to do so by their sharp attacks on his opinions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Further, the Prosecution accused him of promoting militarism.
+Rosenberg was indeed an admirer of the soldier’s profession and a
+soldierly attitude toward life, but he also admired the peasant’s
+standards as the basis of the national character. He advocated the
+<span class='pageno' title='119' id='Page_119'></span>
+creation of a people’s army, both as the outward expression of Germany’s
+capacity as a political ally and for the purpose of training
+and educating the people at home. However, he denies having contemplated
+world conquest. On this point I can refer to his speech
+on Germany’s Position in the World of 30 October 1933. There he
+offered peace to Russia on the occasion of the German withdrawal
+from the League of Nations (Document Book 1, Page 147). I shall
+quote this passage, for it also proves that National Socialism did
+not desire to interfere in the affairs of other countries:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“We are ready at any time to maintain absolutely correct
+relations with Soviet Russia, because naturally we do not
+necessarily want to modify an ideology in the field of foreign
+policy and foreign relations.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the same speech he emphasizes that the avowal of an ideology
+he describes as racial science is “not meant to be an expression of
+racial hatred, but an expression of racial respect” (<span class='it'>Blood and Honor</span>,
+Page 377).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Mr. Justice Jackson called Rosenberg’s nationalism a “wild” one.
+Rosenberg was passionate, but he wanted thereby to overcome class
+conflict in the nation, which threatened its existence. For a clearer
+understanding of the facts it may also be said ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, the Tribunal would like you to
+finish your speech before lunch, if you could possibly summarize
+some parts of it. I don’t know whether that is possible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: I shall try to do that, Mr. President.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I once more refer to Mr. Jackson’s statement that Rosenberg’s
+nationalism, or militarism, was “wild.” In this connection I should
+like to refer only to the fact that such nationalism was a compensatory
+symptom, which is easily found in a conquered country.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The accusation dealing with anti-Christianity and neopaganism
+is something which I have already mentioned, and I should just like
+to refer to it. I have dealt with the term “master race,” mentioning
+the fact that these words are not found in Rosenberg’s works at all.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Concerning the Party Program, I stated that Rosenberg did not
+draft it, but only supplied a commentary upon it, and that it is not
+a question of what is contained in the Party Program, but rather
+with what its effect was. I referred to the witness Funk, who stated
+that his first action and his first program as Minister of Economics
+had no reference at all to the Party Program, but was simply democratic
+and liberal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Party Program was adhered to neither in a positive nor a
+negative sense. The government was carried on just as in other
+states, on the basis of general necessity.
+<span class='pageno' title='120' id='Page_120'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal, I shall turn to the charge that
+Rosenberg was the delegate of the Führer for the supervision of all
+education and spiritual ideology within the NSDAP. During the
+reading of the affidavit by Dr. Eppe I pointed to the fact that
+Rosenberg, as head of this office, had no executive power, and that
+Rosenberg interpreted the duties of his office in such a way that he
+published magazines on all cultural and scientific topics, especially
+the <span class='it'>NS Monatshefte</span>, the polemic political contents of which, after
+1933, were more and more superseded by historical, scientific, and
+cultural subjects. On the basis of all the literature at our disposal
+it is not in accordance with the facts that Rosenberg interpreted his
+position as one from which to sow hatred. After 1933 he mainly
+endeavored to intensify and promote new definite talent. I have
+said in addition that this nonpolitical office concentrated its efforts
+on exercising a regulating and guiding influence on all noble and
+cultural values which manifested themselves.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal, I shall now turn to the topic:
+“Morality as a basis of the Indictment.” I should like to ask the
+High Tribunal, even though I do not propose to read this passage,
+to consider it as having been presented by me. I refer to Pages 82a
+through 82g, and I should like to ask the High Tribunal for permission
+not to read this matter and yet to have this matter considered
+as having been submitted in its entirety and read into the
+record. I shall now sum up ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, all the speech will be taken as
+being presented to the Tribunal. By your summarizing it, you are
+not excluding it from the record of the Tribunal. The Tribunal will
+take note of it all.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: Thank you, Mr. President.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall now sum up in conclusion, and I should like to point out
+the following:</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class="fs">... that he is to be understood as a phenomenon of psychic compensation, as often
+appears in a conquered people. In addition, Germany, situated in the middle of
+Europe, was always exposed to so many political and military dangers that
+military circles in Germany, particularly after the entrance into the Ruhr in 1923,
+were necessarily particularly sensitive on national questions. As a German Balt
+he was brought up in a national way of feeling that led him to expect more of
+self-assertion and mobilization for defense than of the disappointments resulting
+from the international negotiations carried on up to that time. He was always
+ready for an understanding based on equal representation (Document Number
+003-PS, Exhibit Number USA-603).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Rosenberg has been further reproached with anti-Christianity and neopaganism.
+It is true that this reproach was not brought against his theory, but
+in connection with the persecution of the Christian religion in all its forms which
+later resulted. Rosenberg was an opponent of Christianity in its—as he sees them—present
+historical forms, just as he was of Jewry. In place of Christianity he
+strove for an idealistically, racially, and ethnically, conditioned religion, an emotional
+religion of blood and soil.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">He thereby attacked both Christianity and Jewry theoretically, and hoped
+that the Christian Churches would gradually become extinct among the German
+<span class='pageno' title='121' id='Page_121'></span>
+people; yet it will always have to be admitted that Rosenberg staged no violent
+persecution. He carried on this battle with intellectual weapons. Here, too, since
+he expected freedom of conscience for himself, he advocated freedom of conscience
+for others, and pointed out that with his <span class='gesp'>Myth</span> and his new religiousness
+he did not wish to confuse Church believers but to create new spiritual ties for
+those, too, who had ceased to be believers in the Church.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The term “master race,” to my knowledge, does not appear in Rosenberg’s
+writings, nor does it fit into Rosenberg’s ideology, which proceeds from the race
+as a general law. Therefore, Rosenberg speaks of the Nordic, Mediterranean,
+Dinaric race, in relation to races which are biologically different, not in the sense
+of an arrogant judgment as to value, but in the sense of racial facts, in the sense
+of honoring the entire human race of Europe.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">As far as the Party Program is concerned, despite the assertions of the
+Prosecution, it was not he, Rosenberg, who designed it. Like so many other things,
+the meaning and action of the Party Program has also been overestimated and
+exaggerated. It was one of the first deeds of the National Socialist Government
+to design a reconstruction program, of which the Defendant Funk said that almost
+any other liberal or democratic government could accept it also. In place of
+breaking up capital investment, the reinstatement of a sound money and credit
+system was demanded. I could go on quoting a number of examples, for instance
+the program of aliens’ status for Jews, which was not carried out. The Party
+Program was never adhered to subsequently either in the positive or the negative
+sense. Rules were simply enacted as in other states, too, based on the necessities
+of the moment.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The entire ideology of the journalist and author Rosenberg becomes intensified
+and is rendered more menacing to peace, according to the Prosecution,
+by the fact that Rosenberg was nominated the deputy of the Führer for the
+supervision of the entire intellectual and ideological education of the NSDAP.
+How did this assignment come about and what were the circumstances concerning
+it? On the basis of his previous experience in the educational work of the
+Party, its organizational leader asked Rosenberg whether he would not undertake
+a common intellectual project. Rosenberg answered in the affirmative, if the
+Führer so desired. Thereupon, on 24 January 1934, the Führer appointed him chief
+of that office. It was a Party office and had nothing to do with the schools, as is
+erroneously assumed. The office had no right to issue directives to Reich offices;
+even any correspondence with them had to be sent via the Party Chancellery.
+Neither did it have any right to suppress books, et cetera. Even a right to
+issue directives to the Party was not granted, the more so since the branch
+school directors were also subordinated to the Reich leaders (SA, SS, HJ). Therefore,
+from the very beginning Rosenberg did not consider his work as representing
+the tasks of an intellectual police, but as an executive and unifying work,
+as the central point of the expression and realization of the factual and personal
+power of conviction and initiative.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">He had no offices in the various Gaue, not even individual representatives;
+he agreed to the Gau education leader as his deputy at the same time, in order
+to maintain a connection with practical education in the country.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The office had many things to review in the course of time, yet it remained
+limited in extent. It became subdivided into various spheres of work; teaching
+and education proper, cultivation of literature, the arts, cultural and general
+problems. About twice a year, for the purpose of comparing tuition experiences,
+Rosenberg called together the so-called “Working Community for the Instruction
+of the Entire Movement.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In it were represented the educational deputies of the political leadership
+and its various subdivisions. They reported on their work and expressed their
+suggestions. On the basis of these suggestions, Rosenberg frequently lectured in
+the Gaue on appropriate topics, and likewise induced his collaborators to handle
+such questions in all the subdivisions. These are the two educational meetings
+which the Prosecution mentioned by reason of their alleged “broad influence on
+the community schools” as an indication of criminal activity (Volume V, Page 48).
+This generally executive work found expression particularly in the periodicals
+of the offices of Rosenberg’s department; primarily in the N. S. <span class='gesp'>Monatshefte</span>,
+which after 1933 acquired a gradually increasing polemical political content in
+the interest of handling historical, cultural, and scientific topics. <span class='gesp'>Die Kunst
+im Deutschen Reich</span> achieved special significance by simply offering the
+<span class='pageno' title='122' id='Page_122'></span>
+most beautiful examples in the way of contemporary plastic art, excellently
+presented without discussion. The <span class='gesp'>Bücher Kunde</span> offered a monthly cross
+section of writings and literary contributions. The monthly periodical <span class='gesp'>Musik</span>
+devoted itself above all to serious art, the cultivation of the German classics,
+and without any pettiness toward new creations. The journal <span class='gesp'>Germanisches
+Erbe</span> published contributions on research in early history, the <span class='gesp'>Deutsche
+Volkskunde</span> was devoted to games, folk songs, peasant customs. <span class='gesp'>Deutsche
+Dramaturgie</span> described the ambitions and problems of the contemporary
+theater.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Besides this there were special exhibitions of the lifework of great artists in
+Rosenberg’s exhibition building in Berlin, and book exhibitions in various cities.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It is simply not true if the Prosecution declares that Rosenberg used his
+assignment to disseminate hatred. The essence of his entire work after 1933 went
+toward a profounder and large-scale promotion of new positive talents.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Political polemics in these seven years had almost entirely disappeared. But
+for the difficulties in the language, one would find, in glancing through the journals
+and speeches, an honest great effort, whether Rosenberg spoke to youth or
+to the technicians, teachers, lawyers, workers, professors, women, at meetings of
+historians, or before the Northern Society.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The heads of his offices were instrumental in publishing and promoting
+valuable works of art: Classics of music, history of the German ancestry, world
+political libraries, development of German peasantry, and others. In the present
+impassioned days one is not interested to know of this side of somebody’s lifework,
+and therefore I only touch upon it; but I wish to emphasize that it was
+just that which seemed to Rosenberg, since 1933, to constitute the essential part
+of his work, and similarly he intended to devote himself in his old age entirely
+to scientific-cultural research and teaching. I shall permit myself a few more
+words about this later.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Contrary to some opinions which at first appeared necessary, although some
+Individuals may perhaps have looked upon them as rather petty, Rosenberg advocated
+at the universities of Munich and Halle the right of examining new problems
+of our times as well as the independence of scientific thinking. He declared that
+we would have to “feel that we were the intellectual brothers of all those who
+once in mediaeval times raised the flag for this free research” (Document Book 1,
+Page 134). Against certain attempts to identify certain scientific physical theories
+with the Party, he protested in an official declaration which rejected this danger
+of hairsplitting. “It is not the task of the National Socialist movement,” he said
+in a speech about Copernicus and Kant on 19 February 1939, “to make any regulations
+for research other than necessarily connected with our philosophy of life”
+(Document Book 1, Page 173).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">When a certain trend toward mass statistics, peak figures for the number of
+visitors, et cetera, developed in the otherwise desirable progress achieved by
+the German Labor Front, he made a determined stand in favor of emphasis on
+the personal element. He rejected this idea of “mass production” in an address
+to youth with the words: “One cannot receive art and culture like mass-produced,
+ready-made clothes in a department store” (Document Book 1, Page 155). Today
+poisoning of this youth is imputed to him, but on the contrary he asked (Document
+Book 1, Page 161) for comprehension in teaching on the part of everybody
+to whose care young people are entrusted, and he decidedly rejected any orders
+in the intellectual field.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">With regard to any form of collectivism, as has already been mentioned, he
+impressed on youth the importance of comradeship, but emphasized the personal
+element and the right to solitude. When on the grounds of certain occurrences
+many voices criticized the teaching class, Rosenberg began to fear lest general
+discrimination against the profession might develop. He took a stand against this
+danger in two speeches: at a great meeting in October 1934 at Leipzig, and later
+at the conference of the N.S. Teacher’s League at Bayreuth (Document Book 1,
+Page 162), where he declared that the National Socialist movement would step
+in and see that the teaching class be respected, just as it would have done for
+all other professions.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">By these brief allusions I mean to say that Rosenberg, as a regulating and
+leading intellectual force, advocated high cultural values and the rights of personality
+in a manner rendered convincing by his attitude and motives. Throughout
+the whole Party it was no secret that this activity involved profound opposition
+<span class='pageno' title='123' id='Page_123'></span>
+to the Propaganda Minister. Rosenberg from the very beginning considered it
+a calamity that culture and propaganda should be associated in one ministry.
+For him art was a creed, propaganda a form of tactics.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">As things at first could not be changed, Rosenberg emphasized his attitude to
+the outside world by not attending a single annual meeting of the Reich Chamber
+of Culture, in the firm hope that at some later day another conception would win
+through.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Many things Rosenberg said did not fail to have their effect and certainly
+prevented some harmful actions, but more, and probably the most important, did
+not succeed because the legislative and executive powers in the State lay in
+quite different hands, and these finally, due to the war and in spite of the will
+to sacrifice, brought about not the development of the National Socialist idea but
+its degeneration. Moreover, this happened to an extent which Rosenberg could
+not foresee.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It was seen that the foundations for the spiritual education of the Party were
+not sufficient, and round about 1935 there developed a wish to create a serious
+place for research and study. This desire led to the idea later known as “high
+school,” which was intended to take the form of an academy. Rosenberg considered
+the creation of this academy as a task for his old age. Since it would
+have taken years to provide tuition material and to choose suitable personnel, the
+Führer authorized Rosenberg at the end of January 1940 to carry on the preparatory
+work he had started on official orders. Thus, contrary to what the
+Prosecution asserts, (Volume V, Page 48) the “high school” had nothing to do with
+Rosenberg’s “Einsatzstab,” which was not even planned at that time.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Mr. Justice Jackson, in his fundamental speech of 21 November 1945, expressed
+the desire, that this Trial should appear to posterity as the fulfillment of the
+human yearning for justice. Mr. Jackson furthermore declared that he had brought
+the Indictment because of conduct which according to its plan and intention
+meant injustice from the moral and the legal standpoint. In his report of 7 June
+1945 Mr. Justice Jackson outlined that by this Trial those actions are to be
+punished which since time immemorial have been considered as crimes and are
+designated as such in any civilized legislation. The most difficult problem, the
+greatest task, and the most tremendous responsibility for the Tribunal lies concentrated
+in this single point: What is justice in this Trial?</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">We have no code of laws, we have, however astonishing it may sound, not
+even any fixed moral concepts for the relations of nations among each other in
+peace and war. Therefore the Prosecution had to be satisfied with the general
+terms “civilized conception of justice,” “traditional conception of legality,” “conception
+of legality built on sound common sense with regard to justice”; they
+have spoken of “human and divine laws” (Volume VII, Page 78); the Hague Land
+Warfare Rules refer in their preamble to the “laws of humanity” and to the
+“demands of the public conscience.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The basis of justice is without any doubt a morality, the moral law; thus if
+we wish to determine what injustice among nations is, what is contrary to the
+idea of justice among nations according to international law, then we must broach
+the question of morality. The answer will be: everything is moral which our
+conscience accepts as being moral.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">But what is the original cause of moral discrimination: desire and happiness
+of the individual; or progress, improvement, preservation of the life of an individual,
+of a people, of humanity; or virtue; or duty?</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">How can we recognize what is good and what is bad? By intuition, or by
+experience, or by authoritarian and religious education? What is good and bad
+in the actions of a State, what is good and bad in the mutual relationship between
+nations? Does a difference exist between national morals and private morals?
+Can the State commit any injustice at all? From Saint Augustine through Machiavelli
+and Nietzsche to Hegel, Tolstoy, and the pacifist thinkers, yearning humanity
+has received the most different answers to this question.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">And furthermore: Have fixed moral laws existed since time immemorial or
+have changes in the ideals of nations brought about changes in morals, too? What
+is the situation with regard to this today?</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">I have already said once that, according to my opinion, war itself is a
+brutality and a great crime of humanity against itself and the laws of life. An
+essentially different question is whether this conviction has already entered the
+conscience of humanity. We consider ourselves far above the moral level of
+<span class='pageno' title='124' id='Page_124'></span>
+former nations and ages, and are, for example, surprised to find that the highest
+representatives of Greek morality such as Plato and Aristotle consider abandoning
+of children and slavery to be absolutely right, or that in certain parts of East
+Africa even today only robbery and murder give a man the stamp of heroism;
+on the other hand it is absolutely compatible with our present-day idea of morality
+that human beings are killed by hundreds of thousands in war and that the
+products of human welfare and culture are wantonly destroyed. Neither in a
+moral nor in a legal sense is this considered as unjust.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">If the Prosecution now charges the defendant with a wrong in the moral or
+legal sense, it is its duty to present the prerequisites for a punishment of the
+defendant, in such a way as to convince the Court, for, according to the hitherto
+existing moral concepts of nations, killing in war is not murder within the
+meaning of the penal codes of the individual countries, and the measures of a
+sovereign country in war or in peace have never been interpreted as an offense
+within the meaning of these penal codes or as punishable and immoral acts by
+the legal convictions of civilized humanity. Christianity teaches us to return good
+for evil and to love one’s enemies; this has been a world religion for 2,000 years,
+but many people today will laugh outright if one should venture to claim certain
+principles for the relations of nations between each other. In the face of the
+yearning of humanity the Prosecution now desires to aid its progress, even if
+only step by step, in this direction; it seeks to achieve the end that “unequivocal
+rules” shall emerge from this Trial; its mistake however, is that it wants to
+explain “traditional opinions of justice” and civil criminal laws as the contents
+of a public conscience which hardly exists any longer, compliance with which
+cannot in any case be demanded retroactively of the defendants.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It is certainly very true that a profound change is commencing today in the
+moral thinking of humanity, a regeneration of the moral law of nations, and
+that this Trial before the High Tribunal marks the beginning of this new era.
+However, it appears to me very doubtful whether it is proper to impress a new
+kind of justice upon the conscience of mankind by making an example of the
+defendants.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It is easy to speak of human and divine laws, or of the demands of public
+conscience, but we become greatly embarrassed for an answer to the question:
+What is the substance and content of private morality, when is an act immoral
+according to private morality? In their concern over what is good or evil, some
+rely on religion, others have been taught wisdom by experience and education,
+still others find an explanation in the philosophers.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The State has in recent times taken up the moral education of its citizens
+in increasing measure, not only through criminal laws but also through “political
+education” or whatever other name is used for it. Not only did the National
+Socialist State have a great advantage here over the liberal states, but so do
+all totalitarian states of the world: They have hammered moral principles into
+the minds of their citizens, both of a private and public nature. They have proclaimed
+moral ultimate values, such as fidelity, honor, and obedience. By this
+means reflection concerning private and public morals is made easier for the
+individual citizens and they are obliged by force to uphold these ultimate values
+in the prescribed form. The German people, who had become tired and resigned
+as a result of continual warlike disputes and religious upheavals, willingly followed
+National Socialism, even when the latter’s ethics were exalted to a faith;
+it took this leap into the unknown, not with the idea of being taught by this
+means to deceive people, to enslave them, to rob them, to kill them, to torture
+them (see Volume VII, Page 78), but because it was in search of moral elevation,
+an authoritative moral leadership in its material and spiritual distress, and
+because nothing else was offered to it, especially not by a liberal world conscience
+which did not know how to make the fundamental principle of humanity
+a reality. The National Socialist ethical conceptions were taught to Germans as
+<span class='gesp'>summum bonum</span>, as the highest idea, and they believed the idea to be moral
+and good. Then National Socialism came into conflict not only with ideologies,
+but also with the plans of power of other states, because it could not find the
+formula which would include not only perfection and life for Germany, but also
+the interests and justice for all nations of the world. To try to construe out
+of such inadequacy of a national ethical idea, however inefficient, a punishable
+action, a conspiracy, is not admissible in my opinion, if only because uniformly
+acknowledged national morality has not yet developed, and unlimited national
+<span class='pageno' title='125' id='Page_125'></span>
+egotism has not yet been dethroned and is still considered the highest moral
+instance of the State.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It might be objected that the Germans should only have followed the
+teachings of their great philosopher Kant in thought and action, according to
+his “categorical imperative”: Act in such a way that the maxim of your will
+could always serve as a principle for general legislation! Then they would and
+should have recognized the moral instability of National Socialist teachings. To
+that I can answer with the words of the great English philosopher, John Locke,
+who says on the question of what is good or evil in his <span class='gesp'>Essay Concerning
+Human Understanding</span>; Book 2, Chapter XXVIII, Paragraph 6: “God has
+ordained it in such a manner that certain activities produce general happiness,
+preserve society, and even reward the doer. Man has discovered this, and has
+established it as a practical rule. With that rule are connected certain rewards
+and punishments either by God Himself (reward and punishment of infinite size
+and duration in the Beyond) or by mortals (legal penalties, social approval or
+condemnation, loss of honor); good and evil which are not the natural effect and
+results of the actions themselves. Then men look to those rules or laws, be they
+divine or made by the State, and the laws of usage or of private opinion, and
+measure their actions by them. They judge the moral value of their actions
+according to whether they conform with the rules or not. Moral good or evil
+therefore amounts only to conforming or not conforming our action with a law
+which by the will and power of the legislator determines for us what is good
+and evil.”</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Therefore good and evil has been and still is today what the authorities want
+or do not want. Christianity for centuries has been preaching not only to Germans
+but to all nations of the world: “Let every man be subject to the authority
+above him.” And the authorities do not move beyond conscience and morality so
+long as the expansion of national egotism is not opposed by clear laws and
+commandments and irrefutable legal convictions.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The highest good, <span class='gesp'>summum bonum</span>, in international morals of nations
+has not yet been mandatorily codified. There does not exist any authoritative
+idea for the community of nations. Instead of discussions on individual ethics
+and individual criminality, the Prosecution should have submitted its accepted
+principles and criteria as international common law, which was not done.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Therefore, with regard to the standpoint of the prosecuting authorities as to
+the personal responsibility of acting statesmen, I feel impelled to look upon this
+as a totally new philosophy and one which is very dangerous in its consequences.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Apart from the misdeeds of the individual, which do not satisfy even the
+minimum of moral conceptions, the ethical conceptions of National Socialism and
+the actions resulting from them, insofar as they are an expression of National
+Socialist ethics, cannot be subjected to the judgment of a human forum, since
+they are an event of world history. And the fate and guilt of the Defendant
+Rosenberg likewise cannot be judged conclusively within the framework of this
+Trial. As to the question of deciding the criminal guilt of the defendant, that
+is the hard task of the High Tribunal; but his potential historical guilt cannot
+and will not be judged by the Tribunal. Rosenberg, like all persons of historical
+importance, has acted according to his character and spirit, thereby perhaps
+becoming guilty in the eyes of history. The more freedom of action a given
+personality has in his will, the clearer the importance of conditions and the
+one-sidedness of all human activities becomes, and out of an insignificant guilt
+there grows, particularly in historical personalities, an enormous power which
+decides the fate of many, and which remains a gloomy foreboding for whoever
+lets it loose.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Goethe once said: “The doer never has a conscience; no one feels his conscience
+but the observer.” But this maxim can never mean that a person
+must not move and act to the best of his knowledge and conscience, and particularly
+for his country’s sake. And we all know that in reality nobody is capable
+of attaining the good he is striving for. Just as his knowledge, so will his actions
+always be incomplete: Any action we accomplish as free beings is an infringement
+on the operating forces of the universe, which we are never able to assess.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Rosenberg was caught up in the destiny of his nation in a period
+of severe foreign political oppression and internal dissension. He
+struggled for cultural purity, social justice, and national dignity,
+<span class='pageno' title='126' id='Page_126'></span>
+and rejected vehemently all elements which did not admit these
+high values or consciously attacked them in an irreverent manner.
+With respect to foreign policy he stood for an agreement between
+the four central powers of the European continent, in full realization
+of the grave consequences of a lost war. He acted in all loyalty and
+respect toward a personality who appeared to give political shape
+and increasing power to his ideals. After the political victory at
+home, Rosenberg proposed that the polemics and other aspects of
+the period of struggle be subdued. He stood for a chivalrous solution
+of the existing Jewish problem, for spiritual and cultural instruction
+of the Party on a high plane and, contrary to the statements of the
+Prosecution, he opposed any form of religious persecution. He can
+hardly be reproached for emphasizing a definite religious-philosophical
+conviction of his own.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The practical application of many of his views was practiced
+to an increasing degree by authoritative agencies of the Party,
+although later they were disregarded, especially after the outbreak
+of the war. Finally, as has been discovered now, they were often
+turned into the opposite of what Rosenberg fought for.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Until 17 July 1941 Rosenberg was excluded from participation in
+any national legislation. Considered from the point of view of
+personal responsibility, all his speeches and writings up to that time
+come within the scope of unofficial journalistic activity which every
+politician and writer must admittedly be free to engage in—a
+freedom which the Tribunal has fundamentally acknowledged with
+regard to all utterances by the statesmen of other countries during
+the unofficial period of their career. It seems to be all the more
+significant that Rosenberg as a private citizen did not call for war
+or for the commission of any inhuman or violent acts.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As Minister for the East he advocated a generous solution in
+accordance with the understandable national and cultural aspirations
+of the eastern European peoples. He fought for this concept as long
+as there were any prospects for its realization. Ultimately realizing
+that Hitler refused to be persuaded, he requested his dismissal. The
+fact that Rosenberg could not prevent many outrages from happening
+in the East cannot be charged against him in the criminal sense.
+Neither the Armed Forces nor the Police nor the Allocation of Labor
+were subject to his authority. Whenever injustices or excesses came
+to his knowledge, he did everything he could to counteract them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For almost a whole year, Rosenberg endeavored to keep labor
+recruiting on a voluntary basis. Later, when several age groups
+were drafted, he protested against every abuse by executive agencies
+and always demanded redress. Quite apart from the legitimate
+requirements of the occupation power, his labor legislation for the
+Eastern Territories was necessary for the establishment of order and
+<span class='pageno' title='127' id='Page_127'></span>
+the repression of arbitrary measures as well as of dangerous
+idleness, increasing sabotage, and the growing number of murders.
+There was a war on and it was a war area, not a postarmistice
+period, much less one following final capitulation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>So far as he was informed of things and commanded any
+influence, Rosenberg fought for his convictions. The fact that
+adverse powers became stronger than he was cannot be brought up
+as a charge against him. One cannot punish offenses, and at the
+same time punish those who revolted against them. In view of the
+terrible extermination orders which have now been disclosed, it is
+certainly possible to raise the point whether Rosenberg could not
+have exerted much stronger opposition. To expect this would,
+however, suppose an earlier knowledge of things which he only
+learned about after the collapse. Should he be charged with any
+carelessness it must not be forgotten that he felt it to be his duty
+to serve the Reich engaged in the struggle for its existence, and that
+terrible injuries were also inflicted upon the German nation, injuries
+which Rosenberg was equally unable to recognize as war necessities.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>His official tasks, as for example the duties of the Einsatzstab in
+the West and East, were carried out by Rosenberg without compromising
+his personal integrity. The requisitioning of artistic and
+cultural objects he always carried out provisionally, subject to final
+decisions by the supreme authority and, as far as was at all possible,
+with proper identification of the proprietor. Moreover, in the use of
+unclaimed furniture for the benefit of air-raid victims in Germany,
+provision was made for the subsequent indemnification of the owners
+based upon a precise inventory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In considering his entire personality we see that Rosenberg
+followed with faith and devotion an ideal of social justice combined
+with national dignity. He fought for it openly and honorably, went
+to prison, and risked his life for it. He did not step in only when
+National Socialism afforded the opportunity to begin a career, but
+at a time when it was dangerous and asked only for sacrifice. In
+his speeches after 1933 he took his stand in favor of deeper spiritual
+formation, a new cultural education, personality values, and respect
+for every form of honest work. He accepted the gloomy days of that
+time as unfortunate but inevitable accompanying phenomena of a
+revolution otherwise acclaimed as having passed without bloodshed,
+without having in fact learned of the secret details. He fully
+believed that good forces and ideas would prevail over these other
+human imperfections. During the war he was at the service of the
+Reich in accordance with his duty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For 25 years, throughout the revolution and the events of the
+war, he maintained his personal integrity and untainted character.
+He had to witness with deep sorrow that a great idea, in the hands
+<span class='pageno' title='128' id='Page_128'></span>
+of those possessed with the lust for power, was gradually abused,
+and in 1944, at Party meetings, he protested against this abuse of
+power entrusted to its holders. During this Trial he had to his
+dismay and horror to look upon the evidence of the degeneration of
+his life’s ideal; but he knows that his aspirations and the aspirations
+of many millions of other Germans have been honorable and decent.
+Today he still adheres to his honorable, honest, and humanly
+irreproachable conduct and, full of sorrow for the wounds inflicted
+upon all nations and for the downfall of the Reich, he awaits the
+sentence of a just Tribunal.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 11 July 1946 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' title='129' id='Page_129'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>ONE HUNDRED<br/> AND SEVENTY-SIXTH DAY</span><br/> Thursday, 11 July 1946</h1></div>
+
+<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn this afternoon
+at four o’clock to sit in closed session.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Dr. Seidl, will you present the case of the Defendant Frank?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. ALFRED SEIDL (Counsel for Defendant Frank): Mr. President,
+My Lords. The Defendant Dr. Hans Frank is accused in
+the Indictment of having utilized his posts in Party and State,
+his personal influence, and his relation with the Führer, for the
+purpose of supporting the seizure of power by the National Socialists
+and the consolidation of their control over Germany. He is
+also accused of having approved, led, and taken part in the War
+Crimes mentioned in Count Three of the Indictment, as well as
+in the Crimes against Humanity mentioned in Count Four, particularly
+in the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed
+in the course of the administration of occupied territories.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As I have already explained in the case of the Defendant Hess,
+the Indictment fails to adduce any facts in substantiation of these
+accusations. It is similar in the case of the Defendant Frank; here
+again the Indictment contains no statement of factual details to
+substantiate the accusations. Like all the other defendants, the
+Defendant Frank is accused of having taken part in a common
+plan which is alleged to have had as its object the planning and
+waging of wars of aggression and the commission in the course
+of these wars of crimes which infringe upon the laws and customs
+of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The evidence has shown that the Defendant Frank joined the
+National Socialist Party in the year 1928. Both before and after
+the assumption of power by the National Socialists he was concerned
+almost exclusively with legal questions. The Reich Law
+Department was under his control as Reichsleiter of the Party
+until the year 1942. After Adolf Hitler’s appointment as Chancellor,
+Frank became the Bavarian Minister of Justice. In the same
+year he was appointed Reich commissioner for the co-ordination
+of legal institutions. This task consisted in the main of transferring
+to the Reich Ministry of Justice the functions of the
+<span class='pageno' title='130' id='Page_130'></span>
+administrative legal departments of the component states of the
+Reich. That was completed by the year 1934. When the affairs
+of the Bavarian Ministry of Justice had been transferred to the
+Reich, the office of the Defendant Frank as Bavarian Minister of
+Justice came to an end. In December 1934 he was appointed Reich
+Minister without Portfolio. In addition he became, from 1934
+onward, President of the Academy for German Law, which he
+himself had founded, and President of the International Chamber
+of Law. Finally, he was the Leader of the National Socialist
+Lawyers Association.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This list of the various posts held by the Defendant Frank in
+Party and State would alone be sufficient to show that his work
+was almost exclusively concerned with legal matters. His tasks
+were in the main confined to the execution of Point 19 of the Party
+Program, which demanded a German common law. And in actual
+fact almost all speeches and publications by the Defendant Frank,
+both before and after the assumption of power by the National
+Socialists, dealt with legal questions in the widest sense of the term.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the course of his examination in the witness box, the Defendant
+Frank testified that he had done everything he could to bring
+Adolf Hitler to power and to carry out the ideas and the program
+of the National Socialist Party. But whatever the defendant undertook
+in this respect was done openly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The aims of the National Socialists before they assumed power
+can be expressed in a few words: Liberation of the German people
+from the shackles of the Versailles Treaty; elimination of the mass
+unemployment which had arisen in consequence of that treaty
+and the unreasonable reparations policy of Germany’s former
+enemies; counteraction against the symptoms of degeneracy—political,
+economic, social, and moral—connected with that unemployment;
+and finally, the restoration of the sovereignty of the
+Reich in all spheres.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution was unable to produce any evidence to show
+that the revision of the Versailles Treaty was, if necessary, to be
+carried out by violent means and by war. The political, military,
+and economic situation in which Germany found herself before
+the assumption of power—a situation in which it could only be a
+question of eliminating the terrible consequences of the economic
+collapse and of enabling seven million unemployed again to play
+their part in the economic process—could not but make any serious
+thought of a war of aggression appear futile.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, the evidence brought forth nothing to show the
+existence of the common plan as stated in Count One of the
+Indictment, as far as one understands thereby a definite and concrete
+plan among a narrow uniform circle of persons. The evidence,
+<span class='pageno' title='131' id='Page_131'></span>
+in particular the testimony given by the witness Dr. Lammers and
+the defendant himself in the witness box, has shown on the contrary
+that Frank did not belong to the circle of Hitler’s closer
+collaborators. The Prosecution was unable to present to the Tribunal
+a single document dealing with important political or military
+decisions with which the Defendant Frank was connected.
+In particular, the Defendant Frank was not present at any of the
+conferences with Hitler which the Prosecution considers especially
+important in proving the alleged common plan, the minutes of
+which conferences the Prosecution has submitted as Exhibits, Numbers
+USA-25 to 34.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The only statute which is important in this connection is the
+Law on the Reintroduction of General Conscription of 16 March
+1935. The facts have already been explained, and will be further
+enlarged upon, which led to the promulgation of that law and why
+it cannot be looked upon as an infringement of the Versailles
+Treaty. The Defendant Frank signed that law in his capacity as
+Reich Minister, as did all the other members of the Reich Government.
+That law, which had as its object the restoration—at least
+in the military sphere—of the sovereignty of the German Reich,
+did no harm to any other nation. Nor did the content of that
+law, or the circumstances which led to its enactment, admit the
+conclusion that it was part of a common plan with the object of
+launching a war of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The German people had been obliged to realize, during the
+preceding 17 years, that the voice of a nation without military
+power, and in particular a nation in Germany’s geographical and
+military situation, cannot make itself heard in the concert of
+nations if it has not at its disposal adequate instruments of power.
+The Government of the Reich faced the consequences of this realization
+after equality of rights had been promised the German
+people over and over again for 14 years and that promise had
+not been kept, and in particular after it had become clear in the
+years 1933 and 1934 that the Disarmament Conference would not
+be capable of fulfilling its appointed functions. For the rest, I refer
+to the proclamation of the Reich Government to the German
+people, which was issued in connection with the publication of
+that law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Further, the work of the Defendant Frank, even after the
+assumption of power and up to the beginning of the war, was
+confined almost exclusively to the execution of tasks connected
+with the leadership of the Academy for German Law and the
+National Socialist Lawyers Association. The objects of the
+Academy for German Law are apparent from the law concerning
+its establishment of 11 July 1933. It was intended to encourage
+<span class='pageno' title='132' id='Page_132'></span>
+the reform of German legal procedure and, in close and constant
+co-operation with the appropriate legislative authorities, to put the
+National Socialist program into practice in the whole sphere of
+law. The academy was under the supervision of the Reich Minister
+of Justice and the Reich Minister of the Interior. The function
+of the academy was to prepare drafts of statutes; legislation itself
+was exclusively restricted to the Reich ministries for the various
+departments.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One of the tasks of the academy was to exercise the functions
+of the legal committees of the former Reichstag. In actual fact
+the work of the academy was done almost exclusively in its
+numerous committees, which had been established by the defendant.
+Acceptance into the academy was not dependent on membership
+in the Party. Most of the members of the academy were
+legal scholars and eminent legal practitioners who were not Party
+members. Moreover, it is well known that the Academy for German
+Law kept up close relations with similar establishments abroad
+and that numerous foreign scholars gave lectures in the academy.
+These facts entirely exclude the assumption that the academy
+could have played any important part in the common plan alleged
+by the Prosecution. The same is true of the position of the Defendant
+Frank as leader of the National Socialist Lawyers Association.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Adolf Hitler’s attitude toward the conception of a State founded
+on law, insofar as any doubt could still have been entertained
+about it, has become perfectly clear through the evidence presented
+at this Trial. Hitler was a revolutionary and a man of violence.
+He looked on law as an impeding and disturbing factor in the
+realization of his plans in the realm of power politics. Incidentally,
+he left no doubt about this attitude of his and discussed the subject
+of the State founded on law in a number of speeches. He
+was always very reserved in his dealings with lawyers, and for
+this reason alone it was impossible from the outset that any close
+association could have developed between him and the Defendant
+Frank. The Defendant Frank considered it his life’s work to see
+the conception of the State founded on law realized in the National
+Socialist Reich and, above all, to safeguard the independence of
+the judiciary.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Frank proclaimed these principles as late as
+1939, before the outbreak of war, in a great speech he made before
+25,000 lawyers at the final meeting of the Congress of German
+Law at Leipzig. Among other things he declared on that occasion:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“First, no one should be sentenced who has not had an
+opportunity of defending himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Second, no one shall be deprived of his property, provided
+that he uses it unobjectionably from the point of view of the
+<span class='pageno' title='133' id='Page_133'></span>
+community, except by judicial sentence. Legal properties
+in this sense include honor, freedom, life, and earnings.</p>
+
+<p>“Third, an accused person, no matter under what procedure,
+must be enabled to procure someone to defend him who is
+capable of making legal statements on his behalf; and he
+must have an impartial hearing according to law. If these
+principles are applied to their full extent, then the Germanic
+ideal of law will be fulfilled.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These principles constitute a definite repudiation of all methods
+employed in a police-ruled State and imply, moreover, the definite
+rejection of the system of concentration camps. The Defendant Frank
+had actually spoken against the establishment of concentration
+camps before the date indicated. The evidence has shown that in
+the year 1933, in his capacity as Bavarian Minister of Justice,
+he was opposed to the concentration camp at Dachau, that he urged
+the application of the so-called legality principle, that is, the
+prosecution of all offenses by the State, even in these camps, and
+that, over and above this, he demanded the dissolution of the concentration
+camp at Dachau. That this last point is a fact is shown
+by the evidence given by the witness Dr. Stepp, who was questioned
+elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution also appears to see in the sentence, “Right is
+what benefits the people,” an indication of the participation of the
+Defendant Frank in the alleged common plan. Such a conclusion
+could only be drawn in complete misapprehension of the idea which
+the Defendant Frank wished to express by means of this sentence.
+This was merely a challenge to the exaggeratedly individualistic
+legal idea. In the same way as by the phrase, “The common good
+before one’s own,” the sentence quoted is intended to express the
+demand for a legal system which, to a greater extent than in
+previous years, should take account of common law and socialist
+tendencies. It is in reality nothing more than a different way of
+saying: <span class='it'>Salus publica suprema lex</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These material differences alone would have been sufficient to
+make it unthinkable that the Defendant Frank could have belonged
+to the inner circle of Hitler’s collaborators. The differences of
+outlook in regard to the functions of law were bound to become
+more pronounced in the course of the war. It could therefore cause
+no surprise that after the death of the former Reich Minister of
+Justice, Dr. Gürtner, it was not the Defendant Frank who was
+appointed his successor, but the President of the Peoples’ Court,
+Dr. Thierack.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Summing up, it may be said that there is no factual foundation
+for the assumption that the Defendant Frank participated in a
+common plan, a common plan which had as its object the waging
+<span class='pageno' title='134' id='Page_134'></span>
+of an aggressive war and in connection therewith the commission
+of crimes against the rules of war. Before I turn to the points
+of accusation brought against the Defendant Frank within the
+framework of his career as Governor General, I will refer shortly
+to his responsibility under penal law as a member of the organizations
+accused of criminality.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>So far as Frank’s responsibility as member of the Reich Government
+is under investigation, I can here in the main refer to
+the statements which I shall later make in the case of the
+Defendant Hess. The only difference lies in the fact that whereas
+Hess, too, was only Reich Minister without Portfolio, he had—as
+the Führer’s Deputy under the Führer’s decree of 27 July 1934—a
+considerable influence on the preparation of laws. That, however,
+was not the case with the Defendant Frank. Frank had hardly
+any influence at all on the legislation of the Reich. That is why
+he was cosignatory of so extraordinarily few Reich laws. With
+the exception of the law of 16 March 1935, by which general conscription
+was reintroduced, his name is to be found under none
+of the laws which the Prosecution has presented to the Tribunal
+as relevant to the proof of the criminal nature of the Reich
+Government as an organization.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Frank, in his capacity as Reichsleiter and Leader
+of the Reich Law Department, was also a member of the Leadership
+Corps of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party. An investigation
+of this point of accusation seems all the less called for since
+in this respect no act can be attributed to the Defendant Frank
+which fulfills the requirements of any penal law. For the rest,
+here too I can refer to my statements in the case of the Defendant
+Hess.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In Appendix A to the Indictment it is alleged that the Defendant
+Frank was a general of the SS. The evidence has shown that Frank
+at no time belonged to the SS and that he did not even have the
+honorary rank of a general of the SS. On the other hand, he was
+an Obergruppenführer in the SA. With respect to the application
+made by the Prosecution to declare that organization as criminal,
+too, the same may be said as in the case of the application to
+declare the Leadership Corps criminal. The Charter and the Prosecution
+here again depart from the principle which hitherto has
+been considered an indispensable component of any modern criminal
+law practice, namely, that no punishment is admissible unless
+guilt has been established in every individual case.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now pass to the points of accusation in connection with the
+career of the Defendant Frank as Governor General. When the
+Polish Government had left the country after Poland’s military
+collapse, the German occupying forces were faced with the task
+<span class='pageno' title='135' id='Page_135'></span>
+of building up an administration without the help of any parliamentary,
+representation or any representatives of the former
+Polish State. The difficulties arising out of this situation were
+bound to be all the greater because, in spite of the comparatively
+short time that the war had lasted, the war damage, especially
+to the communications system, was not inconsiderable. Above all,
+however, the establishment of an orderly administration was
+rendered more difficult by the fact that the homogeneous economic
+area of the former Polish State was divided into three parts. Of
+the 388,000 square kilometers which made up the territory of the
+former Polish State, about 200,000 were taken over by the Soviet
+Union and 97,000 formed the Government General, while the rest
+was incorporated in the German Reich. A change came on 1 August
+1941. On that date Galicia was annexed to the Government General
+as a new district, whereby the territory of the Government General
+was increased to an area of approximately 150,000 square kilometers
+with about 18 million inhabitants. This frontier delimitation
+made it all the more difficult for the administration, as the agricultural
+excess production all went to the Soviet Union, while
+on the other, hand important industrial cities such as Lodz, and
+above all the coal fields of Dombrowa, fell to the Reich.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Directly after the military collapse of Poland, a military government
+was set up to cover the four military districts of East Prussia,
+Posen, Lodz, and Kraków, Commander Von Rundstedt being placed
+at the head of that government. The Defendant Frank became
+Supreme Chief of Administration (Oberverwaltungschef). The military
+government ended on 26 October 1939 with the coming into
+force of the decree of the Führer and Reich Chancellor concerning
+the administration of the occupied Polish territories under the date
+of 12 October 1939. Under this decree the Defendant Frank was
+appointed Governor General for the occupied Polish territories
+which were not incorporated in the Reich and which shortly afterward
+became known as the Government General.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As the time at my disposal is short, I will not go into detail
+on the question as to whether the administration of the territories
+of the former Polish State, jointly designated as the Government
+General, should have conformed to the principle of <span class='it'>occupatio bellica</span>
+(occupation of enemy territory), or whether it should not rather
+be assumed that the principles of debellatio (complete subjection
+and incorporation in a foreign state) were applicable in that case.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I come now to the question of the powers vested in the Defendant
+Frank by virtue of his office of Governor General. According
+to Article 3 of the Führer’s decree of 12 October 1939 the Governor
+General was directly subordinate to the Führer. The same provision
+placed all branches of the administration in the hands of the
+<span class='pageno' title='136' id='Page_136'></span>
+Governor General. In actual fact, however, the Governor General
+had by no means such wide powers as it would seem at first sight.
+The Führer’s decree itself provided in Article 5 that the Ministerial
+Council for the Defense of the Reich could also make laws for the
+territory of the Government General.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Delegate for the Four Year Plan had the same power.
+Article 6 provided that, moreover, all supreme Reich authorities
+could issue decrees necessary for planning within the German
+living space and economic area and that these would be effective
+also for the Government General.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Apart from this limitation of the authority of the Governor General
+as provided in the Führer decree of 12 October 1939, other
+powers were conferred at a later date which no less impaired the
+principle of uniform administration. That is particularly true of
+the position of the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of
+Labor. I refer at this point to the appropriate documents presented
+by the Prosecution and the Defense, in particular to the Führer’s
+decree of 21 March 1942, in which it is expressly provided that the
+powers of the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor
+extend to the territory of the Government General. The whole
+armament industry in the Government General was at first in the
+hands of the OKW, but after the establishment of the Reich Ministry
+for Armaments and War Production it came under the
+jurisdiction of the latter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The evidence has shown that in other directions, too, the principle
+of uniform administration was extensively infringed upon.
+For this I refer to the statements of the witnesses Dr. Lammers and
+Dr. Bühler and to the content of the documents submitted by me,
+especially Document USA-135. This deals with the directives in
+“special matters concerning instructions Number 21 (Case Barbarossa),”
+in which it is expressly provided that the commander-in-chief
+of the Army shall be entitled “to order such measures in
+the Government General as are necessary for the execution of his
+military duties and for safeguarding the troops” and in which the
+commander-in-chief is empowered to delegate his authority to the
+army groups and armies.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All these infringements of the principle of a uniform administration
+of all special powers, however, pale beside the special
+position allotted to the Reichsführer SS Himmler also in respect of
+the territory of the Government General. The evidence, and particularly
+the testimony of Dr. Bilfinger, Oberregierungsrat in the
+RSHA, shows that as early as in 1939 when the defendant was
+appointed Governor General, a secret decree was issued in which
+it was provided that the Higher SS and Police Leader, East was to
+receive his instructions direct from the Reichsführer SS and Chief
+<span class='pageno' title='137' id='Page_137'></span>
+of the German Police, Himmler. Similarly, it is provided in the
+decree of the Führer and Reich Chancellor for the Preservation of
+German Nationality that the Reichsführer SS shall be directly
+empowered to effect the planning of new German settlement areas
+by means of resettlements. These two decrees conferred on the
+Reichsführer SS Himmler powers which, from the very first day
+of the existence of the Government General, tended to confront its
+administration with almost insurmountable difficulties. It was very
+soon evident that the general administration under the Governor
+General had at its disposal no executive organs, in the true meaning
+of the term. Since the Higher SS and Police Leader, East received
+his instructions and orders direct from Reichsführer SS Himmler
+and refused to carry out instructions emanating from the Governor
+General, it was very soon seen that in reality there were two separate
+authorities ruling over the Government General. The difficulties
+which thus arose were bound to become all the greater, as
+Higher SS and Police Leader Krüger, who for no less than 4 years
+was Himmler’s direct representative in the Government General,
+did not even inform the administration of the Government General
+before carrying out police measures.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is a well-known experience in the life of any state that an
+administration lacking executive police organs is in the long run
+not capable of carrying out its appointed functions. This is true
+even under normal conditions, but it must be all the more pronounced
+in the administration of occupied territory. If we remember,
+moreover, that not only did the Reichsführer SS Himmler issue
+his instructions direct to the Higher SS and Police Leader, ignoring
+the Governor General, but that over and above this the Offices III,
+IV, V, and VI of the RSHA also gave direct orders to the Commander
+of the Security Police and the SD in Kraków, we can well
+assess the difficulties with which the civil administration of the
+Government General had to wrestle day by day.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Under these circumstances the Governor General had no choice
+but to make every attempt to reach some form of co-operation with
+the Security Police, unless he was prepared to relinquish any hope
+of building up a civil administration in the Government General.
+And in fact the history of the administration of the Government
+General—which lasted for over 5 years—is for the greater part
+nothing but a chronicle of uninterrupted struggles between the
+Governor General and the administration on the one hand, and
+the Security Police with the SD as represented by Reichsführer SS
+Himmler and the Higher SS and Police Leader, East, on the other.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same applies to the activity of Himmler and his organs in
+the field of resettlement. As Reich Commissioner for the Preservation
+of German Nationality, Himmler and his organs carried out
+<span class='pageno' title='138' id='Page_138'></span>
+resettlement measures without even establishing previous contact
+with the administration of the Government General or informing
+the Governor General.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The numerous protests of the Governor General, addressed to
+Dr. Lammers, the Reich Minister and Chief of the Reich Chancellery,
+with regard to the measures taken by the Reichsführer and
+the Higher SS and Police Leader, East, and the difficulties they put
+in the way of the administration of that territory, have been established
+by the evidence. These protests led in the year 1942 to an
+attempt at redirecting the relationship between the administration
+and the Police. In retrospect, it can be said today as a result of
+the evidence that even this attempt was only utilized by Himmler
+and the Security Police to undermine internally and externally the
+position of the Governor General and his civil administration.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>By a decree of the Führer dated 7 May 1942 a State Secretariat
+for Security was established in the Government General, and the
+Higher SS and Police Leader was appointed State Secretary. According
+to Article II of this decree, the State Secretary for Security
+also became the representative of the Reichsführer SS in his capacity
+as Reich Commissioner for the Preservation of German Nationality.
+The decisive provision of this decree is contained in Article IV, in
+which it is stated verbatim:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The Reichsführer SS and Chief of the German Police can
+issue direct instructions to the State Secretary for Security
+in matters pertaining to security and the preservation of German
+nationality.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Herewith, the contents of the secret decree issued in 1939 on the
+establishment of the Government General—which also provided
+that the Higher SS and Police Leader, East was to receive his instructions
+direct from the Berlin central offices and particularly
+from the Reichsführer SS in person—was expressly, and now
+publicly, confirmed. It is true that Article V of the Führer decree
+of 7 May 1942 provided that in cases of difference of opinion
+between the Governor General and the Reichsführer SS and Chief
+of the German Police the Führer’s decision was to be obtained
+through the Reich Minister and Chief of the Chancellery.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Chief of the Reich Chancellery, Lammers, was interrogated
+on this subject when he appeared as a witness before this Tribunal.
+He testified that insofar as he found it possible at all to gain the
+Führer’s ear in these matters, the latter on principle invariably
+approved Himmler’s view. This is not surprising if we remember
+Himmler’s position in the German governmental system, particularly
+during the later war years. This deprived the Defendant
+Frank of the last possibility of influencing in any way the measures
+taken by Himmler and the Higher SS and Police Leader, East.
+<span class='pageno' title='139' id='Page_139'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In consequence of Article I, Paragraph 3, of the Führer decree
+of 7 May 1942 the scope of duties of the State Secretary for Security
+had to be newly defined. Both the Higher SS and Police Leader
+and, backing him, the Reichsführer SS attempted to bring as wide
+a field as possible under their jurisdiction in connection with the
+new regulation of the competence of the State Secretariat; on the
+other hand, the Governor General, in the interest of the maintenance
+of some sort of order in the administration, naturally tried
+to obtain control of at least certain departments of the Regular
+Police and the Administration Police. There is no doubt at all that
+it was the Police that emerged the victor in these struggles.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 3 June 1942 the Governor General was obliged—in a decree
+concerning the delegation of duties to the State Secretary for Security—to
+declare himself willing to transfer to the State Secretary
+all the departments of the Security Police and the Regular Police.
+I have submitted this decree to the Tribunal (together with its two
+Appendices A and B) in the course of the evidence as Exhibit
+Number Frank-4. The two appendices list all the functions of the
+Regular and Security Police that have ever existed in the German
+police system. In Appendix A, which covers the departments of the
+Regular Police, there are 26 headings in which not only all the
+departments of the Regular Police are transferred to the State
+Secretary for Security, but over and above that, almost all the
+departmental functions of the so-called Administration Police. I will
+only mention Heading 18 as one example among many. This
+transfers to the Regular Police, and thereby to the Higher SS and
+Police Leader, all matters connected with price control. What is
+true of the Regular Police applies in even greater measure to the
+departments of the Security Police. No change as compared with
+the earlier situation was brought about by placing under the jurisdiction
+of the Higher SS and Police Leader the whole of the Political
+and Criminal Police, political intelligence, Jewish affairs, and similar
+departments; these competencies were already his as leader
+of the Security Police and the SD, and were made entirely independent
+of the administration of the Government General under
+the secret decree of 1939. Departments were also transferred to
+the State Secretary for Security which had only the remotest
+connection with the tasks of the Security Police, for example,
+matters such as the regulation of holidays and so on.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Of considerable importance are the two last headings in the
+Appendices A and B, in which it is expressly provided that at
+conferences and meetings, particularly with the central Reich
+authorities, on all matters pertaining to the Regular and Security
+Police, the Government General—not the Governor—should be
+represented by the Higher SS and Police Leader. Therewith any
+<span class='pageno' title='140' id='Page_140'></span>
+competency possessed by the Governor General, even in regard
+to comparatively unimportant branches of the Administration Police,
+was transferred to the organs of Reichsführer SS Himmler, and
+the Government General was thus deprived of even the last remnants
+of an executive of its own.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Only by considering these facts and the development of the
+conditions obtaining between administration and police in the Government
+General is it possible to form an even approximately correct
+appreciation of the events in the Government General, which
+form part of the subject of the Indictment in this Trial.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Your Lordships, the Prosecution seeks to prove its accusations
+against the Defendant Dr. Frank in the main by quotations from
+the defendant’s diary. In this connection I have the following
+basic observation to make.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That diary was not kept personally by the Defendant Frank
+but was compiled by stenographers who were present at Government
+conferences and other discussions of the Governor General.
+The diary consists of 42 volumes with no less than 10,000 or 12,000
+pages of typescript.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With one exception, the entries do not represent the outcome
+of dictation by the defendant, but take the form of stenographers’
+transcripts. For the greater part—and this is evident from the
+diary itself—the authors of this diary did not record the various
+speeches and remarks word for word, but made a summarized
+version in their own words. The entries in the diary were not
+checked by the defendant, nor—again with one single exception—were
+they signed by him. The attendance lists stapled into several
+volumes of the diary—they are only contained in such volumes
+as relate to Government conferences—cannot be looked upon as a
+substitute for a confirmatory note.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, the evidence has clearly established that very many
+entries in the diary were not made on the basis of personal observations
+but came about through the fact that the author was told
+by participants about the subjects of Government meetings or
+other conferences after they had taken place, and then expressed
+it in the diary in his own words. Moreover, by an examination of
+the diary it can easily be ascertained that the entries cannot be
+considered complete.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All these facts bring us to the conclusion that the material
+evidential value of this diary must not be overestimated. The
+evidential value of this diary can in no way be compared with
+the evidential value of entries made personally by the person
+concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Above all, however, it seems to me essential to point out
+the following: The contents of any document are of material
+<span class='pageno' title='141' id='Page_141'></span>
+evidential value only insofar as the document is appreciated in
+its entirety. The diary of the Defendant Frank with its 10,000
+or 12,000 pages is one uniform document. It is improper to put
+in as evidence certain individual entries without showing the
+context in which alone some of them can be understood. But it
+is particularly improper—and this infringes upon the principles
+of any presentation of evidence—to select from some uniform
+whole, such as a long speech, a few sentences and put them in
+as evidence. In Document Book Number 2, I have listed a few
+examples of this and hereby refer to them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As the Defendant Frank himself rightly pointed out in the
+witness box, the diary is a uniform whole; only in its entirety
+can it be probative and form part of the presentation of evidence.
+I have read through that diary of more than 10,000 pages and
+can only confirm his opinion. And that was why I did not use
+individual entries in presenting my evidence but put in the whole
+diary.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If I myself, in presenting evidence, have read certain single
+entries from the diary and if in the course of my present address
+I shall quote a few more passages from it, then, just as in the case
+of the extracts put forward by the Prosecution, their evidential
+value can certainly be gauged only within the framework of the
+whole diary.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The following may also be looked upon as having been established
+by the evidence: As the diaries show, and as is evident
+in particular from the testimony given by the witnesses Bühler,
+Böpple, and Meidinger, the Defendant Frank in his capacity as
+Governor General often made two or three improvised speeches
+in the course of one day. The extracts from the diary presented
+by the Prosecution consist, for the most part, of single sentences
+from such speeches. If we take into consideration both the temperament
+of the defendant and his habit of expressing himself
+in an incisive manner, then that is another reason which tends
+to reduce the probative value of these extracts from the diary.
+And we actually do find many diary entries which flatly contradict
+other entries on the same subject occurring a little earlier
+or later.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In connection with the many speeches made by the Defendant
+Frank, the following must not be left out of consideration and
+may also be looked upon as established by the evidence: It was
+a foregone conclusion that the Defendant Frank, as an avowed
+champion of the idea of a State founded on law and of the independence
+of the judiciary, would come into increasingly sharp
+conflict with the representatives of the police-state system; this
+developed to an even greater degree in the course of the war,
+<span class='pageno' title='142' id='Page_142'></span>
+both within the Reich and in occupied territory. The representatives
+of the police state, however, were Reichsführer SS Himmler
+and, for the area of the Government General, the Higher SS and
+Police Leader, East, above all and in particular SS Obergruppenführer
+and General of Police Krüger. The relation between the
+Defendant Frank on the one hand, and Reichsführer SS Himmler
+and his representative, Obergruppenführer Krüger, on the other,
+had been extremely bad even at the time the Government General
+was established. They deteriorated still more as the divergence
+of outlook concerning the tasks of the Police came ever more
+openly to the fore; and the Defendant Frank was forced to lodge
+increasingly strong protests with the Chief of the Reich Chancellery,
+Dr. Lammers, and the Führer himself regarding the violent
+measures taken by the Security Police and the SD.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As I have already mentioned, the Governor General, lacking
+an executive of his own, had no choice but to make repeated
+attempts to co-ordinate the work of the general administration
+with that of the Police, in order to be in a position to carry out
+any administrative work at all. Obviously these objectives
+demanded—at least on the face of things in a certain degree—a
+conciliatory tendency toward the general attitude of the Security
+Police and, above all, of the Higher SS and Police Leader, East.
+Moreover, the evidence has further established that the tension
+existing between the Governor General and the Higher SS and
+Police Leader often reached such a degree that the Defendant
+Frank could not but feel himself menaced and—to quote the
+words of the witness Bühler—was no longer a free agent and
+master of his own decisions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The testimony of the witnesses Bach-Zelewsky and Dr. Albrecht
+leaves no doubt on this point. Quite rightly, therefore, the witness
+Dr. Bühler also pointed out that the Defendant Frank expressed
+himself with particular vehemence when the Higher SS and Police
+Leader or the commander of the Security Police and the SD were
+present at conferences, while his utterances were made on quite
+a different note when he was speaking to an audience composed
+only of members of the administration. Even a cursory inspection
+of the diary will confirm this. All these circumstances must be
+taken into consideration in assessing the substantive evidential
+value of the Defendant Frank’s diary.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It should also be noted that these diaries constituted the only
+personal property that Frank was able to rescue from the castle
+at Kraków. On his arrest he handed over all the diaries to the
+officers who took him into custody. It would have been an easy
+matter for him to destroy these documents.
+<span class='pageno' title='143' id='Page_143'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Your Lordships, I now turn to the individual accusations brought
+against the defendant, and their legal aspects. The Defendant
+Frank is accused of having approved of, and participated in, War
+Crimes and Crimes against Humanity in the administration of
+occupied territory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As the law stands, it rests on the principle that only a sovereign
+state, not an individual, can be a subject of international law. To
+make international law binding on an individual, such law itself
+would have to lay down that a certain set of facts constitutes a
+wrong and that the rule thereby established is applicable to an
+individual creating such a set of facts. Only in that way can individuals,
+who under the law as it stands are subject only to the
+criminal law applying in each state, by way of exception be directly
+bound by international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Deviating from this rule, existing international law permits,
+in exceptional cases, a state to punish the national of an enemy
+state who has fallen into its power, if before his capture he has
+been guilty of infringing the rules of war. But even here punishment
+is excluded if the deed was not committed on the person’s
+own initiative, but can only be attributed to his state of allegiance.
+Moreover, the conception of war crimes and their factual characteristics
+are the subject of great controversy both in judicial
+decisions and in legal literature.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nor do the Hague Rules on Land Warfare, which form the
+Appendix to the IVth Convention on the Laws and Customs of
+War on Land and purport to be a codification of certain subject
+matter of the laws of war, list any facts which could be interpreted
+as a basis for the criminal liability of individuals. In Article 3 of
+this convention it is, on the contrary, expressly provided that not
+individuals but the state which infringed the rules may, under
+certain circumstances, be liable to pay an indemnity and is also
+responsible for all acts done by persons belonging to its armed
+forces.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In connection with the Hague Rules for Land Warfare of 1907
+the following should also be noted: The principles therein enunciated
+were evolved from the experience of wars in the 19th
+century. Those wars were confined in the main to the armed forces
+directly concerned therein.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now the first World War already overstepped this framework,
+and not only in respect of the geographical extent of conflict. On
+the contrary, the war became a struggle for extermination of the
+nations involved, a struggle in which each belligerent party utilized
+the whole of its war potential and all its material and imponderable
+resources. War technique having meanwhile been considerably
+perfected, the second World War was bound altogether to
+<span class='pageno' title='144' id='Page_144'></span>
+destroy the framework set up for the conduct of war by the Hague
+Rules for Land Warfare. That can be seen at a glance—the condition
+of Europe today reveals it. If we remember in addition that
+in Germany alone the greater part of almost every city has been
+destroyed as a result of bombing raids; and not only that, but that
+considerably more than a million civilians thereby lost their lives
+and that in a single major raid on the city of Dresden almost
+300,000 people were killed, then it will be possible to realize that
+the Hague Rules for Land Warfare, at any rate in respect of many
+activities coming under the rules of war, can no longer be an
+adequate expression of the laws and customs to be observed in
+waging war. But if any doubt should exist on this subject, then
+that doubt will certainly be removed on contemplation of the consequences
+of the two atom bombs which razed Hiroshima and
+Nagasaki to the ground and killed hundreds of thousands of people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Taking these circumstances into consideration, it is not possible
+to adduce the provisions of the Hague Rules for Land Warfare,
+even indirectly or by way of analogy, to establish individual
+criminal liability. Seeing that this is the case, it must be looked
+upon as impossible to give a clear and general definition of the
+factual characteristics of so-called war crimes. Referring to the
+fact that even Article 6 of the Charter of the International Military
+Tribunal only purports to furnish a list of examples, it will be
+realized that the question as to whether a certain line of conduct
+amounts to the commission of a war crime or not can only be
+answered on the merits of each particular case, and then only if
+all the circumstances are taken into consideration.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the course of the presentation of evidence for the personal
+responsibility of the Defendant Frank, the Prosecution submitted
+as Exhibit USA-609 (864-PS) minutes of a conference held by the
+Führer with the Chief of the OKW on the future form of Polish
+relations to Germany. This conference took place on 17 October
+1939. It is alleged that these minutes alone, by which the administrative
+goals of the Defendant Frank in the Government General
+are said to be established, reveal a plan or conspiracy at variance
+with the laws of warfare and humanity. This is an inadmissible
+conclusion, at least insofar as the Defendant Frank is concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution was unable to prove that the Führer entrusted
+the Defendant Frank with a task in conformity with the administrative
+aims demanded in that conference. Moreover, this seems
+very unlikely, because the directives laid down at that conference
+dealt mainly with measures which could not be carried out by
+the general administration, but only by the Security Police, the
+SD, and the other organs and offices under Reichsführer SS
+Himmler. In this connection special mention should also be made
+<span class='pageno' title='145' id='Page_145'></span>
+of the powers vested in Reichsführer SS Himmler before the date
+of that conference in his capacity of Reich Commissioner for the
+Preservation of German Nationality. Actually, there is at the
+end of Exhibit USA-609 a reference to a commission with which
+Himmler was charged. In consideration of the fact that the Defendant
+Frank, in the course of a short interview with Hitler
+about the middle of September 1939, had been told to take over
+the civil administration of occupied Polish territory as Chief of
+Administration and had not seen Hitler for a very long time after
+that, it can safely be assumed that the directives laid down at the
+conference between Hitler and the Chief of the OKW were
+intended, not for the Defendant Frank, but for Reichsführer SS
+Himmler, who was the only person to have the necessary executive
+organs at his disposal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SEIDL: Mr. President, My Lordships, another document to
+which the Prosecution has referred and which is also alleged to
+show the criminality of the administrative aims of the Defendant
+Frank is Exhibit Number USA-297, which is EC-344(16). The content
+of this document is a discussion which the Defendant Frank
+is said to have had on 3 October 1939 with a certain Captain Varain.
+The Defendant Frank testified in the witness box that he had
+never made any such or similar statements to an officer. Moreover,
+a comparison of the dates shows that this conversation, even
+if it should have taken place, can have no connection with the
+subject of the conference between the Führer and the Chief of
+the OKW, the latter not having been held until 17 October 1939,
+that is, at a later date.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Not within the framework of the evidence presented in connection
+with the personal responsibility of the Defendant Frank,
+but in connection with the accusation of so-called Germanization,
+a document was submitted with the Exhibit USA-300, 661-PS.
+This is a memorandum entitled “Legal Aspects of German Policy
+toward the Poles from the Ethno-Political Point of View.” According
+to a note on the title page, the legal part of this was to serve
+as a model for the Committee of the Academy for German Law
+which dealt with legal nationality questions. This document can
+have no probative value in connection with the personal responsibility
+of the Defendant Frank. He testified in the witness box
+that he had given no instructions for the writing of that memorandum
+and that he was not aware of its contents. Over and
+<span class='pageno' title='146' id='Page_146'></span>
+above this, it would seem that no substantive evidential value can
+be attached to that document within the scope of this whole Trial.
+Nor is it evident, from the memorandum, who wrote it or who
+gave instructions that it should be written. Its whole form and
+content would seem to show that it is not an official document,
+but rather the work of a private individual. It was stated to have
+been found at the Ministry of Justice in Kassel. But in actual
+fact there has been no Ministry of Justice at Kassel for many
+decades. All these circumstances would seem to indicate that the
+material probative value of this document is, to say the least,
+extremely small.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But whatever the evidential value of minutes of conferences
+that took place in the year 1939 on the occasion of the establishment
+of the Government General, the following should be
+pointed out:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In judging the conduct of the Defendant Frank it is not of such
+essential importance to know what Hitler, he himself, or other
+persons said on one occasion or another, but what policy the Defendant
+Frank actually pursued toward the Polish and Ukrainian
+peoples. And here there can be no possible doubt—on the basis
+both of the general result of the evidence and, in particular, of
+entries in the diary of the defendant himself—that he repudiated
+all tendencies and measures designed to effect Germanization. That
+is shown with great clarity by the extracts from the diary which
+I have submitted to the Tribunal. Thus on 8 March 1940 he
+declared at a meeting of department chiefs, that is, to an audience
+of men who as leaders of the various main departments were
+deputed to put his directives into practice:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I have been charged by the Führer to look upon the
+Government General as the home of the Polish people. Accordingly
+no Germanization of any sort or kind is possible.
+In your departments you will please see that the two-language
+principle is strictly observed; you will also point
+out to district and provincial officers that no violence is to
+be used in opposing such safeguarding of Polish national
+existence. We have in a certain sense herewith taken over
+on trust from the Führer the responsibility for Polish
+national life.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This declaration alone makes it apparent that the directives
+laid down in the conference between Hitler and the Chief of
+the OKW on 17 October 1939, as contained in Exhibit USA-609,
+864-PS, cannot possibly have been made the subject of the duties
+with which the Defendant Frank was charged. On the other
+hand, in view of the entire activities of the Higher SS and Police
+Leader, East from the first day of his appointment, it can safely
+<span class='pageno' title='147' id='Page_147'></span>
+be assumed that it was Reichsführer SS Himmler whom Hitler
+charged with carrying out the directives laid down at his conference
+with the Chief of the OKW.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A diary entry of 19 February 1940 is on the same lines; in
+this the Defendant Frank advocates the formation of a Polish
+government or regency council.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 25 February 1940, at a service conference of officials of
+the District of Radom, the Defendant Frank gave out, in program
+form, his directives regarding general administration. On this
+occasion the Defendant Frank said among other things:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“1. The Government General comprises that part of the occupied
+Polish area which is not a component part of the German
+Reich ...</p>
+
+<p>“2. The Führer has decreed that this territory shall be the
+home of the Polish people. The Führer and Field Marshal
+Göring have impressed on me over and over again that this
+territory is not to be subjected to Germanization.</p>
+
+<p>“3. In accordance with the instructions we have received
+under the Führer’s decree Polish laws will remain in force
+here.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 7 June 1942 the Defendant Frank stated word for word
+as follows:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is not as rulers by violence that we come and go in this
+country. We have no terroristic or oppressive intentions.
+Welded into the interests of Greater Germany, the living
+rights of the Poles and Ukrainians in this territory are
+also safeguarded by us. We have not taken away from the
+Poles and Ukrainians either their churches, their schools,
+or their education. We Germans do not wish to denationalize
+by violent means. We are sufficient unto ourselves, and
+we know that people must be born into our community
+and that it is a distinction to belong to it. And that is
+why we can look the world in the face in this our task.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These examples could be amplified by many more, which all
+show clearly that the measures taken, at any rate by Frank, were
+intended to care for the Polish nation and that he repudiated
+any terror policy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to the so-called “peace-enforcing action.” When
+the campaign against Poland had ended in September 1939 that
+did not mean that all resistance had ceased. Very soon afterward
+new centers of resistance sprang up; and when on 9 April
+1940 German troops occupied Denmark and Norway and on 10 May
+1940 the German western army had begun their attack, the leaders
+of the Polish resistance movement believed that, in consideration
+<span class='pageno' title='148' id='Page_148'></span>
+of the general political and military situation, the time for action
+had come. This resistance movement was all the more dangerous
+because dispersed but not inconsiderable remnants of the former
+Polish Army were active in it. A large number of entries in the
+diary of the Defendant Frank show that the security situation
+deteriorated from day to day during that period. Here for instance
+is an entry for 16 May 1940:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The general war situation requires that the most serious
+consideration be given to the internal security situation
+of the Government General. A large number of signs and
+actions lead to the conclusion that there exists a widely
+organized wave of resistance on the part of the Poles in
+the country and that we are on the threshold of violent
+happenings on a large scale. Thousands of Poles are already
+organized in secret circles; they are armed and are being
+incited in the most seditious manner to commit all kinds
+of violence.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In consideration of this menacing general situation, the order
+was given—as the diary shows, by the Führer himself—that in
+the interest of the maintenance of public security all measures
+were to be taken to suppress the imminent revolt. That order
+was given through Himmler to the Higher SS and Police Leader.
+The administration of the Government General at first had nothing
+to do with it. It intervened, however, in order as far as possible
+to prevent the Security Police and the SD from taking violent
+measures and to make sure that innocent people should under
+no circumstances lose their lives.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The testimony given by the Defendants Frank and Seyss-Inquart
+in the witness box and the evidence given by the witness
+Dr. Bühler have shown that the efforts made by the administration
+of the Government General were so far successful in that all the
+members of the resistance movement rounded up by this special
+action were brought before a drumhead court-martial introduced
+by a decree issued in 1939; and moreover, the decisions of this
+court were not carried out before being submitted to a Board of
+Pardon which in many cases modified the sentence. The chairman
+of this Board of Pardon, until his appointment as Reich Commissioner
+for the Netherlands, was the Defendant Dr. Seyss-Inquart.
+As his testimony revealed, no less than half the death sentences
+pronounced by the summary court were commuted to imprisonment
+by the Board of Pardon. For the rest, in regard to the
+so-called peace-enforcing action, I refer to the oral testimony and
+to the extracts from the diary of the Defendant Frank which I
+read into the record.
+<span class='pageno' title='149' id='Page_149'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Within the scope of the charges against him personally, the
+Defendant Frank is accused of having supported the resettlement
+plans of the Reich Commissioner for the Preservation of German
+Nationality (Himmler) and of having thereby also committed a
+war crime. There is no question but that resettlement, even when
+carefully planned and well prepared, means great hardship for
+those who are affected by it; in many cases a resettlement means
+the destruction of a person’s economic existence. Nevertheless,
+it seems doubtful whether resettlement constitutes a War Crime
+or a Crime Against Humanity, for the following reasons:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Germany today is being flooded with millions of people who
+have been driven from their homes and who own no property
+but what they carry with them. The misery thereby caused, which
+is bound to increase to an immeasurable degree in consequence
+of the devastation wrought by the war, is so terrible that the
+bishops of the Cologne and Paderborn ecclesiastical districts were
+moved on 29 March 1946 to bring this state of affairs to the
+attention of the whole world. Among other things they said:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Some weeks ago we found occasion to comment on the
+outrageous happenings in the East of Germany, particularly
+in Silesia and the Sudetenland, where more than 10 million
+Germans have been driven from their ancestral homes in
+brutal fashion, no investigation having been made to ascertain
+whether or not there was any question of personal
+guilt. No pen can describe the unspeakable misery there
+imposed in contravention of all consideration of humanity
+and justice. All these people are being crammed together
+in what remains of Germany without means for earning a
+livelihood there. It cannot be foreseen how these masses of
+people who have been driven from their homes can become
+other than peace-disturbing elements.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lords, I am not mentioning this in order to point out the
+enormous dangers connected with such measures, dangers which
+must arise, if only out of the fact that in view of her planned
+deprivations of territory, Germany—with an area reduced by
+22 percent as compared with 1919—will have to feed a population
+increased by 18 percent and that in future there will be 200
+inhabitants to the square kilometer. I am, further, not pointing
+to this state of affairs to show that if the present economic policy
+is continued and the so-called industrial plan is maintained,
+Germany is heading for a catastrophe the consequences of which
+cannot be confined to the German people. The evidential relevance
+of these facts is however shown by the following:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Millions of Germans were driven from their ancestral homes
+in accordance with a resolution taken at Potsdam on 2 August 1945
+<span class='pageno' title='150' id='Page_150'></span>
+by President Truman, Generalissimo Stalin, and Prime Minister
+Attlee.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>GENERAL RUDENKO: ML President, excuse me for interrupting
+the defendant’s counsel, but it seems to me that his legal
+considerations and the criticism of the decisions taken at Potsdam
+have no bearing on the present case.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SEIDL: Mr. President, may I briefly define my attitude
+on this?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As far as I am concerned, I do not wish to criticize the decisions
+of the Potsdam Conference. However, I am anxious to find out
+whether, employing the rules of the Charter, a certain conduct
+which has been alleged on the part of the Defendant Frank constitutes
+evidence for War Crimes or Crimes against Humanity. It
+is only within the framework of investigating that question that
+I find myself forced to go into the decisions of the so-called Potsdam
+Conference and bring them up in my argument.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Seidl, the Tribunal considers that your
+references to the Potsdam Declaration are irrelevant, and the
+objection of General Rudenko is therefore sustained. You are
+directed to go on to some other part of your argument.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SEIDL: Mr. President, I presume that the Tribunal have
+the translation of my presentation at hand. I am not quite clear
+about the question as to whether the final conclusion, which appears
+on Page 38, is also affected by the decision of the Tribunal which
+you have just announced.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It is affected by that, and I think you can
+pass on to Page 40, where you begin to deal with the subject of
+the Jews. That is the second paragraph on Page 40.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SEIDL: Very well, Mr. President.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Frank is further accused of having approved
+and carried out a program for the extermination of Jews of Polish
+nationality, thereby infringing upon the laws of war and humanity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is true that in a number of speeches given by the Defendant
+Frank in his capacity as Governor General, he revealed his point
+of view on the Jewish question. The extracts from the diary
+submitted by the Prosecution in connection with this matter comprise
+practically everything relevant thereto in the Defendant
+Frank’s diary of 10,000 or 12,000 typed pages. Nevertheless it shall
+not be denied that the Defendant Frank made no secret of his
+anti-Semitic views. He spoke in detail on this question when giving
+his testimony in the witness box.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But the question of the importance to be attached to the diary
+entries submitted by the Prosecution is quite another matter.
+<span class='pageno' title='151' id='Page_151'></span>
+Almost all of them consist of statements made by the Defendant
+Frank in speeches, but there has not even been an attempt by the
+Prosecution to prove the existence of a causal connection between
+these statements and the measures carried out against the Jews
+by the Security Police.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As a result of the evidence, in particular of the testimony given
+by the witnesses Dr. Bilfinger and Dr. Bühler, it can be looked
+upon as certain—in connection with the secret decree concerning
+the jurisdiction of the Security Police and the SD, of the year
+1939, and the decree concerning the transfer of certain tasks to
+the State Secretary for Security—that all the measures concerning
+Jews in the Government General were carried out exclusively by
+Reichsführer SS Himmler and his organs. That is true for both
+the initiation and the organization of ghettos and the so-called
+final solution of the Jewish question.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In regard to the latter it may be said here, on the basis of
+the testimony given by the witnesses Wisliceny and Hoess and of
+the documents presented by the Prosecution, that these measures
+were undertaken on Hitler’s express orders and that only a small
+circle of persons was concerned in their execution. This small
+circle was confined in the main to a few SS leaders of Department
+IVA, 4b of the RSHA and the personnel of the concentration
+camps that had been selected for the purpose.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The administration of the Government General had nothing to
+do with these measures. The above facts also show that the anti-Semitic
+statements by the Defendant Frank as submitted by the
+Prosecution have no causal connection with the so-called final
+solution of the Jewish question. Since a causal link must be
+established before the question of illegality and guilt can even be
+considered, it does not seem necessary to dwell further on the
+matter—all the less because the factual elements of any punishable
+offenses can only be said to exist if at least an attempt has
+been made, that is, if the commission of the offense has at least
+been begun. Under the principles derived from the criminal law
+of all civilized nations, the statements contained in the diary of
+the Defendant Frank do not even constitute preparatory acts. In
+consideration of the tense and sometimes extremely frangible
+relationship between the Government General, on the one hand,
+and the Reichsführer SS Himmler and the Higher SS and Police
+Leader Krüger, on the other, it would also seem to be impossible
+to look upon the statements of the Defendant Frank as acts of
+incitement or complicity. The evidence has shown on the contrary
+that all the efforts of the Defendant Frank to investigate successfully
+the rumors about the elimination of the Jews, at least within
+his own administrative district, failed completely. Only to complete
+<span class='pageno' title='152' id='Page_152'></span>
+the picture need it be mentioned that the Concentration Camp of
+Auschwitz was not in the Government General, but in that part of
+Poland which was annexed to Upper Silesia. For the rest it cannot
+be clearly seen whether the erection and administration of concentration
+camps is in itself to be looked upon as fulfilling the requirements
+of a war crime or a crime against humanity, or whether the
+Prosecution considers the establishment of such camps solely as part
+of the so-called common plan. Setting aside the crimes committed
+in the concentration camps and considering the nature of concentration
+camps to be that in which people are confined for reasons of
+state and police security on account of their political opinions and
+without an opportunity of defending themselves in an ordinary
+court of law, it appears at least doubtful whether an occupying
+power should not have the right to take such necessary steps as this
+in order to maintain public order and security. Apart from the fact
+that it was not National Socialists and not Germans at all who first
+established such camps, the following must be mentioned:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the American Occupation Zone alone there were, according
+to a statement ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. ROBERT M. KEMPNER (Assistant Trial Counsel for the
+United States): Mr. President, we raise an objection. This matter
+is completely irrelevant.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Seidl, do you wish to say anything in
+answer to the objection?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SEIDL: Mr. President, I beg you to overrule the objection
+by the Prosecution, and I should like to say the following: I am
+not interested in criticizing an occupying power; I am only concerned
+with the question of whether certain conduct of which the
+Defendant Frank has been accused by the Prosecution constitutes
+the evidence of a criminal act.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I base my case on the assumption that what is proper for one
+occupying power must, under similar circumstances, be allowed for
+another occupying power, especially when it is a question of accusations
+made against the defendant concerning actions carried out
+during the war, while, the state of war with Germany having
+ceased on 8 May 1945 at the very latest, these urgent reasons now
+perhaps no longer exist to that extent.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal sustains the objection. There
+is no evidence of the statements which you have made. And in any
+event, the Tribunal considers them entirely irrelevant.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SEIDL: I assume, Mr. President, that in that case I may continue
+with the last paragraph on Page 44.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think so, yes, the last paragraph.
+<span class='pageno' title='153' id='Page_153'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SEIDL: It is not necessary to go into this matter in more
+detail here, because the evidence has shown that it was the Defendant
+Frank who from the first day of the National Socialists’ assumption
+of power fought against the police-state system and, above all,
+decried the concentration camps as an institution which could in
+no way be made to harmonize with the idea of a state founded
+on law. In this connection I refer to the testimony given by the
+witness Dr. Stepp, to the defendant’s own statement, and above all
+to the extracts from the defendant’s diary which I put in evidence.
+The evidence has further shown that the establishment and administration
+of the concentration camps lay within the sphere of
+Reichsführer SS Himmler’s organization. The camps, both in Reich
+territories and in all areas occupied by German troops, were exclusively
+under the command of the SS-WVHA or the Inspector
+General of the Concentration Camps. Neither the Governor General
+nor the general administration of the Government General had
+anything to do with these camps.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A further point of accusation against Frank is the charge that
+he supported violence and economic pressure as a means of recruiting
+workers for deportation to Germany. It is true that during
+the recent war many Poles came to work in Germany. But in this
+connection the following should be noted:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even before the first World War, hundreds of thousands of Poles
+came to Germany as vagrant workers. This stream of vagrant
+workers continued to flow also during the period between the first
+and the second World Wars. In consequence of the unfortunate
+demarcation line, the Government General became an area that was
+distinctly overpopulated. The agricultural excess production areas
+had fallen to the Soviet Union, whereas important industrial areas
+were incorporated into the Reich. Under these circumstances, and
+because there were no riches to be found in the soil, the only valuable
+means of production lay in the working capacity of the population.
+And this—at any rate for the first few years—could not be
+utilized to a sufficient extent, because the other production factors
+were lacking. In order to avoid unemployment, and above all in
+the interest of maintaining public order and security, the administration
+of the Government General was bound, if only for reasons
+of State policy, to try to transfer as many workers as possible to
+Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There can indeed be no doubt that during the first years of the
+administration most of the Polish workers went to the Reich voluntarily.
+When later, in consequence of the continuous bombing raids,
+not only Germany’s cities but also her factories crumbled to ruins
+and a not inconsiderable part of Germany’s capacity for the production
+of war materials had to be removed to the Government
+<span class='pageno' title='154' id='Page_154'></span>
+General for reasons of security, the aim of the Defendant Frank
+necessarily was to put a stop to any further transfer of labor. Over
+and above this, however, the Defendant Frank had from the very
+beginning opposed all violent measures in recruiting labor and
+solely for security reasons and in order not to create new centers
+of unrest had insisted that no compulsory measures were to be used
+and only propagandistic methods employed. That is established by
+the testimony of the witnesses Dr. Bühler and Dr. Böpple, and also
+by a large number of entries in the diary. In my presentation of
+evidence I have already referred to several of them. Thus, for
+example, the Defendant Frank said, among other things, on 4 March
+1940:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“... I refuse to issue the decree demanded by Berlin establishing
+compulsory measures and threatening punishment.
+Measures that, viewed from the outside world, create a sensation
+must be avoided under all circumstances. There is
+everything to be said against the removal of people by violence.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 14 January 1944 he made a similar statement to the Commander
+of the Security Police. I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The Governor General is strongly opposed to the suggestion
+that police forces should be used in recruiting labor.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These quotations could be amplified by many more.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I refer further to the evidence presented by me in respect to
+the treatment of Polish workers in Germany. The Defendant Frank
+continuously and repeatedly pleaded for better treatment of the
+Polish workers in the Reich.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the rest, the legal position in the matter of recruiting foreign
+labor does not appear to be quite clear. I do not intend to go
+further into the legal questions pertaining to this matter. The
+defense counsel for the Defendant Sauckel will go into this matter
+fully and I just wish to say the following:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the literature of international law it is undisputed that the
+conception of vital stress (Notstand) as recognized in criminal law
+would, in international law, too, preclude illegality in the case of
+a given violation of law. If the vital interests of a State are endangered,
+that State may, these interests being preponderant, safeguard
+them if necessary by injuring the justified interests of a third
+party. Even those writers who deny the application of the “vital
+stress” theory to international law—they are in the minority—grant
+the threatened State the “right to self-preservation” and therewith
+the right to enforce “necessities of state” even at the cost of the
+just interests of other States. It is a recognized principle of international
+law that a State need not wait until the direct threat of
+<span class='pageno' title='155' id='Page_155'></span>
+extinction is at its very threshold. There can be no doubt that after
+the entry into the war of the United States, with which for all
+practical purposes the productive capacity and the military might
+of almost the whole world were gathered together to overthrow
+Germany, the German Reich was faced with a situation which not
+only threatened the State as such with extinction but over and
+above that placed the bare existence of the people in jeopardy.
+Under these circumstances the right of the State leadership to make
+use of labor forces, even those in occupied territory, in this defensive
+struggle had to be acknowledged.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In addition, the following should not be passed over: The Prosecution
+alleges that many, if not most of the foreign workers were
+brought to Germany by force and that they were then obliged to
+do heavy labor under degrading conditions. However one may look
+upon the evidence on this question, the fact cannot be ignored that
+there are hundreds of thousands of foreign workers still living in
+Germany who were allegedly deported thither by force. They refuse
+to return to their homes, although no one now attempts to hinder
+them. Under these circumstances it must be assumed that the force
+cannot have been as great, nor the treatment in Germany as bad,
+as is alleged by, the Prosecution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another allegation refers to the closing of the schools. It may
+be left out of account whether international law recognizes any
+criminal classification which would make the closing of schools
+appear as a war crime or a crime against humanity. In time of
+war this would seem to be all the more unlikely as it is well known
+that schooling in wartime was considerably reduced, not only in
+Germany, but also in many other belligerent countries. There is
+all the less reason to investigate this question more thoroughly, as
+the evidence has shown that the schools were for the most part
+already closed when the defendant assumed office as Governor
+General. During his whole period of office he left no means untried
+to reactivate, not only the elementary and vocational, but also the
+higher forms of school. In this connection I will only mention the
+university courses which he initiated.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Soviet Prosecution has presented as Exhibit Number
+USSR-335 a decree issued by the defendant to combat attacks
+against German reconstruction work in the Government General,
+dated 2 October 1943. There is no question but that this decree
+setting up a drumhead court-martial is not in conformity with what
+must be demanded of court procedure under normal circumstances.
+However, this decree can only be judged correctly if the circumstances
+which led to its promulgation are taken into consideration.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In general it should first be said that the reconstruction work
+of the administration of the Government General had to be carried
+<span class='pageno' title='156' id='Page_156'></span>
+on in a difficult territory and under circumstances which must be
+among the most difficult that have ever fallen to the lot of any
+administration. After the collapse of the Polish State, the German
+administration found, so to speak, a vacuum in which to organize
+and administer. In all spheres of administration they had to start
+completely afresh. If, in spite of the difficulties, they succeeded
+fairly quickly in repairing the war damage, particularly in the
+communications system, then that is incontestably to their credit.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The year 1940 was, however, to prove the only one in which the
+work of restoration in the area of the Government General could
+be carried out under fairly normal conditions. As the year 1941
+began, the Germans proceeded to concentrate their troops for action
+against the Soviet Union and therewith initiated a period of immense
+strain for the administration of the Government General. The
+Government General became the greatest repair workshop and the
+greatest military transit territory that history has ever known. This
+carried in its train an increasing deterioration of the security
+situation. The resistance movement began to reorganize on an
+intensified scale. But the menace inherent in the security situation
+developed to a still more alarming degree when the German armies
+were forced to arrest their progress in Russia and when—after the
+catastrophe of Stalingrad—their march forward was transformed
+into a general retreat. In the course of the year 1943, the activities
+of the resistance movement and in particular of the numerous guerrilla
+bands, in which thousands of lawless elements were grouped,
+reached extremes that represented a danger to any kind of orderly
+administration. The administration of the Government General
+was forced again and again to deal with this matter. Thus on
+31 May 1943 a service meeting of the authorities of the Government
+General was held to deal with the security situation. At that meeting
+the President of the Chief Department Internal Administration felt
+obliged to state among other things—I quote from the diary:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“... In their activities the guerrilla bands have revealed an
+increasingly well-developed system. They have now gone
+over to the systematic destruction of institutions belonging to
+the German administration; they steal money, procure typewriters
+and duplicating machines, destroy quota lists and lists
+of workers in the communal offices, and take away or burn
+criminal records and taxation lists. Moreover, raids on important
+production centers in the country have multiplied,
+for instance, on sawmills, dairies, and distilleries, as also on
+bridges, railway installations, and post offices. The organization
+of the guerrillas has become strongly military in
+character.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='157' id='Page_157'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the course of the summer and autumn of the year 1943, the
+increasing activities of the partisans and the improvement in their
+military organization and equipment so endangered security in the
+Government General that it might perhaps under the circumstances
+have been better to turn over its entire administration to the appropriate
+army commanders and to proclaim a state of emergency. It
+is indeed not possible to describe conditions then existing in the
+Government General as anything else but a state of war. It was
+the period when at any moment the possibility had to be taken into
+account that a general revolt would break out over the whole
+country.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All this notwithstanding, the Defendant Frank even then made
+every effort under all circumstances to thwart any violent measures
+by the Security Police and the SD. It was in order to exercise at
+least a modifying influence on the Security Police and the SD and
+to have at least some guarantee against excesses that the Defendant
+Frank agreed to the order dated 9 October 1943 setting up a drumhead
+court-martial.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is quite obvious from the content of this decree that its main
+purpose was to serve as a general preventive. It was meant as a
+deterrent to the guerrillas, and there can be no question but that
+in this it was temporarily successful. For the rest, the evidence has
+shown that even while this drumhead court-martial order was in
+operation, the Boards of Pardon continued to act and that many
+sentences passed by the drumhead court-martial were reversed by
+the boards.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the course of the present Trial repeated mention has been
+made of the report by SS Brigadeführer Stroop concerning the
+destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto in the year 1943; Exhibit USA-275
+(1061-PS). Both that report and a number of other documents reveal
+that all the measures in connection with the Warsaw Ghetto were
+undertaken exclusively on the direct instructions of Reichsführer SS
+and Chief of the German Police Himmler. I refer in this connection
+to the affidavit of SS Brigadeführer Stroop of 24 February 1946,
+submitted by the Prosecution as Exhibit Number USA-804 (3841-PS)
+and to the affidavit of the same date given by the former adjutant
+of the SS and Police Leader of Warsaw, Karl Kaleske. That is
+Exhibit Number USA-803 (3840-PS). These documents show quite
+clearly that those measures, like all others within the competence
+of the Security Police and undertaken on direct orders from either
+Reichsführer SS Himmler, the Higher SS and Police Leader, East,
+or on instructions from the RSHA, were carried out exclusively by
+the Security Police and the SD and that the administration of the
+Government General had nothing to do with them.
+<span class='pageno' title='158' id='Page_158'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Soviet Prosecution has also put in evidence as Exhibit
+USSR-93, under Article 21 of the Charter, the Report of the Polish
+Government. That report makes no distinction between the areas
+which were incorporated in the Reich and the territories of the
+former Polish State which were grouped together in the Government
+General. But particularly in view of the fact that the report
+makes no substantial statements as to the personal responsibility of
+the Defendant Frank, it does not seem necessary to delve further
+into this voluminous document. Like the Indictment itself, the
+report constitutes an accusation of a general nature; it does not deal
+in detail with the results of investigations and with evidence which
+might justify the conclusions drawn in the report. The objections
+to be raised to the report must appear all the more valid, since, to
+take only one example, in Appendix (1) of the report directives for
+cultural policy are appended which obviously purport to represent
+instructions given by the Governor General or his administration.
+Actually, however, nothing of the kind is to be found either in the
+<span class='it'>Official Gazette</span> of the Government General or in any other documents.
+The witness Dr. Bühler stated during his interrogation that
+the administration of the Government General had never issued
+such or similar directives. In consideration of this alone, it would
+seem at most admissible to attach substantive probative value to
+this Exhibit USSR-93 only insofar as the statements therein made
+are confirmed by genuine documents and other unobjectionable
+evidence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>According to the Indictment, and in particular according to the
+statements in the trial brief presented by the Prosecution, the
+Defendant Frank is also alleged to be responsible for the undernourishment
+of the Polish population. Actually, however, the Prosecution
+is unable to produce any evidence to show that in the area
+governed by the Defendant Frank either famine occurred or epidemics
+broke out. The evidence has revealed on the contrary that
+the efforts of the Defendant Frank in the years 1939 and 1940 were
+successful in inducing the Reich to deliver no less than 600,000 tons
+Of grain. That made it possible to overcome the food difficulties
+caused by the war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is true that in the following years the Government General
+contributed in no small degree to the war effort by itself delivering
+grain. But it must not be overlooked that these deliveries were
+made possible by an extraordinary increase in agricultural production
+in the Government General. And this was in its turn made
+possible by a farseeing economic policy, especially by the distribution
+of agricultural machinery, seed corn, and so on. Nor should
+it be forgotten that the deliveries of grain by the Government General
+from the year 1941 onward also served to feed the Polish
+<span class='pageno' title='159' id='Page_159'></span>
+workers placed in Reich territory and that in general these grain
+deliveries were utilized to maintain the internal balance between
+the European economic systems. In principle, however, the following
+should be said concerning this question:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In a number of points of accusation the Prosecution has leveled
+reproaches against the administrative activities of the Defendant
+Frank in his capacity as Governor General without making an
+attempt to give an even approximately adequate description of the
+general work of the defendant and without pointing out its inherent
+difficulties. There can be no question but that such an attitude
+transgresses the fundamental rules of any criminal procedure. It
+is a recognized principle derived from the criminal law principles
+of all civilized states that a uniform natural process must be judged
+in its entirety and that its evaluation must take into account all
+the circumstances of the case that are in any way fit for consideration
+by the court when passing judgment. This would seem to
+be all the more necessary in the present case, as the Defendant
+Frank is accused of having pursued a long-term policy of oppression,
+exploitation, and Germanization.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lords, if the Defendant Frank had in truth had any such
+intentions, then he could certainly have attained his goal in far
+simpler fashion. It would not have been necessary to issue hundreds
+of decrees every year, decrees which for example for the year 1940
+reached the proportions of this volume that I hold here in my hand.
+The Defendant Frank, from his first day of office, set himself to
+integrate the entire economic policy in a manner which one can
+only term constructive. Certainly he did this partly in order to
+strengthen the production capacity of the German nation engaged
+in a struggle of life and death. But at the same time there can be
+no doubt that the success of these measures also benefited the Polish
+and Ukrainian peoples. I do not intend to go into this matter in
+detail. I will only ask the Tribunal in this connection to take notice
+of the report given by the Chief of Government on the occasion of
+the fourth anniversary of the existence of the Government General
+on 26 October 1943. I have included this report in the document
+books I put in evidence. It is in Volume IV, Page 42. The report
+gives a concise summary of the measures taken and the successes
+achieved by the administrative acts of the defendant during these
+4 years in all fields of industrial economy, in agriculture, commerce,
+and transport, in the finance and credit system, in the sphere
+of public health, and so on. Only in consideration of all these facts
+is it possible to form an approximately correct estimate of the whole
+position. For the sake of completeness I will add that the defendant
+by his administration succeeded in reducing the danger of
+<span class='pageno' title='160' id='Page_160'></span>
+epidemics—in particular typhus and typhoid—to a degree which
+had been found impossible in this area in the preceding decades.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If much of what had been achieved by the Defendant Frank in
+the Government General was destroyed in the subsequent fighting,
+that can certainly furnish no grounds for reproach against the general
+administration, which had nothing to do with military measures.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lords, I am certainly not going to deny that in the course
+of the recent war terrible crimes were committed in the territory
+known as the Government General. Concentration camps had been
+established in which mass destruction of human beings was carried
+out. Hostages were shot. Expropriations took place; and so on. The
+Defendant Frank would be the last to deny this; he himself waged
+a 5 year struggle against all violent measures. The Prosecution
+has put in evidence, as Exhibit Number USA-610 (437-PS), a memorandum
+which Frank addressed to the Führer on 19 June 1943. In
+this memorandum, on Page 11, he listed nine points in which he
+sharply condemned all the evils which had arisen in consequence
+of the violence practiced by the Security Police and the SD and of
+the excesses committed by various Reich authorities, against which
+all his efforts had proved unavailing.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These nine points are in the main identical with the points of
+accusation against Frank. The content of the memorandum of
+19 June 1943, however, shows very plainly that the defendant
+denies responsibility for these abuses. It reveals, on the contrary,
+quite clearly that neither the defendant nor the general administration
+of the Government General can be held responsible for
+the said evils but that the whole responsibility must be borne by
+the institutions mentioned above, in particular the Security Police
+and the SD, or the Higher SS and Police Leader, East. If the Defendant
+Frank had had the instruments of power wherewith to abolish
+the evils he condemned, it would not have been necessary for him
+to address that memorandum to Hitler at all. He would then himself
+have been able to take all necessary steps. In addition to this
+the evidence has shown that that memorandum of 19 June 1943
+was not the only one addressed to the Führer on the matter. It
+is clear from the testimony of the witnesses Dr. Lammers and
+Dr. Bühler and the defendant’s own statements in the witness box
+that from the year 1940 onward he sent protests and memoranda
+at regular intervals of a few months both to Hitler personally and
+to the Chief of the Reich Chancellery. These written protests were
+invariably on the subject of the violent measures taken and the
+excesses committed by the Higher SS and Police Leader and the
+Security Police, including the SD. But none of the protests met
+with success.
+<span class='pageno' title='161' id='Page_161'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As can also be said on the basis of the evidence, the Defendant
+Frank continually made suggestions to Hitler on the subject of
+improving relations between the administration of the Government
+General and the population. The memorandum of 19 June 1943 is
+also cast in the form of a comprehensive political program. It
+includes, moreover, all the essential points of protest contained in a
+memorandum presented in February 1943 to the Governor General,
+at his own desire, by the leader of the Ukrainian Chief Committee.
+This latter memorandum was put in evidence by the Prosecution as
+Exhibit Number USA-178 (1526-PS). Such suggestions were also
+consistently rejected by Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Under these circumstances it is pertinent to ask what else the
+Defendant Frank could have done. Certainly he should have resigned.
+But that too he did. He offered his resignation no less than 14 times,
+the first time as early as 1939. His resignation was rejected by
+Hitler as often as it was tendered. But the Defendant Frank did
+more. He approached Field Marshal Keitel with the request that
+he be allowed to rejoin the Armed Forces as a lieutenant. That was
+in the year 1942. Hitler refused his consent to that too. These facts
+allow of only one conclusion, namely, that Hitler saw in the Defendant
+Frank a man behind whose back he (with the help of Himmler
+and the organs of the Security Police and the SD) could carry out
+the measures he considered requisite for attaining the aims of his
+power policy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lords, when it became more and more obvious that Hitler
+and Reichsführer SS Himmler were about to abolish the last remnants
+of a State founded on law; when it became increasingly
+apparent that the power of the Police knew no bounds and that a
+police state of the purest water was in process of development, the
+Defendant Frank came forward and addressed four great speeches
+to the German public with a last appeal on behalf of the idea of a
+State founded on law. He did that when Hitler stood at the summit
+of his power. He addressed this appeal to the German public at a
+time when the German forces were marching on Stalingrad and into
+the Caucasus, when the German Panzer Armies in Africa stood at
+El Alamein, barely 100 kilometers from Alexandria. In the course of
+the evidence I read some extracts from these great speeches which
+the Defendant Frank made in Berlin, Heidelberg, Vienna, and
+Munich. Those speeches contained a clear repudiation of every form
+of police state and championed the idea of the State founded on
+law, of the independence of the judiciary, and of law as such. These
+speeches found a tremendous echo among lawyers, but unfortunately
+not in wider circles. Nor in particular were they echoed by the
+men who alone would have possessed the power to ward off the
+threatening catastrophe.
+<span class='pageno' title='162' id='Page_162'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The consequences of this attempt to avert the extinction of the
+idea of the State founded on law by a last great effort are well
+known. The Defendant Frank was deprived of all his Party offices:
+he was dismissed from his post as President of the Academy for
+German Law. The leadership of the National Socialist Lawyers
+Association was conferred on the Reich Minister of Justice, Thierack.
+Frank himself was forbidden by Hitler to speak in public. Although
+the Defendant Frank again on this occasion sent in his resignation
+as Governor General, Hitler refused to accept it, as he had always
+done before. The reason for this, as given in a letter from the Reich
+Minister and Chief of the Reich Chancellery to the Defendant Frank,
+was that considerations of foreign policy had caused the Führer
+again to refuse this latest request of Frank to be allowed to resign.
+According to everything that has emerged from the evidence in
+this Trial it may be looked upon as certain that it was not only,
+and probably not even mainly, for such reasons that Hitler refused
+to accept Frank’s resignation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The decisive factor was obviously the consideration that it was
+better policy not to let the Security Police and Reichsführer SS
+Himmler’s other organs fulfill their appointed task openly, but rather
+to let them continue their work under cover while maintaining a
+general civil administration under the Governor General.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Naturally this open breach between the Defendant Frank, on the
+one hand, and Hitler and the State Police system represented by
+Reichsführer SS Himmler and the Higher SS and Police Leader,
+East, on the other, could not fail to have repercussions on the position
+of the defendant in his capacity as Governor General. Still
+more than before the various Reich authorities now began to interfere
+in the administration of the Government General. Above all,
+however, it was quite clear from the summer of 1942 onward that
+the Higher SS and Police Leader, East, together with the organs of
+the Security Police and SD subordinated to him, took no more
+notice at all of any instructions issued by the Governor General
+and the general administration.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Both in the Government General and in the Reich itself legal
+institutions receded more and more into the background. The State
+was transformed into an unadulterated police state, and developments
+took the inevitable course which the Defendant Frank had
+foreseen and feared—the course which on 19 November 1941 he had
+outlined at a congress of the principal section chiefs and Reich
+group leaders of the National Socialist Lawyers Association in the
+following words:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Law cannot be degraded to a position where it becomes an
+object of bargaining. Law cannot be sold. It is either there
+<span class='pageno' title='163' id='Page_163'></span>
+or it is not there. Law cannot be marketed on the stock
+exchange. If the law finds no support, then the State too
+loses its moral stay and sinks into the depths of night and
+horror.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will begin again at 10 minutes past 2.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal recessed until 1410 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<h2><span class='pageno' title='164' id='Page_164'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Pannenbecker.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. OTTO PANNENBECKER (Counsel for Defendant Frick):
+Mr. President, Gentlemen of the Tribunal:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The American Prosecution, through Dr. Kempner, has charged
+Defendant Frick with criminal actions according to Article 6,
+Items a, b, and c of the Charter. I should like first to examine
+the question as to whether Article 6 of the Charter, with its list
+of criminal acts, is to be considered as the authoritative expression
+of material penal law which would lay down, in a manner irrevocably
+binding on, and not subject to revision by the Tribunal,
+what actions are to be regarded as punishable; or whether Article 6
+of the Charter concerns a rule of procedure defining the competence
+of this Tribunal for specific subject matters.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT [<span class='it'>Interposing</span>]: Perhaps it will be for the
+convenience of the interpreters if I say that we might, as it is now
+nearly half past 2, sit without a break until 4 o’clock, when we rise.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. PANNENBECKER: The latter interpretation was implied in
+the Prosecution’s presentation of the case by Sir Hartley Shawcross’
+remark that although Article 6 of the Charter fills a gap in international
+penal procedure, the material penal law to be applied to
+the defendants has already been previously standardized by positive
+laws. Part II of the Charter, beginning with Article 6, is accordingly
+entitled: “Jurisdiction and General Principles,” and it may be
+inferred therefrom that Article 6 is intended to establish a ruling
+as to the competence of this Tribunal as to procedure in specific
+groups of crimes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Sir Hartley Shawcross’ statements were directed against the
+objection that it is inadmissible and in contradiction with a basic
+legal principle to punish someone for an act which had not yet been
+forbidden at the time it was committed; an objection which has as
+a basis the conception that the Charter has created new material
+penal law with retroactive effect. It should be examined whether
+the prohibition of retroaction of penal laws is a legal principle of
+such importance that it should not be infringed. I need not state to
+this Court the reasons why this legal principle found general
+recognition in all civilized countries as a prerequisite and basic
+precept of justice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In contrast to this, the Prosecution has in its speech charged the
+defendants with the fact that they themselves had continuously
+disregarded law and justice, and inferred from this that the defendants
+in this Trial could not appeal to such a legal principle. I do
+not believe, however, that such an argument can be decisive in this
+<span class='pageno' title='165' id='Page_165'></span>
+Trial. The Prosecution has replied in the negative to the further
+question of whether it would not have been right to pay back in
+the same coin and not allow the defendants of this Trial any possibility
+at all to defend themselves in a proper legal procedure.
+Such a course of simply exercising the power of the victor over the
+defendants has purposely not been assumed by the signatory
+powers for reasons presented in detail by the Prosecution. On the
+contrary, Sir Hartley Shawcross has appealed to the Tribunal to
+apply in this procedure—I quote—“the undisputed principles of
+international custom.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If, however, it is intended to proceed in such a manner, then an
+examination must take place in keeping with the same principles
+of law, to determine the question whether the deeds with which the
+defendants are charged can be regarded as criminal acts for which
+punishment is possible according to the recognized principles of
+international custom. It is not, according to these principles, an
+argument if the use of a legal principle as fundamental as the
+prohibition of retroaction in penal law is in actual application to
+be made dependent on whether or not the defendants concerned
+themselves with law and justice. The decision of the signatory
+powers to subject, on the basis of considerations which have been
+seriously weighed, the conduct of the defendants to a proper trial
+recognizing all legal principles of international custom, therefore
+signifies not only the observance of legal procedure with all assurances
+of fair trial, but such a decision by the signatory powers
+also signifies adherence to the fundamental principles of a material
+guarantee of justice, of which the prohibition of retroactive penal
+laws is one.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection I should like to point out that the decreeing
+of the retroactive validity of penal laws, when so ordered by the
+National Socialist Government for certain individual cases, to which
+Dr. Stahmer has already referred, shocked the entire civilized world.
+At that time, the violation of such a principle of law was generally
+condemned as a deplorable retrogression in civilization. I also ask
+the Tribunal to recall that one of the first measures taken by the
+occupation powers for deliverance from the National Socialist abuse
+of the law was to declare void any laws which had a retroactive
+effect on the material penal legislation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In view of this situation there exist valid reasons, I believe, why
+Article 6 of the Charter should, in accordance with its heading, be
+regarded as a ruling on the jurisdiction of this Tribunal, all the
+more so as the signatory powers have already and with so much
+emphasis insisted on a renewed strict and uniform observance of
+the prohibition against retroactive penal laws.
+<span class='pageno' title='166' id='Page_166'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the basis of such an interpretation, whereby Article 6 establishes
+the jurisdiction of this Tribunal, it would be for the Tribunal
+by its own examination not only to determine whether the charges
+on which the Indictment is based are proved, but also to rule on
+the legal question as to whether, for the facts established in each
+case by the Prosecution, there exists a criminal law which makes
+punishment possible. To revert in this way to provisions of material
+criminal law in existence at the time the act was committed does not
+mean that it would be impossible for this Tribunal to call the
+accused to account for offenses which are punishable under all
+circumstances. There are, however, a number of restrictions resulting
+from this which in the opinion of the Defense it would be
+better to accept rather than violate a principle so essential to just
+procedure as is the prohibition of retroaction in criminal laws. I
+am therefore of the opinion that it is entirely possible, and not
+incompatible with the necessity for just expiation for war crimes,
+to interpret Article 6 in accordance with its heading as a ruling
+on the jurisdiction of this Court, but not as new material criminal
+law.<a id='r1'/><a href='#f1' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[1]</span></sup></a> The next remarks concern themselves with the conspiracy,
+a matter which has been dealt with by Dr. Stahmer to such an
+extent that I can omit these pages. I continue now on Page 7 with
+the summary.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Charter does not impose the interpretation that a defendant
+is responsible also for such acts of commission as exceed the
+measure of his participation in the common plan. The wording of
+the Charter, “in the execution of a common plan,” does not contradict
+the interpretation that the Charter establishes liability for
+acts of commission which remained within the scope of the said
+plan. To that extent the assumption of liability for the actions of
+others complies with a demand of justice, but beyond that it would
+<span class='pageno' title='167' id='Page_167'></span>
+violate essential legal principles. The Defense therefore advocates
+the concept that, as far as the actions of others are concerned, for
+which a defendant is to be made liable, proof must be required
+that these actions, in the manner of their execution, corresponded
+to the intention of the defendant. To give an example:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The participation of a defendant in rearmament against the
+regulations of the Versailles Treaty does not in itself justify the
+assumption that that defendant also desired a war of aggression
+which was later on planned by others in the further plan of restoring
+military power to the German people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should now like to turn to the various categories of crimes of
+which the Defendant Frick is accused, taking first of all the assertion
+of the Prosecution that the defendant participated in the
+planning and preparation of wars of aggression. With regard to the
+problem as to whether a war of aggression is a criminal offense
+according to the concepts of law for the period in question, I refer,
+in order to avoid repetition, to the statements of Professor Jahrreiss,
+with which, in behalf of the Defendant Frick, I fully concur.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>By virtue of these convincing statements, there exists only one
+possibility of punishing co-operation in a war of aggression as a
+criminal offense capable of being perpetrated by individual persons,
+namely, when, contrary to the statement of Sir Hartley Shawcross,
+the Charter is applied as a standard of material penal law which
+has for the first time defined, with retroactive effect, a war of
+aggression as a criminal offense by individual persons. From the
+point of view of the other interpretation, which regards Article 6
+of the Charter as a procedure regulating the jurisdiction of this
+Court, the Defense holds that the deduction is cogent that the Court
+is indeed declared competent to judge offenses against peace, but
+that the criminal guilt of the individual defendants is not proved
+<span class='pageno' title='168' id='Page_168'></span>
+therewith because one condition for this is lacking, namely, the
+possibility of establishing that the defendants have offended against
+a principle of generally valid international custom or a principle of
+national law which defined the war of aggression at the time it
+took place and declared it punishable as a crime of which a single
+individual could be guilty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As it happens, the statesmen, during the period between the two
+World Wars, have neglected to establish adequate measures of
+general validity, by which it would have been made clear that
+anyone who, after the first wholesale slaughter of peoples, organized
+a second World War, would go about with a rope around his neck.
+The statements of the Prosecution, that such rules of international
+law are necessary, appear to be absolutely convincing, but the fact
+cannot be overlooked that such rules were nevertheless not created
+by the statesmen of that period at the right time. A missing rule
+of law, fashioned to fit a special case, cannot be replaced subsequently
+by an order of procedure or by the sentence of a Court
+whose task is to apply the general law, but not to create it for a
+single special case.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall now turn to the actual statements of the Prosecution
+concerning the participation of the Defendant Frick in the planning
+and preparation of wars of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution sees such activity already in Frick’s earliest co-operation
+with the Party, which he continued until the year 1933,
+in order to bring Hitler to power. The Prosecution appraises in a
+similar way the subsequent activity of Frick after the taking over
+of the Government by Hitler, when he helped to consolidate the
+power of the Party and its leaders through measures of domestic
+policy, especially by his participation in the legal measures by
+which armed forces were created, and finally by his collaboration
+in measures by which direct preparations were made in case of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Proceeding from the interpretation that only deliberate participation
+by the defendant in the preparation of a war of aggression
+is of penal significance, I shall not take up the question as to
+whether the Prosecution has proved that Frick was aware that his
+collaboration in the advancement of the Party and its aims constituted
+a preparation for war, and intended it as such, and therefore
+helped to bring the war about.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection the Prosecution has made the assertion that
+Hitler and his Party from the very beginning openly pursued the
+aim of bringing about a change in Germany’s situation in foreign
+politics by means of war. On the basis of this statement the Prosecution
+has declared that no special proof is necessary that in
+working for Hitler and his Party each of the defendants also knowingly
+collaborated in the preparation of a war of aggression.
+<span class='pageno' title='169' id='Page_169'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As proof of the fact that Hitler and his Party had from the
+beginning planned a war of aggression, the Prosecution refers to
+the Party Program, which names as one of its aims the abolition
+of the Treaty of Versailles. No word is said, however, in the Party
+Program that this aim should be achieved by force of arms. In the
+Party Program, as the testimony of the Defendant Von Neurath
+has also shown, among other things, there is nothing to prove an
+intention existing from the very beginning to wage a war of aggression.
+Nor is anything different found in the other official publications
+of the Party from the time previous to Hitler’s assumption
+of the Government. Because as the Party did not, on the basis of
+its official publications, reveal any intention of bringing about the
+revision of the Versailles Treaty by force of arms, it was even
+before 1933 authorized outside the territory of the Reich, as for
+example in 1930 in Danzig, when it received the sanction of the then
+High Commissioner of the League of Nations and of the Polish
+Resident General.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From the time of his assumption of power on 30 January 1933
+Hitler, as responsible head of the Government, adopted a quite
+unequivocal attitude with regard to the ways and aims of his foreign
+policy, both in official speeches and discourses as well as in private
+conversations. Unchangingly, and upon every occasion that presented
+itself after his assumption of power, he stressed his absolute desire
+for peace and his abhorrence of war, and he always defended this
+attitude with convincing reasons. He repeated again and again that
+he intended to obtain certain revisions of the Versailles Treaty by
+peaceful means only. I need not repeat the quotations to that effect
+from Hitler’s speeches, which were read by the Prosecution to prove
+how Hitler deceived the world, and the people he ruled, by his peace
+talks. And the world, including the German people, took these
+speeches which he, as responsible head of the Government, made
+again and again, quite seriously. In the face of that, warning voices
+which at an early stage were convinced that Hitler wanted war,
+remained a hopeless minority throughout the world.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has repeatedly alluded to this world belief
+which took Hitler’s assertions of peaceful intentions seriously, and
+the best proof of this delusion about peace even among the foreign
+statesmen, who also knew the Party Program, would certainly
+appear to lie in the fact that these statesmen neglected to so vast
+an extent to arm against Hitler’s war of aggression, in which
+nobody in Germany and in the world believed seriously except
+those who were directly initiated into Hitler’s most secret plans.
+From the Party Program and from isolated wild speeches made
+before 1933 during the period of parliamentary opposition, it is not
+possible to prove a continuous preparation for a war of aggression
+<span class='pageno' title='170' id='Page_170'></span>
+since the twenties, which is alleged to have been discernible to anybody
+who took a glance at the Party Program.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution contends further that even if the warlike
+intentions were not discernible in a general way at first, the intention
+of Hitler to prepare a war of aggression must have been
+clearly visible to the Defendant Frick on account of the duties
+which he had to fulfill after 30 January 1933 in his capacity as
+Reich Minister of the Interior. These duties included measures for
+the strengthening of the internal political power of Hitler and his
+Party. The Prosecution referred in this connection to the collaboration
+of Frick in the legal decrees by means of which the opposition
+against Hitler’s system of government was destroyed in parliament
+and in the country; further, to the legislative measures which
+eliminated real self-government in the cities and communities, and
+to legislative and administrative decrees by which opponents of the
+National Socialist system were excluded from taking any part in
+the business of the State and in economic life.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has submitted that without these measures
+Hitler could not have conducted another war, for the beginning of
+which the complete destruction of opposition in the country was
+said to be a necessary prerequisite—particularly the establishment
+of Hitler’s absolute dictatorship. Yet in all the measures I have
+enumerated, a direct connection with the preparation for war is
+lacking. For these measures had equal meaning and significance,
+unconnected with a subsequent war, merely as projects of a National
+Socialist domestic policy. It has not been proved that beyond that
+the Defendant Frick was informed of Hitler’s more far-reaching
+plans, namely, after consolidating his power at home to pursue the
+aims of the Party’s foreign policy not by peaceful but by military
+means.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>By establishing retrospectively that the strengthening of Hitler’s
+inner political authority was a necessary condition for his intentions
+for war as revealed later, nothing is achieved unless proof is forthcoming
+that Hitler had from the beginning aimed at power in the
+domestic sphere only as a first step toward the waging of wars, and
+that Frick was aware of this when he took part in the measures of
+domestic policy of which he is accused. Otherwise, as purely
+domestic measures, they do not come under the jurisdiction of this
+Tribunal according to the provisions of the Charter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But there is no such evidence, and it is much rather to be
+assumed that Frick, as a typical official connected with domestic
+politics, considered his measures as absolutely independent acts
+which had nothing whatsoever to do with the solutions by force of
+questions of foreign policy. Nor can another view of the situation
+be derived from the measures dealing directly with Germany’s
+<span class='pageno' title='171' id='Page_171'></span>
+rearmament, that is, the reintroduction of general conscription and
+the occupation of the demilitarized zone of the Rhineland. In his
+capacity as Reich Minister of the Interior, Frick issued the orders
+of the civil administration for the mobilization of men liable for
+military service, and consequently he himself also signed the Armed
+Forces Law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Yet even these measures in themselves were not to be recognized
+as preparation for a war of aggression. The reintroduction of
+compulsory military service and the assumption of military sovereignty
+over the demilitarized Western Zone were explained by
+Hitler himself, to his collaborators and the world, by arguments
+whose soundness was then widely accepted, and after the first shock
+many foreign statesmen still believed in Hitler’s well-founded
+assurances of peace, and advocated the opinion that there was no
+reason to fear any belligerent intentions on the part of Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To be sure, Hitler personally declared to his Commanders-in-Chief
+on 23 November 1939 that he had created the Armed Forces
+in order to make war. I refer to Document 789-PS; Exhibit Number
+USA-23. But Hitler previously cleverly obscured this intention
+by another argument which at that time still found credence in
+Germany and abroad, and—as proved by the evidence—even those
+collaborators in his own Cabinet who had not been initiated into
+his secret plans believed in it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus it is that several defendants refer to the fact that they
+approved of the reconstruction of the German Armed Forces in the
+face of the provisions of the Versailles Treaty, but that they did
+not want a war and did not consider that by their collaboration they
+were participating in the planning of a war of aggression. As for
+the Defendant Frick, the view of the defense is that there is no
+proof that Hitler had informed him of his plans for war, and therefore
+his collaboration in the measures concerned with the reconstruction
+of the German Armed Forces cannot be charged against
+him as intentional collaboration in the planning of wars of aggression.
+A similar situation arises with regard to the defendant’s
+activity in organizing the civil administration in general for the
+eventuality of war, a task entrusted to the defendant as Plenipotentiary
+for Administration of the Reich by the second Reich Defense
+Law dated 4 September 1938.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I beg to point out again that the position of Plenipotentiary for
+Administration of the Reich was created only by this second Reich
+Defense Law of 4 September 1938, and thus was not included in the
+first Reich Defense Law of 21 May 1935.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To be sure, long before, even before 1933, experts from the
+various ministries held conferences dealing with the subject of
+Reich defense, meeting at irregular intervals after 1933 as the Reich
+<span class='pageno' title='172' id='Page_172'></span>
+Defense Committee, as shown in the documents submitted by the
+Prosecution. These meetings had nothing to do with an agreement
+to wage a war of aggression. They dealt with general questions of
+Reich defense, as is customary also in other countries. By the Reich
+Defense Law of 21 May 1935, the organization for Reich defense was
+more closely co-ordinated, particularly by the appointment of a
+Plenipotentiary for War Economy, and at his interrogation the
+Defendant Schacht explained in detail that the purpose in creating
+that position was not preparation for a war of aggression (according
+to the duties and regulations to be found in the first Reich Defense
+Law) but the organization of the economy for defense in the event
+of a war of aggression by other states.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same holds true with regard to the position of Plenipotentiary
+for Reich Administration as created by the second Reich
+Defense Law of 4 September 1938, which was conferred on the
+Defendant Frick by virtue of his position as Reich Minister of the
+Interior. This position signified the co-ordinated establishment of
+the entire civil administration for the purpose of Reich defense.
+Regardless of whether, according to documents which have been
+submitted to the Tribunal, Hitler already wanted war at the time
+when he authorized the second Reich Defense Law, it is nevertheless
+relevant for the defense of the defendant whether Frick at that time
+was able to recognize the aggressive intentions of Hitler from the
+law itself and from his preliminary work thereon or from other
+evidence or information which was communicated to him then.
+From the law itself it cannot be discerned that Hitler’s intention
+was to use it in the sphere of civil life as an instrument of preparation
+for a war of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The kind of tasks which were given to the Defendant Frick in
+his capacity as Plenipotentiary for Reich Administration had to do
+merely with the concentration of domestic administration of Germany
+in case of a possible war or threat of war, and nothing else
+can be seen from Document Number 3787-PS (Exhibit Number
+USA-782), which was submitted subsequently.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The law is so formulated that it always refers only to the defense
+of the Reich in case of war. It speaks about the “state of defense”
+and mentions the case of a “surprise threat to the Reich territory,”
+in the event of which certain measures must be taken. Beyond this
+the law does not vouchsafe any hint, which would be in keeping
+with Hitler’s oft-repeated principle not to divulge any more of his
+plans than the person concerned had to know for his own work—a
+principle which he strictly adhered to even with his closest collaborators.
+In view of this principle it should not be assumed, nor
+has it been at all proved, that when the order for this law was
+given to the Ministry of the Interior any other information was
+<span class='pageno' title='173' id='Page_173'></span>
+imparted than the necessity for taking precautionary measures, by
+concentrating the full strength of the domestic administration of the
+country, against a surprise threat to Reich territory through a
+possible attack by other states.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is not necessary for me to state in detail that such a measure
+cannot be considered as a premeditated preparation for a war of
+aggression when it had been explained to the competent authorities
+of the domestic administration that it was essential for the defense
+of the Reich against the threatening attack by another state. Hitler
+knew very well how to hoodwink all those who had no need to
+know about his secret plans, yet nevertheless should understand the
+reasons for the armament and the organization of the state ordered
+by him for the eventuality of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I will deal now very briefly with some further documents bearing
+on the activity of the Defendant Frick as Plenipotentiary for Reich
+Administration. Frick, in his speech of 7 March 1940, referred to
+this position—Document Number 2608-PS, Exhibit Number USA-714—and
+stated that the planned preparation of the administration
+for the possible event of war had been already effected during
+peacetime by the appointment of a Plenipotentiary for Reich
+Administration. This speech therefore merely confirms that which
+is already revealed by the text of the law. The same applies to
+Document 2986-PS, Exhibit Number USA-409, an affidavit by the
+defendant to the same effect. Therefore, according to this law, the
+position of the Plenipotentiary for Reich Administration, combined
+with the appointment of a Plenipotentiary for Economy and the post
+of Chief of the OKW, cannot be described as a “triumvirate” holding
+governmental authority in Germany. Nothing has ever become
+known either inside or outside Germany of a government by such
+a triumvirate, and the witness Lammers has also referred to the
+strictly subordinate tasks performed by these persons by means of
+ordinances—tasks which had nothing to do with the preparation of a
+war of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another field of the defendant’s activity is likewise appraised by
+the Prosecution as participation in preparation for a war of
+aggression, namely, Frick’s work for the Association for Maintaining
+Germanism Abroad. I refer to Exhibit Number Frick-14 and Document
+Number 3258-PS, the latter submitted as Exhibit Number
+GB-262. Both documents reveal that Frick supported the said
+association as a union for the fostering of German cultural relations
+abroad and promoted its cultural efforts. It cannot, however, be
+gathered from the documents that Frick engaged in any capacity
+whatsoever for the furtherance of the aims of a so-called “Fifth
+Column” abroad. Another document from which the Prosecution
+deduced the approval of the policy of aggressive war by Frick is the
+<span class='pageno' title='174' id='Page_174'></span>
+affidavit of Messersmith, Document Number 2385-PS, Exhibit Number
+USA-68. This affidavit has been characterized by several
+defendants as inaccurate, and the Defendant Schacht in particular
+showed at his examination that in essential points it cannot be
+correct at all. The Prosecution was not able to produce the witness
+for cross-examination. I object on behalf of Frick against any use
+of the affidavit, all the more so since an additional clarifying interrogation
+of the witness through a written questionnaire only led to
+the result that the witness, by using general phrases, avoided giving
+concrete answers to the questions put to him. The answers to the
+questionnaire show plainly enough that Messersmith cannot make
+concrete statements at all and that in his affidavit he obviously
+was considerably deceived himself as to the extent of his memory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I do not believe that his affidavit, which has been refuted in
+essential points, can be made use of for passing legal judgment.
+As to the question whether the Defendant Frick participated in
+conscious preparation for a war of aggression, the Prosecution
+further submitted Document D-44, Exhibit Number USA-428. From
+this document it is seen that the Reich Ministry of the Interior is
+supposed in the year 1933 to have issued a directive that official
+publications were not to be drawn up in a form which might enable
+people abroad to infer an infraction of the Versailles Treaty from
+such publications. This document does not reveal whether by these
+directives actual treaty violations were to be masked or whether it
+was only a question of avoiding the appearance of treaty violations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same problem applies to Document 1850-PS, Exhibit Number
+USA-742. This contains the minutes of a conference between the
+Leadership of the SA and the Reich Defense Minister, who proposed
+to the SA in 1933 that budgetary funds of the Reich should be set
+aside by the Reich Ministry of the Interior for the military training
+of the SA. The document does not throw any light upon the attitude
+of the Reich Ministry of the Interior toward this proposal, and even
+if it had accepted it, this again would have proved only that the
+Reich Ministry of the Interior furthered the restoration of the
+Armed Forces, a fact which anyhow is already proved.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus, none of these documents furnishes proof that the Defendant
+Frick recognized as preparation for a war of aggression the
+measures ordered by Hitler as necessary for the defense of the Reich.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is true that during the war, in 1941, a few days before the
+outbreak of the war with the Soviet Union, a conference took place
+between the Defendant Rosenberg and representatives of various
+ministries concerning measures in case of a possible occupation of
+parts of the Soviet Union. This is shown in Document 1039-PS,
+Exhibit Number USA-146, Rosenberg’s report concerning these discussions,
+in which it is stated that negotiations took place with
+<span class='pageno' title='175' id='Page_175'></span>
+“Reich Minister Frick (State Secretary Stuckart).” This parenthesis
+means that the Reich Ministry of the Interior was represented in
+these negotiations by State Secretary Stuckart, therefore that Frick
+did not personally participate in the negotiations. As the negotiations
+took place only a few days before the beginning of the war in
+the East, it is not proved by the document that Frick himself was
+informed about the negotiation before the beginning of the war
+which, as it is generally known, was afterward proclaimed by
+Hitler as a necessary measure of defense against an imminent attack
+by the Soviet Union. It has been made clear by abundant evidence
+in this Trial how far Hitler kept his true aggressive intentions
+secret, and how well he knew how to cover up the true aim of all
+his political measures for years with thousands of convincing
+reasons to justify the individual measures of his policy of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was a very small circle of collaborators whom Hitler
+informed about his war plans, but this circle was not selected
+according to the position of the person concerned in the Cabinet, or
+according to his position in the Party hierarchy, but exclusively
+from the point of view of whether it was necessary for the person
+concerned, with respect to his own tasks in the field of preparations
+for the war, to know the aggressive character of Hitler’s general
+policy or even his detailed plans of aggression. Document 386-PS,
+Exhibit Number USA-25, shows how systematically the principle
+of secrecy was kept, even as regards the older members of the Party
+and the administrators of important departments in the Reich
+Cabinet. Whoever, such as the Minister of the Interior, had merely
+to carry out measures within the framework of preparations for war
+which could well be similar to tasks of a purely defensive character
+was, in accordance with Hitler’s principle, not informed of the
+latter’s aggressive intentions. For this reason, the presence of the
+Defendant Frick is not shown in even a single one of these secret
+conferences in which Hitler informed a circle of selected men
+about his plans for foreign policy and his war aims. In the Document
+386-PS just mentioned, Hitler especially emphasized and gave
+reasons for the exclusion of the Reich Cabinet as a body to which
+such plans should be made known.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In another record concerning a similar conference—Document
+L-79, Exhibit Number USA-27—the additional principle is laid down
+that no one should be told anything concerning the war plans who
+does not need to know these plans for his actual work.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Frick’s name is not only missing from the list of those present
+at Hitler’s conferences on his policy of aggression which took place
+before the war, but the same applies also to the numerous conferences
+concerning Hitler’s further war aims and aggressive intentions
+which were held during the war. The Defendant Frick was no
+<span class='pageno' title='176' id='Page_176'></span>
+more informed of the later attacks or included in their preparation,
+as is shown by the list of those present at Hitler’s lectures concerning
+his plans, which have in part been submitted here.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Frick, purely an expert in domestic administration who was not
+considered competent for military questions and questions of foreign
+policy, was deemed good enough to organize the civilian administration
+for the eventuality of any possible war, but in Hitler’s opinion,
+his foreign policy and military plans were none of Frick’s business.
+However, the Prosecution asserts further that after the conquest of
+foreign territories and their occupation, the Defendant Frick
+regulated the administrative policy in those territories and that he
+is responsible for it. The Prosecution considers this activity, of the
+defendant, according to Article 6, Letter (a) of the Charter, as
+“participation in the execution of wars of aggression.” According to
+the submission of the Prosecution, Frick exercised an over-all control
+of the occupied territories, especially in his capacity as chief of
+the Central Office for the occupied territories. On the basis of the
+same function, he is deemed to be responsible for all War Crimes
+and Crimes against Humanity which were committed in the occupied
+and incorporated territories before and during the war, up to his
+dismissal as Reich Minister of the Interior on 20 August 1943.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is a question of legal interpretation whether the activity in
+the administration of occupied territories, pursuant to Article 6,
+Letter (a) of the Charter, is to be considered as the “execution of
+wars of aggression,” or whether criminality comes into consideration
+only under the point of view of crimes against the rules of war or
+against humanity. In deciding this question it appears important to
+me that it is not one of the tasks of an official of a civil administration
+to examine, after the conclusion of military operations, whether
+it is a case of legal or illegal occupation according to the standards
+of international law. An obligation for such an examination would
+be an exaggerated demand to make of the department of the civil
+administration or the administrative chief, whose activity cannot be
+described as illegal on the grounds that the territory administered
+by him had been annexed a short or even long time ago in violation
+of the regulations of international law. There is no obligation for
+such examination in the practice of civil administration. The Charter
+moreover does not demand such an interpretation because, when
+naturally construed, the military operations themselves might be
+understood to constitute an execution of wars of aggression, but not
+the later civil administration of conquered territories.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The punishment of crimes which occurred in the administration
+of the occupied territories would not be made impossible through
+such an interpretation. In any case these crimes are subject to
+punishment as Crimes against Humanity or against the rules of war
+<span class='pageno' title='177' id='Page_177'></span>
+according to the Charter. And now mention must be made of those
+territories in particular for which the Defendant Frick bears a
+responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>First of all there are the territories which were incorporated in
+accordance with constitutional law into the commonwealth of the
+German Reich, which are therefore called “incorporated territories.”
+By their constitutional incorporation these territories came under
+the administration of the Reich, but only to that extent did they
+come under the authority of the Reich Minister of the Interior, in
+that the Defendant Frick bears the constitutional responsibility of
+a minister for the internal administration of these territories up to
+20 August 1943. In the East, this mainly concerned the territories of
+West Prussia, Posen, and Danzig, in other words, the so-called
+returned Eastern territories which belonged, until the Versailles
+Treaty, to the commonwealth of the German Reich. In the East, the
+Memel district received the same constitutional treatment; in the
+West, the Eupen-Malmedy district; and in the Southeast, the Sudetenland.
+Furthermore the country of Austria was incorporated into
+the commonwealth of the German Reich. For all those territories
+Frick has a share in the laws and administrative measures brought
+about by the incorporation. He bears the usual responsibility of a
+Minister of the Interior for the domestic administration of these
+territories up to the time of his dismissal in August 1943. For the
+territory of Bohemia and Moravia on the other hand there existed
+a special Protectorate Government, which was described as autonomous
+in the decree concerning the establishment of the Protectorate—Document
+2119-PS—and was therefore not controlled by the
+Reich Ministry of the Interior. In a similar way, an administration
+not dependent on the Reich Ministry of the Interior existed in the
+Polish territories, which were collectively designated “Government
+General” and were put under the jurisdiction of a “Governor General.”
+In contrast to the so-called “incorporated Eastern territories,”
+the Reich Ministry of the Interior had no right to issue orders or to
+handle administrative matters in the Government General, as can
+be seen from Document 3079-PS which contains Hitler’s decree concerning
+the administration of the occupied Polish territories. The
+same appears from numerous other documents, among them Document
+USSR-223, the Frank diary, in which he states that no Reich
+central offices are authorized to intervene in the government of his
+territory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same applied to all other occupied territories for which a
+special administration was established under any legal form. These
+separate administrations were not dependent on the corresponding
+departmental ministries in the Reich, but were under the jurisdiction
+of the administrative chief for the corresponding territories,
+who was himself directly subordinate to Hitler.
+<span class='pageno' title='178' id='Page_178'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This applies to the occupied Soviet Russian territories, the entire
+administration of which was under the jurisdiction of a Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories. The same applies to
+Norway, where a Reich Commissioner was appointed. In a similar
+way, a Reich Commissioner was appointed for the Netherlands, who
+was also independent of the Reich Ministry of the Interior and was
+directly subordinate to Hitler. In Luxembourg, Alsace, and Lorraine,
+there were chiefs of civil administrations who were also not dependent
+on the Reich Ministry of the Interior, while in Belgium and
+northern France there was a military administration of which the
+same was true.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the same way the administrative chiefs of the territories
+which were occupied in the Southeast of Europe were completely
+independent of the Reich Ministry of the Interior. For part of the
+occupied territories there exists, in the decrees issued at the time
+concerning the creation of a separate civil administration, a stipulation
+that the Reich Minister of the Interior was designated the
+central agency, and from this formulation the Prosecution has
+deduced a responsibility of the Defendant Frick for the administration
+of all the territories, as is Stated in the Indictment.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The actual tasks of the central agency can be seen from the order
+concerning the establishment of a central agency for Norway—Document
+3082-PS, or Number 24 in the Frick document book. The
+witness Dr. Lammers has given a further explanation of the tasks.
+At that time it was the primary task of the central agency to put
+personnel at the disposal of the chiefs of the civil administrations in
+the occupied territories on request. Therefore, if a civil official was
+needed for any district, the administration of the district concerned
+applied to the central agency in the Reich Ministry of the Interior,
+which then put some official from the Reich at the disposal of the
+chief of the civil administration. The Reich Ministry of the Interior
+was especially fitted for this, as it had at its disposal numerous
+officials of the domestic administration in Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But the transfer of an official from his own department to
+another office, which will alone give orders to that official from that
+moment on, does not establish responsibility for the further activity
+of that official in his new department, to whom the Reich Ministry
+of the Interior could issue no orders whatsoever. To take as an
+example: If the Minister of Justice transfers one of his officials to
+the Foreign Minister, naturally only the Foreign Minister is
+responsible for the further activity of this official. This activity of
+the central agency therefore does not justify the assumption of
+responsibility by Frick for the administration of the occupied
+territories.
+<span class='pageno' title='179' id='Page_179'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The requisitioning of officials for the occupied territories was
+concentrated in the Reich Ministry of the Interior. That is, as the
+examination of the witness Lammers indicated—and I quote from
+the above-mentioned Document 3082-PS—“the unified co-operation
+adapted to the needs of Norway, of the supreme Reich authorities
+with one another and with the Reich Commissioner.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In like manner, the hearing of evidence for the Defendants
+Rosenberg, Frank, and Seyss-Inquart, who functioned as chiefs of
+civil administrations in the occupied territories, has on no occasion
+revealed any co-operation of any kind with the Defendant Frick
+either in his capacity of Reich Minister of the Interior or Director
+of the Central Agency in this Ministry.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, the Prosecution has referred to several documents in order
+to prove that the Defendant Frick exercised extensive control over
+all occupied territories. Actually, however, those documents do not
+reveal an administrative activity of any greater extent than I have
+just stated. Document 3304-PS gives proof of an administrative
+activity for the incorporated Eastern Territories. This coincides with
+my statement that the incorporated Eastern Territories, in their
+internal administration, were subject to the Reich Ministry of the
+Interior by virtue of their constitutional incorporation into the German
+Reich. The document, however, bears no reference to the
+administration of the Occupied Eastern Territories, that is, the
+Government General or to the occupied Soviet Russian territories.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The other document submitted, 1039-PS, Exhibit Number
+USA-146, proves the transfer of administrative personnel from the
+department of the Reich Ministry of the Interior to the Reich
+Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territories, a typical task of the
+Central Agency which I have already discussed. The Prosecution
+has submitted further documents which reveal that the Reich
+Ministry of the Interior had a hand in the bestowal of German
+citizenship. Even this does not, however, prove any administrative
+authority of the Defendant Frick for the occupied territories, but
+merely a typical activity of a Minister of the Interior whose department
+is competent for the general regulations concerning German
+citizenship, including cases where persons living outside the Reich
+territory are involved. This activity of the Minister of the Interior
+can also furnish no proof of an extensive administrative policy and
+a general responsibility of the Defendant Frick for the administration
+of the occupied territories. In particular, in the occupied
+territories which were not incorporated into the Reich territory,
+Frick had no authority or competence whatsoever as far as the tasks
+of the Police were concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler directly commissioned Himmler to carry out police work
+in the occupied territories—see Document 1997-PS, Exhibit Number
+<span class='pageno' title='180' id='Page_180'></span>
+USA-319, Hitler’s decree concerning police security measures for
+the Eastern Territories, for which Himmler was directly responsible.
+The same is revealed by Document 447-PS, Exhibit Number
+USA-315, a directive of the OKW dated 13 March 1941, to the effect
+that the Reichsführer SS in the Occupied Eastern Territories is
+charged with special duties in the execution of which he will act
+independently and on his own responsibility. The same applies to
+the police tasks in the other occupied territories, which were
+assigned either to the Reichsführer SS Himmler or to the SS and
+police leaders who took their orders only from Himmler, although
+in many cases they were ostensibly assigned to the civil administrative
+chief in question, such as for example the Governor General
+in Poland (see excerpt from Frank’s diary in the Frick document
+book under Number 25, also USSR-223). In no case, therefore, were
+police tasks in the occupied territories under the Defendant Frick’s
+jurisdiction. Consequently, the Defendant Frick bears no responsibility
+for crimes against the laws of war and against humanity in
+the occupied territories, since in these territories he could neither
+order crimes nor prevent them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Concerning the territory of the German Reich I must now
+examine the claim of the Prosecution as to the responsibility of the
+Defendant Frick for all the police measures, including the Gestapo,
+as well as for the establishment and administration of concentration
+camps. May I first refer to the documents submitted by me in
+evidence, which reveal that the Police, including the political police,
+was in 1933 still the concern of the individual states within the
+Reich, such as Prussia, Bavaria, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In Prussia, the Secret State Police (Gestapo) and the concentration
+camps were established and administered by Göring in his
+capacity as Prussian Minister of the Interior. The tasks of the
+political police were then transferred by a Prussian law, dated
+30 November 1933, to the office of the Prussian Prime Minister,
+which was also administered by Göring. So when the offices of the
+Reich and the Prussian Minister of the Interior were merged, in the
+spring of 1934, Frick did not assume the tasks of the political police
+which still remained incumbent upon Göring in his capacity as
+Prime Minister.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A similar regulation prevailed in the other states, where Himmler
+was gradually given the duties of special deputy for the political
+police. During this period, the Reich Minister of the Interior had
+only the right of so-called “Reich supervision” over the states, which
+Frick made use of for the enactment of general instructions and
+legal ordinances; and this is the only point where Frick, as Minister
+of the Reich, could exercise any influence on the affairs of the political
+police and concentration camps.
+<span class='pageno' title='181' id='Page_181'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Frick made use of this possibility, in accordance with his basic
+attitude as confirmed by the witness Gisevius, to prevent and repress
+arbitrary actions by the political police as far as was in his power
+in the circumstances then prevailing. He endeavored, by the enactment
+of provisions of law and procedure, to restrict the arbitrary
+practices of the political police in the states.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I refer to Document 779-PS, submitted by me as Exhibit Number
+Frick-6. This is a decree dated 12 April 1934, containing restrictive
+provisions of this sort under a significant preamble—which I quote:
+“In order to remedy abuses occurring in the infliction of protective
+custody.” This is followed by directives to the governments of the
+states forbidding the application of preventive custody in numerous
+cases where it had previously been improperly ordered by the
+Gestapo. In this struggle of Frick against arbitrary actions by the
+political police in the states, the police had, it is true, ultimately
+come out better because they were under the direction of Göring and
+Himmler, with whom the “bureaucrat” Frick—as Hitler disdainfully
+called him—could not compare as regards influence in the Party
+and State. For that reason the political police in the states in practice
+frequently disregarded Frick’s ordinances. But Frick did not
+stand by idly as long as there was reason to hope that through his
+intervention the unrestrained practices of the political police in the
+states could be directed into orderly and legally regulated channels.
+I refer to Document 775-PS, Exhibit Number Frick-9, a memorandum
+from Frick to Hitler which clearly and unequivocally calls
+a spade a spade, mentioning legal insecurity, unrest, and embitterment,
+and severely criticizing individual cases of misuse of the right
+to order protective custody by the political police of the states. Here
+I would insert that the same document also proves that in the
+struggle over the churches, the defendant clearly took their side.
+This is also proved by Exhibit Number Neurath-1.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his testimony the witness Gisevius refers to an additional
+memorandum which he himself drew up for Frick as a further
+attempt to restrain through severe criticism and by suggestions for
+legal control the arbitrary practices of the political police in the
+states. All of these attempts failed because Frick’s political influence
+was too insignificant and he could not assert himself against Göring
+and Himmler, and because at the time Frick himself could not yet
+see that the practices of Göring and Himmler were essentially in
+harmony with what Hitler actually wanted himself. Thus the documents
+submitted by the Prosecution, taken in conjunction with the
+evidence offered by the Defense, show that in the domain of the
+political police and in ordering protective custody, Frick had a
+certain competency at a time when the police was still a service
+administered by the individual states. This evidence also shows
+<span class='pageno' title='182' id='Page_182'></span>
+that during that time Frick’s jurisdiction was very limited and it
+further shows that Frick, acting within the bounds of his competency,
+took action solely in order to intervene against the terror and
+arbitrary actions of the Gestapo through general instructions and
+through repeated complaints in individual cases, so that the conclusion
+is not justified that Frick in any way actively participated
+in the Gestapo’s measures of terror and violence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At a later period the legal situation changed. With Hitler’s decree
+of 17 June 1936—Document 2073-PS, Document Book Frick Number
+35—police tasks for the entire Reich were combined and
+uniformly transferred to Himmler, whose department was formally
+made a part of the Ministry of the Interior under the title “Reichsführer
+SS and Chief of the German Police in the Reich Ministry of
+the Interior.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The question now is whether this new regulation conferred on
+Frick, in his capacity as Reich Minister of the Interior, any authority
+of command or any right to issue instructions which could be
+enforced with regard to the political police, its offices and its
+functionaries. When Himmler, in accordance with his own wish,
+which he could gratify because of his influence on Hitler, was
+appointed Police Chief for the entire Reich, there did not exist in
+Germany a police or security ministry, properly speaking.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This is the reason why the uniform direction of the police
+through Himmler in person was formally attached to the Reich
+Ministry of the Interior. But Himmler wanted to be more than a
+department chief in the Ministry of the Interior. Therefore a
+position entirely novel in German administrative law was created
+for him and his purposes. The entire sphere of the police was
+separated from the rest of the activities of the Ministry of the
+Interior and placed under Himmler’s special jurisdiction under a
+newly created title of office which, as a government office, contained
+the words “Reichsführer SS,” thereby making it possible for Himmler
+to carry out political police tasks under a title of office characterizing
+him as Reichsführer SS and in that capacity giving him
+independence from any instructions issued by a minister of state.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In order to accentuate further the independence of his office
+within the bureaucratic hierarchy as well, Himmler was given the
+additional right from the very beginning to represent police matters
+before the Cabinet independently and on his own responsibility,
+like any Reich minister; this is also shown in the decree concerning
+his appointment, Document 2073-PS. This decree is a typical
+example of the overlapping of competencies which Hitler favored to
+excess in his government system. Himmler became part of the
+Ministry of the Interior and, as an official of the Ministry of the
+Interior, was formally bound to abide by instructions of the
+<span class='pageno' title='183' id='Page_183'></span>
+Minister. However, he was also an independent Chief of Police with
+the right to represent before the Cabinet on his own responsibility
+matters pertaining to the Police, thus excluding Frick in that
+respect. In addition to that, his orders simultaneously carried the
+authority of the Reichsführer SS, in which Frick had no authority
+at all to interfere.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In actual effect this involved arrangement also enhanced the
+tremendous influence of Himmler on Hitler. In keeping with his
+convictions, and to safeguard a well-ordered state apparatus, Frick
+repeatedly tried to intervene through general instructions intended
+to restrain the arbitrary acts of the political police. As late as 25
+January 1938 he tried through a decree to curtail the admissibility
+of protective custody and he forbade it in a number of cases of
+improper application. I refer to Document 1723-PS, Exhibit Number
+USA-206, an extract of which under Number 36 appears in the Frick
+document book. He prohibited protective custody in lieu of, or
+cumulative to, a legal penalty, forbade its application by police
+authorities of the intermediate or subordinate levels, and gave
+orders that the accused should be heard before arrest. He decreed
+periodical examination of the reasons for the continuance of confinement
+and on principle forbade the protective custody of foreigners,
+whom the Police had authority only to expel from the Reich
+in case of acts endangering the State.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>An obvious argument is that the Gestapo in practice disregarded
+all these instructions of Frick and that Himmler and his subordinates
+maintained an absolute reign of terror and violence. This is correct
+and has been confirmed in detail by the witness Gisevius. But
+something else appears of importance to me in the defense of Frick:
+To show that Frick himself disapproved of such arbitrary acts and
+that he tried to do all in his power to prevent them. Finally,
+however, Hitler forbade even this. He informed him through Lammers—as
+confirmed by the latter as witness—that he was not to
+concern himself with police matters, that Himmler could manage
+that better by himself and that the Police was doing well under
+Himmler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus Himmler finally got complete control of the Police, and he
+gave outward expression to this by later dropping, with Hitler’s
+consent, from his official title, the words “in the Reich Ministry of
+the Interior,” simply referring to himself as “Reichsführer SS and
+Chief of the German Police,” which is also shown in the testimony
+of the witness Lammers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I believe that, in view of the circumstances, the problem of the
+Defendant Frick’s criminal responsibility for the political police and
+their arbitrary measures is not established by the fact that the
+entire Police was formally incorporated in the Reich Ministry of the
+<span class='pageno' title='184' id='Page_184'></span>
+Interior after the year 1936, since it has been proved! that Frick
+himself did not participate in arbitrary acts, but on the contrary
+tried again and again to intervene against such arbitrary practice
+with all the power he possessed, which however was no match for
+the personality of Himmler and his influence with Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In order to insure fair judgment, I request that the actual
+situation as to power of command and authority, and not the purely
+superficial circumstances of a formal incorporation of the tasks
+involved in the Reich Ministry of the Interior, be taken into account.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I insert the following here: The Prosecution, during their presentation
+on 3 July 1946, submitted Document D-181, Exhibit GB-528,
+and stated in connection with that document that it proved that the
+political police were not only formally incorporated in the Ministry
+of the Interior, but that Frick was in fact responsible for the
+measures of the Police. Actually the document shows only that
+Frick as Minister of the Interior was officially contacted in the
+matter of the sterilization of those suffering from so-called hereditary
+diseases. The document has nothing to do with any measures
+of the Police, least of all with any measures of the political police.
+Moreover there is no information in it regarding Himmler’s position
+in the Ministry of the Interior.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now I will continue with my plea: In this connection, I must
+briefly deal with the reference of the Prosecution to the fact that
+Hitler’s decree concerning the appointment of Himmler as Chief of
+the German Police—Document 2073-PS—had been countersigned by
+Frick himself.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I believe that the relationship between Frick and Himmler, as
+well as their divergent relations to Hitler, are sufficiently clear to
+justify the conclusion that the appointment of Himmler simply
+amounted to an agreement between Hitler and Himmler, to which
+Frick would have objected in vain. We are confronted with the same
+problem which applies to so many defendants, namely, that of the
+formal countersigning of an order issued by Hitler, which was then
+signed as a matter of form by the head of a department, although
+that department head had no influence on the order and could not
+have prevented it, especially as it would have had full constitutional
+effect as a Führer decree without the minister’s additional signature.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now have to deal with several documents which the Prosecution
+consider to have a bearing on actual activity by the Defendant
+Frick within the sphere of tasks of the political police. I have
+already dealt with Document 3304-PS, to which the Prosecution
+referred in this connection. It concerns an ordinance on the assignment
+of a Higher Police Leader to the Reichsstatthalter (Reich
+Governor) in the Eastern territories which were incorporated into
+the commonwealth of the German Reich, and hence deals with the
+<span class='pageno' title='185' id='Page_185'></span>
+administrative organization of the Reich Governor’s office in a part
+of the Reich. This decree therefore falls within the scope of the
+general competence of the Ministry of the Interior, and accordingly
+does not furnish proof of any specific police activity. Moreover, this
+decree has nothing to do with any arbitrary acts of the Gestapo.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the same lines in the decree of 20 September 1936—Document
+2245-PS—concerning the appointment of police experts in the
+Prussian provincial administrations, which were also subordinate to
+the Reich Ministry of the Interior as offices of the general internal
+Reich administration, the assignment of a police expert to the
+office of general administration in the province is a measure of
+internal Reich administration. This measure, too, had no connection
+with arbitrary acts of the Gestapo, and more particularly it does not
+prove that the defendant issued any instructions to the Gestapo.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The situation is no different with respect to the documents which
+have been appraised by the Prosecution as demonstrating the participation
+of the defendant in the establishment and administration
+of concentration camps, or as a sign of approval of terror methods
+used by the Gestapo. In their statement of 22 November 1945,
+the Prosecution referred to Document 2533-PS as proof of the
+approval of these arrangements by the Defendant Frick. I need not
+go further into the contents of the document; it represents an article
+by the Defendant Frank in the journal of the Academy of German
+Law, of which Frick has erroneously been called the author by the
+Prosecution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A further document does not, in the opinion of the Defense,
+contain sufficient evidentiary value to be utilized in giving legal
+judgment. I have in mind Document 2513-PS, Exhibit Number 235,
+which contains an excerpt from a speech which Frick allegedly made
+in the year 1927. But the excerpt is taken from a provincial Social
+Democrat newspaper, a small paper opposed to Frick, the reporter
+thus having no authentic copy of the speech at his disposal—and
+we all know what mistakes and misunderstandings are apt to be
+contained in such short reports, the wording of which cannot be
+checked by the speaker himself. Thus this document, according to
+which Frick is said to have stated that history is written not only
+with the ballot, but with blood and iron, is not a reliable source.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution refers to dealings concerning the expropriation
+of land in order to extend the grounds of the Auschwitz Concentration
+Camp. The general domestic administration is competent for
+expropriation matters, and for this reason an official from the
+Ministry of the Interior was called into negotiations, who stated,
+however—Page 2 of the English translation of the document—that
+he was not authorized to dispose of the freehold of the land. Thus
+one cannot from this document either construe any political police
+<span class='pageno' title='186' id='Page_186'></span>
+activity on the part of the defendant, or an approval of the concentration
+camp system. Finally, in this connection the Prosecution
+states that the Defendant Frick personally visited the Oranienburg
+and Dachau Concentration Camps. The defendant does not deny the
+visit to Oranienburg in 1938, about which witness Hoess testified.
+At that time, as witness Hoess himself testified, the outward aspect
+of the camps was still generally that of a military training area. In
+any case, an official visitor to a camp at that time could not observe
+any indication of murder, ill-treatment, or similar crimes, so that
+such a visit is not a decisive argument for knowledge of crimes in
+the concentration camps.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the other hand, Frick never visited the Dachau Concentration
+Camp, contrary to the testimony of the witness Blaha. I refer to the
+testimony of Gillhuber in regard to this, who as the constant companion
+of Frick must have known about such a visit if it had taken
+place. I take the liberty of pointing out that the two other constant
+companions of Frick were also named by me as witnesses, but in
+agreement with the Prosecution were considered by the Tribunal
+as unnecessary on the grounds that one of the companions would be
+sufficient as a witness.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Before concluding this chapter, I still have to go into the matter
+of an allusion made by the Prosecution which described Frick at
+one time as the Chief of the Reich Security Main Office. I beg to
+refer to the testimony of the witness Ohlendorf, who stated to the
+Court that the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) was a creation
+of Himmler, who combined in this office his state police tasks and
+his functions as Reichsführer SS, with which Frick had no connection
+of any kind, much less any powers of command. The sole chief
+of this office was thus Himmler himself.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I must go further into the charges which are made against the
+Defendant Frick with respect to the persecution of members of the
+Jewish race. Frick did collaborate in legal measures, particularly
+the Nuremberg Laws, and in administrative measures which he
+regarded as an expression of a National Socialist racial policy. On
+the other hand there is no proof that Frick himself shared in or
+knew of the measures of physical extermination which, on Hitler’s
+direct orders, were carried out by Himmler and his organizations
+and kept absolutely secret from those who themselves had no part
+in these frightful events. Further, in his capacity as Minister of the
+Interior, the defendant is also accused of collaboration in the killing
+of the sick and insane. Hitler’s basic order is contained in Document
+630-PS, Exhibit Number USA-342. This document shows that Hitler
+did not give an order for this to any government office but to two
+separate individuals, namely, Bouhler and Dr. Brandt, so that this
+was quite outside the ministries’ authority. Moreover, contrary to
+<span class='pageno' title='187' id='Page_187'></span>
+all rules, Hitler did not sign this order himself in an official capacity
+as Führer and Reich Chancellor, but used private stationery with
+the heading “Adolf Hitler.” This shows, a fact that the witness
+Lammers has confirmed, that Hitler did not give an order for these
+measures to the Ministry of the Interior or some other government
+office, but to two of his Party comrades, and the Party emblem is
+the only sign on this stationery. On the other hand, the documents
+submitted by the Prosecution prove that complaints were made
+which also reached the Ministry of the Interior, but they do not
+prove that, in contradiction to Document 630-PS, Frick personally
+was contacted on the subject of measures for the killings, or that he
+could have prevented them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>After his dismissal as Minister of the Interior on 20 August 1943
+Frick was appointed Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia. Here
+he was given a task which from the start was definitely limited in
+its competence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I refer to Document 3443-PS, which is also included as USSR-60
+and under Number 29 in the Frick document book, and to 1366-PS,
+submitted by me as Exhibit Number Frick-5a. Furthermore, I refer
+to the testimony of the witness Lammers. The office of the Reich
+Protector was originally the unified representation of Reich authority
+in the Protectorate. In actual practice, however, its authority
+passed more and more to Frank, the Reich Protector’s State Secretary
+at that time.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With the appointment of Frick in August 1943 through a Führer
+decree which was not made public, the executive authority was
+now formally transferred to Frank, who from that date received
+the official title of “The German Minister of State in Bohemia and
+Moravia.” From that time on the Reich Protector retained essentially
+the right of representation and the right of pardon, improper
+use of which by Frick has been neither maintained nor proved by
+the Prosecution. On the other hand Frank, as “German Minister of
+State” according to the above-mentioned Führer decree, derived his
+executive authority directly from Hitler by whom he had been
+directly appointed, and from whom he received his instructions
+without Frick’s interpolation, Frick being in no way competent to
+exercise any influence thereon. Considering this state of affairs, the
+Defendant Frick cannot be incriminated by Document 3589-PS,
+Exhibit Number USA-720.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to the Prosecution’s charge that Frick, by his
+membership in certain organizations, is responsible for certain
+criminal actions. The SS was one of these organizations mentioned
+by the Prosecution, to which, however, Frick never belonged. Thus
+he was never a general in the SS, as stated by the Prosecution. I
+<span class='pageno' title='188' id='Page_188'></span>
+would assume this to be merely an error on the part of the Prosecution.
+In any case, the Prosecution did not submit any form of
+proof. Frick was likewise never a member of the SA, as shown—probably
+by mistake—in the chart indicating the defendants’
+membership in various organizations. For this too, there is no proof.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has further charged Frick with being the
+supreme head of the Gestapo, and therefore designated him as a
+member of this organization, with the argument that since the
+appointment of Himmler in 1936 as Chief of the German Police the
+Gestapo has been formally incorporated into the Reich Ministry of
+the Interior. But the Gestapo had its own chief in the person of
+Himmler, from whom alone it took orders, and Himmler’s formal
+subordination to the Minister of the Interior does not make the
+latter a member of that organization, which was exclusively under
+Himmler’s orders.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Frick is further charged, in his capacity as
+Reichsleiter, with membership in the Political Leadership Corps.
+My colleague, charged with the defense of this organization, will in
+his turn deal with the character of this organization. As to the
+Defendant Frick, I have only to point out that he held the formal
+position of a Reichsleiter in his role as chairman of the Reichstag
+faction of the NSDAP. The Reichstag itself having lost all political
+importance after 1933, which requires no further explanation, this
+position of Frick’s was in practice equally unimportant and could
+not be compared with the position of a Reichsleiter who administered
+important political departments.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally Frick, as Reich Minister, was a member of the Reich
+Cabinet. With regard to the character and the authority of this
+organization I also refer first of all to the statements, which are yet
+to follow, of my colleague who has been appointed defense counsel
+for this organization.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I refer here only to the testimony of Lammers and Gisevius, and
+further to the excerpt from the book of this latter witness, which
+I have submitted as Exhibit Number Frick-13 as evidence of the
+position and authority which the Reich Cabinet had with respect
+to the dictatorial practices of Hitler. From all this, the Defendant
+Frick appears as a person who certainly took action politically to
+bring Hitler to power, and who temporarily exercised a decisive
+influence on internal policy after his goal had been achieved. All
+his measures, however, had inner political aims; they were not
+intended to have anything to do with the foreign political aims of
+a war of aggression, much less with Crimes against Peace or against
+the rules of warfare—and, as also specified by Article 6 of the
+Charter, only in such cases would this Court have jurisdiction, as
+stated by the Prosecution itself.
+<span class='pageno' title='189' id='Page_189'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When Frick realized later that the policy was taking a course of
+which he could no longer approve, he tried to exert all his influence
+to bring about a change. But he had perforce to find out more and
+more clearly that Hitler would not listen to his remonstrances and
+complaints. On the contrary, he was forced to realize that these
+complaints destroyed Hitler’s confidence in him, and that he
+preferred to be advised by Himmler and similarly minded persons,
+so that finally, after the year 1937, Frick was no longer received
+by Hitler when he wanted to present complaints. Frick then gave
+up such hopeless attempts to bring about a change in the situation.
+Things would not have been altered by his resignation either, which
+the evidence has shown he repeatedly tendered in vain. Thus his
+tragedy lies in his entanglement in a system, in the first steps of
+which he had participated enthusiastically and the development of
+which he had imagined would be quite different. In any case, it
+appears important to me, in judging his personality and his actions,
+that even this presentation of evidence, which has gone on for
+months, has not given any proof of the personal participation of the
+defendant in any crime.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is not without reason that John Gunther in his book <span class='it'>Inside
+Europe</span>, which I have presented to the Tribunal as evidence, describes
+precisely the Defendant Frick as “the only honest Nazi.” At
+the same place Gunther goes on to call him a “bureaucrat through
+and through.” Hitler himself kept calling him the “pen pusher”
+(“Paragraphenschuster”) because Frick—which was typical of him—did
+not become acquainted with him at some public meeting, but in
+his office in the police department in Munich in the year 1923.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This man felt enthusiasm for Hitler’s suggestive power, so
+lacking in himself, a Hitler who with big words appealed to his
+heart, his honor, and his patriotism. It was Hitler who made him
+proud of being able to participate in the reconstruction of a German
+nation which, through powerful armed forces, was to be in a
+position to play a peaceful yet active role in world politics.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And it was again Hitler who knew how to make his program
+appear to the bourgeois official Frick as the only way to forestall
+Bolshevik rule in Germany—this and many more superficial truths,
+twisted statements, and devices of propaganda which fooled so many
+people who fell for the suggestive power of Hitler, not realizing
+in time that they had subordinated themselves to the hypnotic will
+of a criminal, who was prepared to overthrow the pillars of civilization
+for his aims and who finally would leave Germany a
+monstrous spiritual and material field of rubble, for the removal of
+which I pray that this Trial may also contribute through a sentence
+in accordance with law and justice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Marx.
+<span class='pageno' title='190' id='Page_190'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. HANNS MARX (Counsel for Defendant Streicher): Gentlemen
+of the Tribunal, Mr. President.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I begin the speech for the defense of Julius Streicher.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When in May of the past year the final battles of the greatest
+and most horrible war of all time came to an end, the Germans
+were slow to rise again from the stupor in which they had, for the
+most part, spent the last months of the war. Like all the peoples of
+Europe they had suffered unspeakably for years. The last months
+in particular, with their hail of bombs, had brought so much misery
+to both the country and the people that it almost surpassed human
+endurance. This terror was increased by the knowledge that the war
+was lost, and by the fear of the uncertain fate which the occupation
+period would bring. And when finally the period of first anxiety
+had passed, when the German people were slowly beginning to
+breathe again, paralyzing horror spread once more.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Through the press and radio, through newspapers and motion
+pictures, knowledge was spread of the atrocities which had taken
+place in the East, on the steppes and in the concentration camps.
+Germany learned that people, men of its own blood, had slaughtered
+millions upon millions of innocent Jewish people. Most people felt
+instinctively that these deeds would necessarily be the greatest of
+all the accusations the world had to level against Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The question of whether the German people in its totality had
+known and approved of these actions was, and is, the truly fateful
+question. It is the touchstone by which the decision must be made
+as to whether or not Germany will ever be able to return again as
+a nation with equal rights into the common cultural and spiritual
+sphere of the world. As in every case of guilt, there immediately
+arose here also the question as to who was responsible, and the
+search for that individual. Who had ordered these atrocities, who
+had carried them out, and how could such inconceivable things have
+happened at all, the like of which cannot be found in history even
+in the earliest days?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During all this asking and guessing, the news arrived that the
+former Gauleiter of Franconia and publisher of Der Stürmer, the
+present Defendant Julius Streicher, had fallen into the hands of the
+American troops. From the echo this news aroused in the press,
+which was exclusively directed and published by the occupying
+power, as well as in the radio news, it was to be gathered that the
+world was of the opinion that in the person of Julius Streicher not
+only had one of the numerous anti-Semitic propaganda agents of
+the Third Reich been taken prisoner, but in short Enemy Number
+One of the Jews.
+<span class='pageno' title='191' id='Page_191'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Throughout the rest of the world the opinion evidently
+prevailed that in the person of Julius Streicher not only the most
+active propaganda agent for the persecution and extermination of
+the Jews had been seized, but that he had also participated to the
+highest degree in carrying out these acts of extermination. He was
+said to have been, as one heard, not only the greatest hater of the
+Jews and the greatest preacher of extermination of the Jews, but
+also the person to whose direct influence one could trace back the
+extermination of European Jewry.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is only from this angle that it can be explained why the
+Defendant Streicher should sit here in the dock, together with the
+other defendants, among those chiefly responsible for the National
+Socialist system. For neither by virtue of his personality nor
+measured by his offices and positions does he belong to the circle
+of leaders of the NSDAP or to the Party’s decisive personalities.
+This view was probably also held in the beginning by the Prosecution,
+but was abandoned by them at an early stage, for the written
+Indictment already no longer charged the Defendant Streicher with
+any personal and direct part in the abominable mass murders.
+Rather did it state that there was less guilt with which he would
+be charged than in the case of any of the other defendants; only
+his propaganda, his activities by the written and spoken word, were
+made the subject of the accusation against him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As far as particulars are concerned, the Counts of the Indictment
+against the Defendant Streicher were summed up as follows:</p>
+
+<div class='listEntry'>
+<span class='listTag'>I.</span><p class='listPara'>Support of seizure of power and consolidation of power of the
+NSDAP after the latter’s entry into the Government.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='listEntry'>
+<span class='listTag'>II.</span><p class='listPara'>Preparation of aggressive wars by propaganda aimed at the
+persecution of the Jews.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='listEntry'>
+<span class='listTag'>III.</span><p class='listPara'>Intellectual and spiritual preparation and education to encourage
+hatred against the Jews,</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(a) in the German people,</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(b) in the German youth, and</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(c) in the active extermination of Jewry.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Without Julius Streicher, no Auschwitz, no Mauthausen, no
+Maidanek, no Lublin—thus the Indictment may be summed up
+briefly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As far as Count One of the Indictment is concerned, the defendant
+does not deny that as regards the Party’s later seizure of power
+he supported and promoted it with all his might from its earliest
+inception. His support went to the extent of placing a whole movement
+which he had built up personally in Franconia at the disposal
+<span class='pageno' title='192' id='Page_192'></span>
+of Adolf Hitler’s Party which was small after the first World War,
+as one can imagine, and limited to southern Bavaria only. Furthermore,
+after Hitler’s release from the fortress of Landsberg, he
+immediately joined him again and subsequently championed his
+ideas and goals with the greatest determination.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I think this is a good time to break off. The
+Tribunal will adjourn.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 12 July 1946 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;'>NOTES</p>
+
+<hr class='footnotemark'/>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f1'><a href='#r1'>[1]</a></span>
+
+Proceeding from this interpretation of the Charter there arises the need for
+a discussion on how the Indictment is to be construed with respect to the conspiracy
+charged therein. This construction is based on the legal concept of Anglo-American
+law which determines the responsibility of a plurality of persons
+differently and in a more far-reaching way than the German penal code, which
+contains the principles of law to which the accused were subject at the time when
+they committed the deed. The German penal code also provides that a person
+can be held responsible for offenses committed by others provided he participated
+in a common plan which was later carried out by others. But the German penal
+code places decisive weight on determining the extent to which the acts committed
+at a latter date correspond to the common plan. Since in the serious crimes which
+are being prosecuted before this Court the determination of the form of guilt in
+the original plan is necessary in order to permit punishment, later acts of commission
+by others can be charged against a defendant only to the extent to which
+they corresponded to arrangements to which the defendant deliberately agreed.
+A defendant who participated in certain plans cannot be held responsible for
+subsequent plans of a wider scope, or for acts of commission which far exceeded
+the original plans without his co-operation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Responsibility for subsequent plans and acts of commission can be established
+according to German law only if it can be proved that the defendant, without
+participating in those subsequent plans and actions, at the time of his original
+participation recognized and approved this manner of development and execution
+and, in other words, deliberately encouraged it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To revert to the example of the Prosecution:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He who participates’ in the plan for robbing a bank is responsible if this plan
+is carried out, even though he does not personally participate in the execution.
+But a person does not at the same time become guilty of premeditated murder if
+the active members subsequently and without his participation discuss murdering the
+guard or in case one of the members should shoot one of the guards without
+prior agreement, because the latter has caught him in the act.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nobody can be convicted of premeditated murder if he did not participate in a
+plan to commit murder, unless it can be proved that when he participated in the
+plan for robbing the bank such killing of a guard was already contemplated and
+that in spite of this he approved the plan for the bank robbery. In that case he,
+too, would have deliberately contributed to the murder. In other words, according
+to the provisions of German substantive criminal law there does not exist a liability
+for so-called excesses of the immediate culprits or for an unforeseen development
+of plans not originally conceived on such a wide scope, so that a more far-reaching
+interpretation in line with the concept of conspiracy in Anglo-American
+law, which at the time when the accused committed their deed did not exist,
+would violate the principle which prohibits retroactive application of penal laws.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' title='193' id='Page_193'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>ONE HUNDRED<br/> AND SEVENTY-SEVENTH DAY</span><br/> Friday, 12 July 1946</h1></div>
+
+<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn today at 4 o’clock.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. MARX: Mr. President, with the permission of the Tribunal
+I shall now continue with the presentation of the final plea for the
+Defendant Streicher. Yesterday I had come to the point where the
+individual accusations against Streicher had been summarized, and
+I had taken liberty of explaining that these accusations are subdivided
+into three different paragraphs:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>1. Support of seizure of power and consolidation of the power
+of the NSDAP after its entry into the Government.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>2. Preparation of aggressive wars by propaganda aimed at the
+persecution of the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>3. Intellectual and spiritual preparation and education of the
+German people and German youth to effect the destruction of Jewry
+and to encourage hatred of the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With respect to Count One of the Indictment, the defendant does
+not deny that, with regard to the Party’s later seizure of power,
+he supported and promoted it with all his might from the very
+beginning. His support went to the extent of a whole movement
+which he had built up personally in Franconia and which he put
+at the disposal of Adolf Hitler’s Party, which was quite small after
+the first World War and limited to Southern Bavaria only. Furthermore,
+after Hitler’s release from the fortress of Landsberg he
+immediately joined him again and subsequently championed his
+ideas and aims with the greatest determination.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Until 1933 the defendant’s activity was limited to propaganda
+for the NSDAP and its aims, particularly in the field of the Jewish
+question. Nothing criminal can be seen in this attitude of the
+defendant as such. Participation in a party within a state which
+allows such an opposition party can be regarded as criminal only
+if, first of all, the aims of such a party are objectively criminal and
+if, subjectively, a member of such a movement knows, approves of,
+and thereby supports, these criminal aims.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The foundation of the entire charges against all the defendants
+lies in this very fact that the NSDAP is accused of having had
+<span class='pageno' title='194' id='Page_194'></span>
+criminal aims from the very beginning. According to the assertion
+of the Prosecution, the members of this Party started out with the
+plan of subjugating the world, of annihilating foreign races, and of
+setting the German master race above the whole world. They are
+accused of having harbored the will to carry out these aims and
+plans from the very outset by means of aggressive wars, murder,
+and violence. If, therefore, the Defendant Streicher’s mere participation
+in the NSDAP and his support of it are to be ascribed to
+him as a crime, it must be proved that the Party had such plans
+and that the defendant knew and approved of them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The gentlemen who spoke before me have already demonstrated
+sufficiently that a conspiracy with such aims did not exist. Therefore
+I can save myself the trouble of making further statements on
+this subject and I can refer to what has already been set forth by
+the other defense counsel. I have only to deal with the point that
+the Defendant Streicher did not in any case participate in such a
+conspiracy, if the latter should be considered by the High Tribunal
+to have existed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The official Party Program strove to attain power in a legitimate
+way. The aims advocated therein cannot be considered as criminal.
+Thus, if such aims did actually exist, they could only—by the very
+nature of a conspiracy—be known in a restricted circle.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Party Program was not kept secret but was announced at
+a public meeting in Munich, so that not only the whole public of
+Germany but also that of the entire world could be informed about
+the aims of the Party. Therefore that element supplied by secret
+agreement towards a common aim, which is usually the characteristic
+sign of a conspiracy, is not present.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The evidence too, has shown nothing to the effect that already
+at that time there existed a plan for a war of revenge or aggression
+connected with the previous or simultaneous extermination of the
+Jews. If, nevertheless, a conspiracy should have existed, the latter
+would have confined itself to the restricted circle which revolved
+exclusively around Hitler. But the Defendant Streicher did not
+belong to that circle. None of the offices he occupied provides the
+least proof of that. As an old Party member he was just one among
+many thousands. As honorary Gauleiter, as honorary SA Obergruppenführer,
+he was also only an equal among equals. Thus one
+cannot find in any of the offices he held any connection or complicity
+with the innermost circle of the Party. It is also impossible
+to discern after the end of 1938 any personal relations with the
+leading men of the Movement, either with Hitler himself or with
+the Defendant Göring, or with Goebbels, Himmler, or Bormann.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution did not offer any evidence on this point, nor
+did the proceedings produce any proof to that effect. Of all the
+<span class='pageno' title='195' id='Page_195'></span>
+material presented during all these months of the Trial, nothing can
+be taken as even a shadow of proof that the Defendant Streicher
+was so closely connected with the supreme authority of the Party
+that he could have, or even must have, known its ultimate aims.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the Jewish question too the final aims of the Party—the
+effects of which were manifest in the concentration camps—were
+not, before the seizure of power and for several years after, formulated
+and determined as they appeared in the end. The Party
+Program itself provided for Jews to be placed under aliens’ law,
+and so the laws issued in the Third Reich followed this line. Only
+later on, it may be added, the program in this as in many other
+points became more radical and finally went haywire altogether
+under the influence of the war. But any proof that the Defendant
+Streicher knew other aims than those of the official Party Program
+has not been offered. Consequently it has not been proved that the
+defendant supported the seizure of power of the Party in cognizance
+of its criminal aims; and only on such a basis could a penal charge
+be brought against him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact that the defendant, as Gauleiter, further endeavored to
+increase and maintain the power of the Party after the seizure of
+power is not disputed by him. But here, too, the defendant’s conduct
+can only be considered punishable if he knew at that time the
+objectionable aims of the Party. As a matter of actual fact it must
+be said here that the Defendant Streicher, in contrast to almost all
+the other defendants, did not remain in his position until the end,
+not even until the war. Officially he was dismissed in 1940 from his
+position of Gauleiter, but actually and practically he had been
+without any influence and power for more than a year before that
+time. But as long as he could still work within the modest framework
+of his capacity of Gauleiter, no criminal plans of the NSDAP
+were recognizable. In any case not for anybody who, like the
+Defendant Streicher, was outside the close circle surrounding Adolf
+Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Count Two of the Indictment brought against the Defendant
+Streicher, namely, the persecution of Jews as a means of preparation
+for a war of aggression, can be included here. Up to 1937 the
+existence of a plan for a war of aggression was in no way recognizable.
+In any case, if Hitler had had any intentions in that direction,
+he did not allow them to be recognized from the outside. If, however,
+anybody had been taken into his confidence at that time, it would
+have been the leading men in politics and the Armed Forces, who
+belonged to the closest circle around him. To those, however, the
+Defendant Streicher by no means belonged. It is especially significant
+here that at the outbreak of the war Streicher was not even
+<span class='pageno' title='196' id='Page_196'></span>
+appointed Wehrkreiskommissar (Commissioner of Military Administrative
+Headquarters) of his Gau. The individual conferences from
+which the Prosecution derives the evidence for the planning of the
+war which broke out later in no case ever saw the Defendant Streicher
+as participant. His name does not appear anywhere, neither in
+any written decree, nor in any minutes. Consequently no proof has
+been offered that Streicher knew of such alleged plans for waging
+war. This does away with the accusation that he preached hatred
+against the Jews in order to facilitate thereby the conduct of the
+war planned for some later time.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection I should add that one of the main points in
+the program of the NSDAP was the slogan, “Get rid of Versailles!”
+The defendant adopted this point of the program which, however,
+does not mean he envisaged a repeal of the treaty by means of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even the former democratic German governments, in the course
+of their negotiations with their former opponents in the World War,
+stressed the fact at all times that the Versailles Treaty presented no
+proper basis for permanent world peace and particularly for
+economic adjustment. Not only in Germany but everywhere in the
+rest of the world clear-thinking economic circles were against the
+Versailles Treaty. We may point especially to the United States of
+America as an example of this.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Almost all political parties in Germany, irrespective of their
+other aims, agreed that the Treaty of Versailles should be revised.
+Neither was there any difference of opinion over the fact that such
+revision was possible only on the basis of an agreement. Even to
+consider any other possibility of solution would have seemed
+Utopian, for the German Reich lacked all military power. The
+NSDAP also strove, at any rate as far as could be seen from outward
+signs, to find a solution to the problem in this way. To support such
+an aim, however, cannot be looked upon as a violation of treaty
+obligations and, therefore, cannot be made the object of a charge
+against the defendant. No proof has been offered that he thought of
+warlike complications or that he desired them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to the matter of the defendant’s attitude in the
+Jewish question. He is accused of having incited and instigated for
+decades the persecution of the Jews and of being responsible for the
+final extermination of Europe’s Jewry. It is clear that this accusation
+constitutes the decisive point of the Indictment against Julius
+Streicher and perhaps the decisive point of the total Indictment, for
+in this connection the attitude of the German people to this question
+must be tried and judged as well. The Prosecution takes the point
+of view that there is just as little doubt as to the responsibility of
+the defendant as there is doubt about the guilt in which the German
+<span class='pageno' title='197' id='Page_197'></span>
+people are involved. As evidence of this the Prosecution put
+forward:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(a) The speeches by Streicher before and after the seizure of
+power, particularly one speech in April 1925, in which, he spoke
+about the extermination of the Jews. Herein, in the prosecutor’s
+opinion, is the first evidence to be seen regarding the final solution
+of the Jewish question planned by the Party, namely, the extermination
+of all Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(b) Active assertion of the person and authority of the defendant,
+especially on “Boycott Day,” 1 April 1933.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(c) Numerous articles published in the weekly paper, <span class='it'>Der
+Stürmer</span>, among them especially those dealing with ritual murder
+and with quotations from the Talmud. He is said to have knowingly
+and intentionally described therein the Jews as a criminal and
+inferior race and created and wished to create hatred of these people
+and the wish to exterminate them. The defendant’s reply to these
+points is as follows:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He states that he worked merely as a private writer. His aim
+was to enlighten the German people on the Jewish question as he
+saw it. His description of the Jews was merely intended to show
+them as a different and a foreign race and to make it clear that they
+live according to laws which are alien to the German conception.
+It was far from his intention to incite or inflame his circle of
+listeners and readers. Moreover, he always only propagated the idea
+that the Jews, because of their alien character, should be removed
+from German national and economic life and withdrawn from the
+close association with the body of the German people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Further, he always had in mind an international solution of the
+Jewish question; he did not favor a German or even European
+partial solution and rejected it. That was why he suggested, in an
+editorial in <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> in the year 1941, that the French island
+of Madagascar should be considered as a place of settlement for
+the Jews. Consequently, he did not see the final solution of the
+Jewish question in the physical extermination of the Jews but in
+their resettlement.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It cannot be the aim of the Defense to go into further details
+of the defendant’s actions as a writer and speaker, particularly with
+regard to <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> and his reply to the accusations raised
+against him. His ideology and convictions shall not be explained,
+excused, or defended, nor his manner of writing and speaking either.
+Examination and judgment in this respect rest with the Tribunal
+alone. This much only shall be said, that between the defendant’s
+actions and the expressions frequently employed by him there is an
+antithesis which cannot be bridged. It may be stated that the
+defendant never, when in charge of an anti-Jewish undertaking,
+<span class='pageno' title='198' id='Page_198'></span>
+had coercive measures used against the Jewish population, as might
+necessarily be expected of him if the accusations made by the
+Prosecution were true.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I consider it my duty as defense counsel to broach and examine
+the question as to whether the Defendant Streicher with his
+speeches, his actions and his publications, not only strove towards
+the result alleged by the Prosecution but actually attained it. The
+question therefore should be examined as to whether Streicher
+actually educated the German people to a degree of anti-Semitism
+which made it possible for the leadership of the German nation to
+commit such criminal acts as actually occurred. Furthermore, it
+must be examined whether the defendant filled German youth with
+hatred against the Jews to the extent that is charged by the Prosecution.
+Finally, the question must be examined whether Streicher
+actually was the man who spiritually and morally prepared the
+executive organs for their active persecution of the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At the beginning of this exposition it appears important to point
+out that a great many of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> articles, from which the
+Prosecution endeavors to deduce an incitement to stamp out and
+annihilate the Jews, were not written by Streicher himself, but by
+his collaborators, especially by the Deputy Gauleiter, Karl Holz,
+who was well known for extremely radical tendencies. Even though
+the Defendant Streicher bears formal responsibility for these
+articles, which responsibility he expressly assumed before the
+Tribunal, this aspect nevertheless appears very important for the
+extent of his criminal responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Further it may be said in this connection that, according to the
+unrefuted statement of the defendant, the most caustic articles were
+written in reply to articles and writings in the foreign press, which
+contained very radical suggestions for the destruction of the German
+nation—also, no doubt, due to the existing war psychosis.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Streicher—and this cannot be denied and shall
+not be defended—continually wrote articles in <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> and
+also made speeches in public which were strongly anti-Jewish and
+at least aimed at the elimination of Jewish influence in Germany.
+During the first years Streicher found a comparatively favorable
+soil for his anti-Jewish tendencies. The first World War ended with
+Germany’s defeat, but wide circles did not wish to admit the fact
+of a military victory of Germany’s opponents of that time. They
+attributed this defeat exclusively to a breakdown of national
+defense and resistance from within and depicted Jewry as being
+the main culprit for this inner undermining. In doing this they
+intentionally overlooked the mistakes which had been committed by
+the Government of that time before and during the war with respect
+to domestic and foreign policy, as well as the errors of strategy. A
+<span class='pageno' title='199' id='Page_199'></span>
+scapegoat was sought on which to lay the blame for the loss of the
+war, and it was thought to have been found in the Jews. Jealousy,
+envy, and also disregard of personal shortcomings accomplished the
+rest in influencing feelings unfavorably toward the Jewish population.
+In addition to that came the inflation and in the following
+years the economic depression with its steadily increasing misery
+which, as experience shows, makes any nation ripe for any form of
+radicalism.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On this ground and in this setting <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> developed. For
+these reasons it first met with a certain amount of interest and
+attracted a considerable number of readers. But even in the last
+years before the seizure of power it did not have great influence; its
+distribution hardly went beyond Nuremberg and its close vicinity.
+By means of attacks on persons known locally in Nuremberg and
+in other places, it managed to arouse in these localities, from time
+to time, a certain amount of interest and thereby to extend its circle
+of readers. Certain parts of the population were interested in the
+propagation of such scandal and for that reason subscribed to
+<span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But criminal action can only be seen here—and this is presumably
+the opinion of the Prosecution also—if this type of literary
+and oral activity led to criminal results. Now, was the German
+nation really filled with hatred for the Jews by <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> and by
+Streicher’s speeches in the sense and to the extent asserted by the
+Prosecution?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution submitted the evidence on this point in a very
+brief manner. It draws conclusions, but it has not produced actual
+proof. It alleges the existence of results, but cannot produce
+evidence for that assumption. The prosecutor has maintained that
+without Streicher’s incitements over a number of years the German
+people would not have sanctioned the persecution of the Jews and
+that Himmler would not have found among the German people anyone
+to carry out the measures for the extermination of the Jews.
+If, however, the Defendant Streicher is to be made legally responsible
+for this, then not only must it be proved that the incitement
+as such was actually carried through and results achieved in this
+direction; but—and this is the decisive point—conclusive proof must
+be produced that the deeds which were done can be traced back
+to that incitement. It is not the question of the result obtained
+which must primarily and irrefutably be proved but the causative
+connection between incitement and result. Now, how is the influence
+of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> upon the German people to be estimated,
+and what picture unfolds in the handling of the Jewish problem
+during the years between 1920 and 1944?
+<span class='pageno' title='200' id='Page_200'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is easy to recognize here three stages of development. The
+first period comprises the time of the defendant’s activity between
+1922 and 1933; the second that between 1933 and 1 September 1939,
+or February 1940; the third, the time from 1940 to the collapse.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With regard to the first period, it would show a considerable
+lack of appreciation of the tendencies which had already existed in
+Germany for a long time and thereby a completely groundless
+exaggeration of Streicher’s influence, if no mention were made of
+the fact that long before Streicher there was already a certain
+amount of anti-Semitism in Germany. For instance a certain
+Theodor Fritsch had touched on the Jewish question in his journal
+<span class='it'>Der Hammer</span> long before Streicher’s time, referring especially to
+the alleged menace offered by the immigration of Jewish elements
+from the East, which might overflow the country and acquire too
+much control in it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Immediately after the end of the first World War the so-called
+“German National Protective and Defensive League” (Deutsch-Völkischer
+Schutz- und Trutzbund) appeared on the scene, which in
+contrast to <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> and the Movement brought into being by
+Streicher, extended over the whole of Germany, setting as its aim
+the repression of Jewish influence. Anti-Semitic groups existed in
+the South as well as in the North long before Streicher. In comparison
+with these large-scale efforts, <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> could only have
+a regional importance. This alone explains why its influence was
+never at any time or in any place of great importance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is a decisive fact, however, that the German nation in its
+totality did not let itself be influenced by all these groups either in
+its business relations or in its attitude towards Jewry and that even
+during the last years before the NSDAP came to power no violent
+actions against the Jews were committed anywhere by the people.
+However, when towards the end of the second decade after the first
+World War a considerable increase of the NSDAP became noticeable,
+this was not due to anti-Semitic reasons but to the fact that
+the prevailing confusion in the various parties had been unable to
+point to a way out of the ever-increasing economic misery. The
+call for a strong man became ever more urgent. The conviction
+became more and more firmly rooted among the broad masses that
+only a personality who was not dependent on the change of majorities
+would be able to master the situation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The NSDAP knew how to exploit this general trend for its own
+ends and to win over the nation, sunk in despair, by making
+promises in all directions. But never did the masses think, when
+electing the NSDAP at that time, that its program would produce
+developments as we have witnessed.
+<span class='pageno' title='201' id='Page_201'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With the seizure of power by the NSDAP in 1933, the second
+epoch was introduced. The power of the State was exclusively in
+the hands of the Party and nobody could have prevented the use of
+violence against the Jewish population. Now would have been just
+the right moment for the Defendant Streicher to put into effect the
+baiting the Prosecution has alleged. If by that time wide circles of
+the population, or at least the veteran members of the NSDAP, had
+been trained to be radical Jew haters, as stated by the Prosecution,
+acts of violence against the Jewish population would necessarily
+have taken place on a greater scale due to that feeling of hatred.
+Pogroms on the largest scale would have been the natural result of
+a truly anti-Semitic attitude of the people. But nothing like that
+happened. Apart from some minor incidents, evidently caused by
+local or personal conditions, no attacks on Jews or their property
+took place anywhere. It is quite clear that a feeling of hatred for
+the Jewish people did not prevail anywhere at least up to 1933,
+and the charge brought by the Prosecution against the defendant
+that ever since the very outset of his fight he successfully educated
+the German people to hate the Jews can thus be dropped.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The year of the seizure of power by the NSDAP also put
+<span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> to a decisive test. Had <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> been considered
+by the broad masses of the German people as the authoritative
+champion against the Jews and therefore indispensable for that
+fight, an unusually large increase in the circulation would have
+followed. No such interest was, however, shown. On the contrary,
+even in Party circles demands were made that <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> should
+be discontinued entirely; or at least that its illustrations, style, and
+tone should be altered. It became more and more clear that the
+already small interest in Streicher’s Jewish policy was steadily
+declining. It must be added that with the seizure of power by the
+Party the total press apparatus came under the control of the Party,
+which immediately undertook to co-ordinate the press, that is, to
+direct it from a central office in the spirit of the National Socialist
+policy and ideology. This was done through the Minister of Propaganda
+and the Reich Press Chief via the official “National Socialist
+Correspondence.” Particularly Dr. Goebbels, the Minister of Propaganda,
+described by various witnesses such as Göring, Schirach,
+Neurath, and others as the most bitter advocate of the anti-Semitic
+trend in the Government, is said to have given each week to the
+entire German press several anti-Jewish leaders, which were printed
+by more than 3,000 dailies and illustrated papers. If in addition we
+take into account that Dr. Goebbels was making broadcasts of an
+anti-Semitic nature, we need no further explanations for the fact
+that the interest in a one-sided anti-Semitic journal should diminish
+and that is what actually happened.
+<span class='pageno' title='202' id='Page_202'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is particularly significant that at that time it had been
+repeatedly suggested that <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> should be suppressed altogether.
+This is brought out clearly in the testimony given by
+Fritzsche, on 27 June 1946, who stated in addition that neither
+Streicher nor <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> had any influence in the Ministry of
+Propaganda and that he was considered so to speak as nonexistent.
+It may have been for the same reason that <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> was not even
+declared a press organ of the NSDAP and was not even entitled to
+show the Party symbol. It was looked upon by the Party and
+State administration, in contrast to all papers which were considered
+to be of any importance, as a private paper belonging to a
+private writer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The firm which published <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>, and which belonged at
+that time to a certain Härdel, was not inclined, however, to accept
+so quietly the dwindling of its circle of readers, for it was now
+aided by the fact that Streicher had become the highest leader in
+Franconia; and it knew how to make the most of this circumstance.
+Already at that time pressure was exerted on many sections of the
+population to prove their loyal political attitude and trustworthiness
+by subscribing to <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>. The witness Fritzsche also has
+alluded to this circumstance, stating that many Germans only
+decided to subscribe to <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> because they thought it would
+be a means of paving the way for their intended membership in
+the Party.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>So as not to give a false impression of the circulation figures of
+<span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> during the years between 1923 and 1933, the following
+analysis will show the different stages of its development.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the years 1923 to 1933 <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> was able to increase its
+circulation from some 3,000 to some 10,000 copies, and this in turn
+went up to some 20,000 shortly before the seizure of power. On the
+average, however, between 1923 and 1931 the circulation was only
+some 6,000 copies. Following the seizure of power, by the end of
+1934 it had reached an average of some 28,000 copies. It was not
+until 1935 that <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> became the property of the Defendant
+Streicher who, according to his statement, bought it from the widow
+of the previous owner for 40,000 RM—a not very considerable sum.
+From 1935 on the management of the business was taken over by
+an expert, who succeeded by clever canvassing in increasing the
+circulation to well over 200,000 copies; and this figure was later
+increased still further until it more than doubled. The relatively
+low circulation figures for <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> up to the beginning of 1935
+show that, despite the Party’s rise to power, popular interest in
+<span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> existed only to a small extent. The extraordinary
+increase in the circulation which began in 1935 is to be traced to the
+adroit canvassing methods already mentioned which were carried
+<span class='pageno' title='203' id='Page_203'></span>
+out by the new director Fink. The use of the Labor Front, as
+explained by the proclamation of Dr. Ley in Number 36 of
+<span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>, 1935—which copy, Mr. President, I have taken the
+liberty of submitting as an exhibit—and the acquisition thereby of
+many thousands of forced subscribers must be ascribed to the
+personal relations of the manager Fink with Dr. Ley.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In that connection I further refer to a quotation from the
+<span class='it'>Pariser Tageblatt</span> of 29 March 1935 reproduced in <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> of
+May 1935. Here, too, it is stated that the increase of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer’s</span>
+circulation cannot be ascribed to the desire of the German people
+for such kind of spiritual food. It is neither presumable nor
+probable in any way that the compulsory subscription to <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>,
+forced on the members of the Labor Front in such a manner, could
+have actually turned subscribers into readers of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> and
+followers of its line of thought. On the contrary, it is known that
+bundles of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> in their original wrappings were stored in
+cellars and attics and that they were brought to light again only
+when the paper shortage became more acute.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When, therefore, the Defendant Streicher wrote in his paper in
+1935—Document Number GB-169—that the 15 years’ work of
+enlightenment of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> had already attracted to National
+Socialism an army of a million of “enlightened” members, he
+claimed a success for which there was no foundation whatsoever.
+The men and women who joined the Party after 1933 did not apply
+for membership as a result of the so-called enlightenment work of
+<span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> but either because they believed the Party’s promises
+and hoped to derive advantages from it or because by belonging
+to the Party they wanted, as the witness Severing expressed it, to
+insure for themselves immunity from political persecution. The
+sympathy for the Party and its leadership very soon decreased in
+the most marked manner. Thus the Defendant Streicher, too, lost
+authority and influence to an ever-increasing extent even in his
+own district of Franconia, at least from 1937 on. The reasons for
+this are sufficiently known.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Toward the end of 1938 he saw himself deprived of practically
+all political influence, even in his own district. The controversy
+between him and Göring ended with the victory of the latter. Hitler,
+when pressed to do so by the Defendant Göring, had dropped
+Streicher completely, as the Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe
+at that time was naturally more important and far more influential
+than the Gauleiter, Streicher. The defendant even had to submit
+to Aryanization as carried out in the district of Franconia with its
+correctness being checked by a special commission sent by Göring.
+In the course of the year 1939 Streicher was completely pushed
+aside and was even forbidden to speak in public. At the outbreak
+<span class='pageno' title='204' id='Page_204'></span>
+of the war, in contrast to all other Gauleiter, he was not even
+appointed to the position of Wehrkreiskommissar of his own district.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During the last phase, in the war years, the Defendant Streicher
+had no political influence whatsoever. As from February 1940 he
+was relieved of his position as a Gauleiter and lived on his estate
+in Pleikershof, cut off from all connections. Even Party members
+were forbidden to visit him. Since the end of 1938 he had no connections
+whatsoever with Hitler, by whom he had been completely
+cast off from that time on.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In what way now did <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> exert any influence during
+the war period? It can be said that during the war <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> no
+longer attracted any attention worth mentioning. The gravity of
+the times, the anxiety for relatives on the battlefield, the battles at
+the front, and finally the heavy air attacks completely diverted the
+German people’s interest from questions dealt with in <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>.
+The people were weary of the continuous repetition of the same
+assertions. The best proof of how little <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> was desired
+as reading matter can be seen in the fact that in restaurants and
+cafés <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> was always available for perusal, whereas other
+papers and magazines were permanently being read. The circulation
+figures decreased steadily and unceasingly in those years.
+Certainly the influence of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> in the political sphere no
+longer amounted to anything.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During the periods mentioned <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> was rejected by
+large circles of the population from the very outset. Its crude style,
+its often objectionable illustrations, and its one-sidedness aroused
+widespread displeasure. There can be no question of any influence
+being exercised by <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> upon the German people or even
+the Party. Although the German people for years had been deluged
+with Nazi propaganda, or rather because of that very fact, a journal
+such as <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> could exert no influence upon its inner attitude.
+Had the German people—as maintained by the Prosecution—actually
+been saturated with the spirit of fanatical racial hatred, other
+factors certainly would have been far more responsible for it than
+<span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> and would have contributed far more essentially to a
+hostile attitude towards the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But nothing of such nature can be established. The general
+attitude of the German people was not anti-Semitic, at any rate,
+not in such a way or to such a degree that they would have desired,
+or approved of, the physical extermination of the Jews. Even official
+Party propaganda with regard to the Jewish problem had exerted
+no influence upon the broad masses of the German people, neither
+had it educated them in the direction desired by the State leadership.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This is shown by the fact that it was necessary to issue a number
+of legal decrees in order to segregate the German population from
+<span class='pageno' title='205' id='Page_205'></span>
+the Jewish. The first example of this is the so-called Law for the
+Protection of German Blood and German Honor of September 1935,
+by the provisions of which any racial intermingling of German
+people with the Jewish population was subject to the death penalty.
+The passing of such laws would not have been necessary if the
+German people had been predisposed to an anti-Semitic attitude,
+for they would then of their own accord have segregated themselves
+from the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The law for the elimination of the Jews from German economic
+life, promulgated in November 1938, was along the same lines. In a
+people hostile towards the Jews, any trade with Jewish circles
+would have necessarily ceased and their business would have
+automatically come to a standstill. Yet in fact the intervention of
+the State was needed to eliminate Jewry from economic life.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same conclusion can be drawn from the reaction of the
+greater part of the German populace to the demonstrations carried
+out against the Jews during the night of 9-10 November 1938.
+It is proved that these acts of violence were not committed spontaneously
+by the German people but that they were organized and
+executed with the aid of the State and Party apparatus upon instructions
+of Dr. Goebbels in Berlin. The result and the effect of
+these State-directed demonstrations—which in a cynical way were
+depicted for their effect abroad as an expression of the indignation
+of the German people at the assassination of the Secretary of the
+Embassy in Paris, Vom Rath—were different from that visualized by
+the instigators of this demonstration.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These acts of violence and excesses based upon the lowest
+instincts found unanimous condemnation, even in the circles of the
+Party and its leadership. Instead of creating hostility towards the
+Jewish population they roused pity and compassion for their fate.
+Hardly any other measure taken by the NSDAP was ever rejected
+so generally. The effect upon the public was so marked that the
+Defendant Streicher in his capacity as Gauleiter found it necessary
+in an address in Nuremberg to give a warning against exaggerated
+sympathy for the Jews. According to his statement he did not do
+this because he approved of these measures but only in order to
+strengthen by his influence the impaired prestige of the Party.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Previously, as appears from the testimony of the witness Fritz
+Herrwerth examined here, he refused SA Obergruppenführer Von
+Obernitz’s request to take part personally in the demonstration
+planned and called it useless and prejudicial. He publicly expressed
+this point of view later also, during a meeting of the League of
+Jurists at Nuremberg. In doing so he risked placing himself in open
+opposition to the official policy of the State.
+<span class='pageno' title='206' id='Page_206'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All these facts show that despite the anti-Jewish propaganda
+carried on by the Government, actual hostility against the Jewish
+population did not exist among the people themselves. Thus it is as
+good as proved that neither Streicher’s publications in <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>
+nor his speeches incited the German people in the sense maintained
+by the Prosecution. Therefore the general attitude of the German
+nation provides no proof of incitement to hatred of the Jews having
+been successfully carried out by the Defendant Streicher and leading
+to criminal results. The Prosecution, however, has further supported
+its accusation by the specific assertion that only a nation educated
+to absolute hatred of Jews by men like the defendant could approve
+of such measures as the mass extermination of Jews. Thereby the
+charge is made against the whole of the German people that they
+knew about the extermination of the Jews and approved of it; the
+severity and consequences of such a charge on the whole future of
+the German nation is impossible to estimate.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But did the German nation really approve of these measures? A
+fact can only be approved of if it is known. Therefore should this
+assertion of the Prosecution be considered as proved, then logically
+it must also be considered as proved that the German nation
+actually had knowledge of these occurrences. However, evidence
+in this respect has shown that Reichsführer SS Himmler, who was
+entrusted by Hitler with the mass assassinations, and his close
+collaborators shrouded all these events in a veil of deepest secrecy.
+By threatening with the most severe punishments any violations of
+the rule of absolute silence which was imposed, they managed to
+lower before the events in the East and in the extermination camps
+an iron curtain which hermetically sealed off those facts from the
+public.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler and Himmler prevented even the corps of the highest
+leaders of the Party and State from gaining any insight and information.
+Hitler did not hesitate to give false information to even
+his closest collaborators, like Reich Minister Dr. Lammers, who was
+heard here as a witness, and to make him believe that the removal
+of the European Jews to the East meant their settlement in the
+Eastern Territories but by no means their extermination. However
+much the statements of the defendants may diverge on many points,
+in this connection they all agree so completely with one another
+and with the statements of other witnesses that the veracity of their
+testimonies simply cannot be questioned. If it was not possible for
+even the Defendant Frank in his capacity as Governor General of
+Poland to get through to Auschwitz, because without Hitler’s special
+consent even he was denied entrance, then this fact speaks for itself.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If even the leading personalities of the Third Reich, with the
+exception of a very small circle, were not informed and if even they
+<span class='pageno' title='207' id='Page_207'></span>
+had at best very vague information, then how could the general
+public have known about it? Under these circumstances the possibilities
+for finding out what was going on in the camps were
+extremely slight.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the majority of the people, foreign news did not exist as a
+source of information. Listening to foreign radio stations was
+punishable with the heaviest penalties and therefore did not take
+place. And if it did, the news broadcast by foreign radio stations
+concerning events in the East, although, or rather because, it corresponded
+to facts, was so crass, so horrible beyond any human
+understanding, that it was bound to appear to any normal individual,
+as in fact it did, as intentional propaganda. Germany could
+only gain factual knowledge of the extermination measures against
+the Jews from people who either were working in the camps
+themselves or came in contact with the camps or their inmates or
+from former concentration camp inmates.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There is no need to explain that members of the camp personnel
+who were concerned with these happenings kept silent, not only
+because they were under stringent orders to do so, but also in their
+own interest. Furthermore, it is known that Himmler had threatened
+the death penalty for information from the camps and for spreading
+news about the camps and that not only the actual culprit but also
+his relatives were threatened with this punishment. Finally, it is
+known that the extermination camps themselves were so hermetically
+sealed off from any contact with the world that nothing concerning
+the events which took place in them could penetrate to the
+public.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The prisoners in the camps who came into contact with fellow-workers
+in their work kept silent because they had to. People who
+came to the camps were also under the threat of this punishment
+insofar as they could obtain any insight into things at all, which
+was all but impossible in the extermination camps. From these
+sources, therefore, no knowledge could come for the German people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But the order for absolute silence was compulsory to a still
+greater measure for every concentration camp inmate who had been
+released. Hardly anybody ever came back to life from the actual
+murder camps; but if, once in a while, a man or woman was
+released, in addition to the other threatened punishments the threat
+of being sent back to the camp hung over them if they violated the
+order for silence. And this renewed detention would have meant
+gruesome death.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was therefore nearly impossible to learn from released concentration
+camp prisoners positive facts concerning the occurrences
+in the camps. If this was the case with regard to normal concentration
+camps in Germany, it applied in a still greater measure to
+<span class='pageno' title='208' id='Page_208'></span>
+the extermination camps. Every lawyer who, as I did, defended
+people before detention in a concentration camp and who was
+visited by them again after their release, will be able to confirm
+that it was not possible, even in such a position of trust and under
+the protection of professional legal secrecy, to get former concentration
+camp inmates to talk.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If men such as Severing, who testified here—a Social Democrat
+of long standing, who was highly trusted by his party comrades and
+who was, because of this, in touch with many former concentration
+camp inmates—came to know of the real facts connected with the
+extermination of the Jews only very late and even then to a very
+restricted extent, then such considerations must apply even more to
+any normal German.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It can be derived with absolute certainty from these facts that
+the leaders of the State, that Hitler and Himmler, wanted under all
+circumstances to keep secret the extermination of the Jews; and
+this forms the base for another argument—in my opinion, a cogent
+one—against the anti-Semitism of the German people asserted by
+the Prosecution. If the German people had indeed been filled with
+such hatred of Jewry as the Prosecution affirms, then such rigorous
+methods for secrecy would have been superfluous.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If Hitler had been convinced that the German nation saw in the
+Jews its principal enemy, that it approved of and desired the extermination
+of Jewry, then he would obviously have published the
+planned and also the effected extermination of this very enemy. As
+a sign of the “total war” constantly propagandized by Hitler and
+Goebbels, there would indeed have been no better means to
+strengthen the faith in victory and the will of the people to fight
+than the information that Germany’s principal enemy, these very
+Jews, had already been annihilated.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>So unscrupulous a propagandist as Goebbels certainly would not
+have failed to use such a striking argument if he could have based
+it on the necessary presupposition, that is, the German people’s
+absolute determination to exterminate the Jews. However, the “final
+solution” of the Jewish question had by all possible means to be
+kept secret even from the German people who had for years been
+subjected to the heaviest pressure by the Gestapo. Even leading
+men in the State and the Party were not allowed to be told of it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler and Himmler were evidently themselves convinced that
+even in the midst of a total war, and after decades of education and
+gagging by National Socialism, the German nation—and above all
+its Armed Forces—would have reacted most violently on the
+publication of such a policy against the Jews. The policy of secrecy
+followed here cannot be explained by any considerations of the
+<span class='pageno' title='209' id='Page_209'></span>
+enemy nations. In the years 1942 and 1943 the whole world was
+already engaged in a bitter war against National Socialist Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>An intensification of this struggle seemed hardly possible, at any
+rate not by the mere publishing of facts which had long since
+become known abroad. Apart from this, considerations of making
+a still worse impression on the enemy countries could hardly
+influence men such as Hitler, Goebbels, and Himmler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If they had expected to achieve even the slightest tangible results
+by proclaiming to the German people the extermination of the Jews,
+they would certainly not have omitted to proclaim it. On the contrary,
+they would have tried in every way to strengthen by this
+means the German people’s faith in victory. The fact that they did
+not do this is the best proof that even they did not consider the
+German people radically anti-Semitic, and it is also the best proof
+that there can be no question of such anti-Semitism on the part of
+the German people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I may therefore sum up by saying that all this stands in contradiction
+to the Prosecution’s assertion that the Defendant Streicher
+brought up the German people to hate the Jews to an extent which
+made them approve of the extermination of Jewry. Therefore, even
+if the defendant by means of his proclamations had aimed at achieving
+such an end he was not successful.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection, light must also be thrown upon the part attributed
+by the Prosecution to the Defendant Streicher, namely that
+he had educated German youth in the spirit of anti-Semitism and
+had inculcated the poison of anti-Semitism so deeply into their
+hearts that these pernicious effects would be felt long after his
+death.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The main reproach made against the defendant in this connection
+is based on the fact that young people, as a result of Streicher’s
+education in hatred toward the Jews, are supposed to have been
+ready to commit crimes against Jews which otherwise they would
+not have committed, and that youth thus educated might be expected
+to perpetrate such crimes in the future too. Here the Prosecution
+relies mainly on the juvenile literature published by Der
+Stürmer and some announcements addressed to youth which appeared
+in this paper.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Far be it from me to gloss over these products or to defend them.
+Evaluation of them can and must be left to the Tribunal. In accordance
+with the basic principle of the Defense, the only question to be
+taken up here will be whether or not the defendant in any way
+influenced the education of youth in a manner to promote criminal
+hatred of Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As for the books which have been mentioned here, it must be
+said that German youth scarcely knew of their existence—much
+<span class='pageno' title='210' id='Page_210'></span>
+less did they read them. No evidence has been produced in support
+of the Prosecution’s assumption to the contrary. The healthy
+common sense of German youth refused such stuff. German boys
+and girls preferred other reading material. It may be emphasized
+in this connection that neither the text nor the illustrations in these
+books could attract youth in any way. They were, on the contrary,
+bound to be shunned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Of special importance in regard to this point is the fact that,
+Defendant Baldur von Schirach, the man responsible for educating
+the whole body of German youth, testified under oath that the afore-mentioned
+juvenile books published by this company were not circulated
+by the Hitler Youth Leadership and did not find a circle
+of readers among the Hitler Youth. The witness made the same
+assertions in regard to <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>. One of his closest co-workers,
+the witness Lauterbacher, stated in this connection that <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>
+was actually banned for the Hitler Youth by the Defendant
+Von Schirach. It is clear that the very style and illustrations of <span class='it'>Der
+Stürmer</span> were ill-adapted to attract the interest of young persons
+or to offer them ethical support. The step taken by the Reich Youth
+Leadership is therefore quite understandable.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Although some of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> articles submitted by the Prosecution
+seem to indicate that <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> was read in youth circles
+and produced a certain effect there, it must be borne in mind that
+these were typical commissioned articles, that is, commissioned for
+propaganda purposes. There is no evidence whatsoever to support
+the Prosecution’s assertion that German youth harbored criminal
+hate toward Jews. Therefore, neither the German people nor its
+youth ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Marx, perhaps this would be a convenient
+time to break off.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. MARX: One might now be tempted to assume that <span class='it'>Der
+Stürmer</span> exercised a particularly strong influence upon the Party
+organizations, the SA and SS; but this was not the case either. The
+SA, the largest mass organization of the Party, rejected <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>
+just as did the mass of the people. Its publications were <span class='it'>Der SA-Führer</span>
+and <span class='it'>Die SA</span>. The mass of the SA took these as the foundation
+of their ideology. These publications do not contain even one
+article from the pen of the Defendant Streicher. If the latter had
+really been the man the Prosecution believes him to be, the most
+authoritative and influential propagandist of anti-Semitism, he
+would of necessity have been called upon to collaborate in these
+publications, which were issued to instruct the SA on the Jewish
+<span class='pageno' title='211' id='Page_211'></span>
+question. A publication intended to provide ideological instruction
+could never have dispensed with the collaboration of such a man.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact that not one word by Julius Streicher himself ever
+appeared in these papers demonstrates afresh that the picture drawn
+of him by the Prosecution does not correspond in any way with the
+actual facts. The Defendant Streicher could gain no influence over
+the SA through his paper and the columns of <span class='it'>Der SA-Führer</span> and
+<span class='it'>Die SA</span> were closed to him. Even the highest SA leaders refused to
+advocate his ideas. The SA Deputy Chief of Staff, SA Obergruppenführer
+Jüttner, testifying before the commission on 21 May 1946,
+made the following statement in this connection:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“At a leader conference, the former SA Chief of Staff, Lutze,
+stated that he did not want propaganda for <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> in
+the SA. In certain groups <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> was even prohibited.
+The contents of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> disgusted and repelled most of
+the SA men. The policy of the SA with regard to the Jewish
+question was in no way directed at the extermination of the
+Jews; it aimed only at preventing a large-scale immigration
+of Jews from the East.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='noindent'>The ideology of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> was thus rejected on principle by the
+individual SA man as well as by the SA leaders, and there is therefore
+no question of Streicher’s having influenced the SA.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Not only was the Defendant Streicher not asked to collaborate
+in SA publications, but his articles did not appear in any other
+newspapers and publications. He was given no chance of contributing
+either to the <span class='it'>Völkischer Beobachter</span> or to other leading organs
+of the German press, although the Propaganda Ministry intended
+enlightenment on the Jewish question to form one of the noblest
+tasks of the German press.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Streicher was given no opportunity, either by the
+State leadership or by the Propaganda Ministry, of impressing his
+ideas upon a wider circle. The Defendant Fritzsche, the man who
+shared the decisive authority in the Propaganda Ministry, testified
+that Streicher never exerted any influence upon propaganda and
+that he was completely disregarded. In particular, he was not
+entrusted with radio talks, although talks given over the radio
+would have had much greater effect on the masses than an article
+in <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>, which necessarily reached only a limited circle.
+The fact that even the official propaganda of the Third Reich made
+no use of the Defendant Streicher makes it clear that no results
+could be expected from his activities, and that, in fact, he had no
+influence at all. The official leaders of the German State recognized
+Streicher for what he actually was, the insignificant publisher of an
+entirely insignificant weekly. It must be stressed once more as
+clearly as possible that the fundamental attitude of the German
+<span class='pageno' title='212' id='Page_212'></span>
+people was no more radically anti-Semitic than that of German
+youth or the Party organizations. Success in instigating and inciting
+to criminal anti-Semitism is, therefore, not proven.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to the last and decisive part of the accusation, that
+is, to the examination of the question: Who were the chief persons
+responsible for the orders given for the mass-extermination of
+Jewry; how was it possible that men could be found who were ready
+to execute these orders; and whether without the influence of the
+Defendant Streicher, such orders would not have been given or
+executed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The main person responsible for the final solution of the Jewish
+question—the extermination of Jewry in Europe—is without doubt
+Hitler himself. Though this greatest of all trials in world history
+suffers from the fact that the chief offenders are not sitting in the
+dock, because they are either dead or not to be found, the facts
+ascertained have nevertheless resulted in cogent conclusions concerning
+the actual responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It can be considered as proved beyond any doubt that Hitler
+was a man of unique and even demoniacal brutality and ruthlessness
+who, in addition, later lost all sense of proportion and all self-control.
+The fact that his chief characteristic was ruthless brutality
+became apparent for the first time in its force when the so-called
+Röhm Putsch was suppressed in June 1934. On this occasion Hitler
+did not hesitate to have his oldest fellow combatants shot without
+any kind of trial. His unrestrained radicalism was further revealed
+in the way in which the war with Poland was conducted. He
+ordered the ruthless extermination of leading Polish circles merely
+because he feared an antagonistic attitude toward Germany on their
+part. The orders which he gave at the beginning of the Russian
+campaign were still more drastic. At that time he already ordered
+partial operations for the extermination of Jewry:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These examples show beyond doubt that respect for any principle
+of humanity was alien to this man. Furthermore the proceedings,
+by the depositions of all the defendants, have clearly
+established the fact that in basic decisions Hitler was not open to
+any outside influence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler’s basic attitude toward the Jewish question is well known.
+He had already become an anti-Semite during the time he spent in
+Vienna in the years before the first World War. There is, however,
+no actual proof that Hitler from the very beginning had in mind
+such a radical solution of the Jewish question as was finally effected
+in the annihilation of European Jewry. When the Prosecution
+declares that from the book <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span> a direct road leads to the
+crematories of Mauthausen and Auschwitz, this is only an assumption;
+and no evidence for it has been given. The evidence rather
+<span class='pageno' title='213' id='Page_213'></span>
+suggests the fact that Hitler also wanted to see the Jewish problem
+in Germany solved by way of emigration. This thought, as well as the
+position of the Jewish part of the population under the laws governing
+aliens, formed the official State policy of the Third Reich. Many
+of the leading anti-Semites considered the Jewish question as settled
+after the laws of 1935 had been promulgated. The Defendant
+Streicher shared this opinion. The stiffening of Hitler’s attitude to
+the Jewish question cannot be traced back beyond the end of 1938
+or the beginning of 1939. Only then did it become apparent that in
+case of war—which he believed was propagated by the Jews—he
+was planning a different solution. In his Reichstag speech on
+30 January 1939 he predicted the extermination of Jewry should a
+second World War be let loose against Germany. He expressed the
+same ideas in a speech made in February 1942, on the occasion of
+the 20th anniversary of the day on which the Party was founded.
+And, finally, his testament, too, confirms his exclusive responsibility
+for the murdering of European Jewry as a whole.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Though Hitler had adopted an increasingly implacable attitude
+on the Jewish question ever since the beginning of the war, there
+is nothing to show that he visualized the extermination of the Jews
+in the early stages of the war. His final resolution to this effect was
+undoubtedly formed when Hitler, probably as early as 1942, saw
+that it was impossible to secure a victory for Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It can be assumed almost with certainty that the decision to
+exterminate the Jews originated—as did almost all of Hitler’s
+plans—exclusively with himself. It cannot be ascertained with certainty
+how far others who were closely attached to Hitler brought
+their influence to bear on him. If such influence did exist, it can
+only have come from Himmler, Bormann, and Goebbels. It can at
+least be stated beyond any doubt that during the decisive period
+from September 1939 to October 1942 Streicher did not influence
+him, nor, under the circumstances, could he have done so. At that
+time Streicher was living—deprived of all his offices and completely
+left in the cold—at his farm at Pleikershof. He had no connection
+with Hitler either personally or by correspondence. This has been
+proved beyond all doubt by the statements made by the witnesses
+Fritz Herrwerth and Adele Streicher, and by the statement under
+oath of the defendant himself. It cannot, however, be maintained in
+earnest that his reading of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> moved Hitler to give orders
+for wholesale murder. This should make it clear that the Defendant
+Streicher had no influence whatever on either the man who made
+the decision to exterminate Jewry, or on the orders issued by him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In October 1942 Bormann’s decree ordering the extermination of
+Jewry was issued (Document 3244-PS). It has been established
+beyond all question that this order came from Hitler and went to
+<span class='pageno' title='214' id='Page_214'></span>
+Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler, who was charged with the
+actual extermination of the Jews. He for his part charged the Chief
+of the Gestapo, Müller, and his commissioner for Jewish affairs,
+Eichmann, with the final execution of the order. These three men
+are the three who are chiefly responsible, next to Hitler. It has not
+been proved that Streicher had any possibility of influencing them,
+or that he did actually influence them. He states—and there is no
+proof to the contrary—that he never knew either Eichmann or
+Müller, and that his relations with Himmler were slight and far
+from friendly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Casually it might be mentioned that Himmler was one of the
+most radical anti-Semites of the Party. From the beginning he had
+advocated a merciless fight against the Jews; and in any case,
+judging by what we know of him, he was not the man to allow
+himself to be influenced by others in matters of principle. Apart
+from that, however, a comparison of the two personalities shows
+that Himmler was in every way the stronger and superior man of
+the two, so that for this reason alone the exertion of any influence
+by the Defendant Streicher on Himmler may be ruled out. I believe
+I may refrain from further illustration of this point.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to the question of whether the activity of the
+Defendant Streicher had a decisive influence on the men who actually
+carried out the orders; that is, on members of the Einsatzgruppen
+on the one hand, and on the execution Kommandos in the
+concentration camps on the other; and whether any spiritual and
+intellectual preparation was necessary to make these men willing
+to execute such measures.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his speeches in Nikolaev, Posen, and Kharkov—which have
+often been mentioned here—the Reichsführer SS stated unequivocally
+not only that he besides Hitler was responsible for the final
+solution of the Jewish question, but also that the execution of the
+orders was only made possible by the employment of forces which
+he himself had selected from among the SS. We know from Ohlendorf’s
+testimony that the so-called Einsatzgruppen consisted of
+members of the Gestapo and the SD, companies of the Waffen-SS,
+members of the police force with long service records, and indigenous
+units.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It must be stated as a matter of principle that the Defendant
+Streicher never had the slightest influence on the ideological attitude
+of the SS. The extensive evidence material of this Trial contains no
+shadow of proof that Streicher had any connections with the SS.
+The alleged Enemy Number One of the Jews, the great propagandist
+of the persecution of the Jews—as he has been pictured by the
+Prosecution—the Defendant Streicher never had the opportunity of
+writing for the periodical <span class='it'>Das Schwarze Korps</span> or even for the
+<span class='pageno' title='215' id='Page_215'></span>
+<span class='it'>SS Leithefte</span>. These periodicals alone, however, as the official
+mouthpieces of the Reichsführer SS, determined the ideological
+attitude of the SS. These SS periodicals also determined their
+attitude toward the Jewish question. In these circles <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span>
+had just as small a public; it was rejected, just as it was in other
+circles. Himmler himself rejected Streicher ironically as an
+ideologist. Therefore the Defendant Streicher could not have had
+any influence on the ideology of the SS members of the Einsatzgruppen,
+much less on the old members of the Police, and least of
+all on the foreign units. Nor could he dictate the ideology of the
+execution squad’s in the concentration camps. Those men originated
+for the most part from the Death’s Head Units, that is the old guard
+units, of whom the above statement is true to a greater degree.
+Added to this is the fact that the experienced members of the Police,
+as well as the SS men with long service records, were trained in
+absolute obedience to their leaders. Absolute obedience to a Führer
+command was a matter of course for both.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even those experienced police force members, however, accustomed
+as they were to absolute obedience, even the veteran SS
+men, could not simply be charged by Himmler with carrying out
+the executions of the Jews. Rather did he have to select men whom
+he trusted to lead these execution squads and to make them
+personally responsible for their assignments, pointing out explicitly
+that he would take all responsibility and that he himself was only
+passing on a definite order from Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even these men, whom the Prosecution alleges to have been the
+elite of Nazism, were so far from being enemies of the Jews in the
+meaning of the Indictment, that the entire authority of the head
+of State and Führer, and of his most brutal henchman, Himmler,
+was required to force upon the men responsible for carrying out the
+execution orders the conviction that their order was based on the
+will of the authoritarian head of the State; an order which, according
+to their conviction, had the power of a fundamental State law
+and therefore was above all criticism.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The men charged to carry out the annihilation, therefore, obeyed
+their orders not for ideological reasons and not because they were
+incited to do so by Streicher, as the Prosecution contends, but solely
+in obedience to an order from Hitler transmitted to them through
+Himmler, and knowing that disobedience to a Führer order meant
+death. In this respect, too, therefore, Streicher’s influence has not
+been proved.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The accusations brought against the defendant by the Prosecution
+are herewith exhausted. But, in order to reach a conclusion
+and to form a judgment of the defendant which will take the actual
+findings fully into account, it seems advisable to give once more a
+<span class='pageno' title='216' id='Page_216'></span>
+short account of his personality and his activities under the Hitler
+regime.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution considers him to be the leading anti-Semite
+and the leading advocate of a ruthless determination to annihilate
+Jewry. This conception, however, does justice neither to the part
+played by the defendant and the influence actually exercised by
+him, nor to his personality. The manner of the defendant’s employment
+in the Third Reich and the way in which he was called upon
+to co-operate in the propagation and final solution of the Jewish
+question shows the Prosecution’s conception to be false. The only
+occasion on which the defendant was called upon to take an active
+part in the fight against Jewry was in his capacity as chairman
+of the Action Committee for the Anti-Jewish Boycott Day on 1 April
+1933. His attitude on that day is in direct opposition to his violent
+utterances in <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> and makes it evident that the passages
+in his paper which have been attacked were pure propaganda.
+Although on that day he could have drawn upon the whole power
+of State and Party against Jewry, he was content to order that
+Jewish places of business be marked as such and put under guard.
+In addition, he gave explicit instructions that any molestation of the
+Jews or acts of violence, or any damage to Jewish property, was
+forbidden and would be punished. In the later stages no further
+use at all was made of the defendant. He was not even consulted
+on the ideological basis for the settlement of the Jewish question.
+He was unable to voice his ideas in the press or over the air. He
+was not asked to write on the clarification of the Jewish question
+either in the <span class='it'>Schulungsbriefe</span> of the Party or the periodicals belonging
+to the organizations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Not he but the Defendant Rosenberg was charged by Hitler with
+the ideological training of the German people. The latter was
+responsible for the Institute for Research into the Jewish Question,
+set up in Frankfurt, and not the Defendant Streicher; in fact, the
+latter was not even considered as a collaborator in this institute.
+The Defendant Rosenberg was commissioned with the arrangement
+of an Anti-Jewish World Congress in 1944. It is true that this
+assembly did not take place, but it is significant that the plans made
+for it did not include the participation of the Defendant Streicher.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The whole of the anti-Jewish laws and decrees of the Third
+Reich were drafted without his participation. He was not even
+called in to draft the racial laws proclaimed at the Party rally in
+Nuremberg in 1935. The Defendant Streicher did not take part in
+a single conference on even moderately important questions in
+either peace or wartime. His name does not appear on any list of
+participants or on any minutes. Not even in the course of the
+discussions themselves is one single reference made to his name.
+<span class='pageno' title='217' id='Page_217'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fight against Jewry in the Third Reich grew more and more
+embittered from year to year, especially after the outbreak of war
+and during its course. In contrast to this, however, the influence of
+the Defendant Streicher yearly grew weaker. Already by 1939 he
+was almost entirely pushed aside and had no relations with Hitler
+or other leading men of State and Party. In 1940 he was relieved
+of his office as Gauleiter and after that he played no further part
+in political life.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the Defendant Streicher had really been the man the Prosecution
+believes him to be, his influence and his activity would have
+increased automatically with the intensification of the fight against
+the Jews. His career would not have ended, as it actually did, in
+political powerlessness and banishment from the scene of action,
+but with the commission to carry out the destruction of Jewry.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It cannot be denied that by writing <span class='it'>ad nauseam</span> on the same
+subject for years in a clumsy, crude, and violent manner, the
+Defendant Streicher has brought upon himself the hatred of the
+world. By so doing, he has created a strong feeling against himself
+which led to his importance and influence being rated far higher
+than they actually were, for which he now runs the risk of having
+the extent of his responsibility similarly misjudged.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The defense counsel, who in this case had a difficult and
+thankless task, had to limit himself to presenting those aspects and
+facts which allow the true significance of this man and the role he
+played in the tragedy of National Socialism to be recognized. But
+it cannot be the task of the Defense to deny indisputable facts and
+to defend acts for which absolutely no excuse exists.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact remains, therefore, that this defendant took part in the
+demolition of the main synagogue of Nuremberg, and thus allowed
+a place of religious worship to be destroyed. The defendant states
+as an excuse that his aim in so doing was not the demolition of a
+building meant for religious worship, but the removal of an edifice
+which appeared out of place in the Old Town of Nuremberg, and
+that his opinion had been shared by art experts. The truth of this
+was proved by the fact that he left the second Jewish house of
+worship untouched until it finally, and without his connivance, went
+up in flames during the night of 9 to 10 November. However that
+may be, the defendant shows the same lack of scruple here as he
+does in his other actions. He must account here for his actions in
+this connection alone; the Defense cannot shield him. But here, too,
+the fact that the population of Nuremberg disapproved of these
+actions clearly and unmistakably must be stressed. It was clear to
+any impartial observer that the people viewed such actions with icy
+detachment and that only brute force could compel them to tolerate
+such measures and to look on at such senseless proceedings.
+<span class='pageno' title='218' id='Page_218'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is just as impossible for the Defense to express any opinion
+on the revival of the ritual murder myth. No interest whatsoever
+was taken in these articles; but their tendency is obvious. The only
+point in the defendant’s favor, apart from the good faith with which
+we must credit him, is the fact that the author of these articles was
+not himself, but Holz; he must, however, put up with the charge
+that he allowed it to happen.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It must appear incomprehensible that the defendant continued
+to play a part in the publication of <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> long after he had
+been politically crippled and vanished from the scene of action.
+This very fact reveals his one-track mind better than anything else.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When the Prosecution accuses the defendant of having aimed at
+the physical annihilation of the Jews and prepared the way for
+this later result by means of his publications, I would like to refer
+to the statements given by the defendant under oath at his interrogation,
+to which I am here referring in their entirety.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The defendant claims that in the long series of articles published
+by <span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> since its foundation there were none demanding
+actual deeds of violence against the Jews. He also claims that
+among the issues, of which there were over one thousand, only
+about 15 were found to contain expressions which could form the
+basis for a charge against him in the meaning of the Indictment.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the contrary, the defendant argued that his articles and
+speeches had always shown an unmistakable tendency to achieve a
+solution of the Jewish problem in its entirety throughout the world,
+since any kind of partial solution would serve no useful purpose
+and failed to reach the heart of the problem. Basing himself on
+this very point of view he had always expressed himself unequivocally
+as opposed to any kind of violence, and he would never have
+approved of an action such as that finally carried out by Hitler in
+such a gruesome manner.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This must raise serious doubts as to whether the defendant can
+be proved to have agreed with the mass murders practiced on
+Jewry, and I leave this decision to the Tribunal. In any case, he
+himself refers to the fact that he had no reasonably certain knowledge
+of these wholesale murders until 1944, a fact corroborated by
+the statements of the witnesses Adele Streicher and Hiemer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He considered the articles published in the <span class='it'>Israelitisches Wochenblatt</span>
+as propaganda and consequently did not believe them. In this
+connection, the fact that up to the autumn of 1943 he did not in any
+article express satisfaction concerning the fate of Jewry in the East
+is in his favor. Although he did write then on the disappearance
+of the Jewish reservoir in the East, there is nothing to show that
+he had any reliable source of information at his command. He
+<span class='pageno' title='219' id='Page_219'></span>
+might, therefore, very well have believed that this process of disappearance
+was not identical with physical annihilation but might
+represent the evacuation of the Jewish population assembled there
+to neutral countries or the territory of the Soviet Union. As no
+evidence has been presented to show that the defendant had
+received hints from any quarter in regard to the intended extermination
+of Jewry, he could not have conceived of such a diabolical
+occurrence which appears to be utterly inconceivable to the human
+mind. And it certainly cannot be assumed that the mental capacity
+of the defendant should have enabled him to foresee a solution of
+the Jewish question such as could only have originated in the brain
+of a person who was no longer in his right senses.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The defendant describes himself as a fanatic and seeker of truth.
+He professes to have written nothing and to have expressed nothing
+in his speeches which he had not taken from some authentic source
+and properly confirmed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There is no doubt that he was a fanatic. The fanatic, however,
+is a man who is so possessed or convinced of an idea or illusion that
+he is not open to any other consideration, and is convinced of the
+correctness of his own idea and no other. A psychiatrist might
+regard it as a sort of mental cramp. Fanaticism of any kind is not
+far removed from maniacal obsession. As a rule it goes along with
+considerable overestimation of oneself and overevaluation of one’s
+own personality and its influence on the world around it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Not one of the defendants here on trial shows such a wide discrepancy
+between fact and fancy as does the Defendant Streicher.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution showed him as he appeared to the outside
+world. What he really was—and is—has been shown by the Trial.
+But only actual facts can form the basis for the judgment. Base your
+judgment also, Gentlemen, on the fact that the defendant in his
+position as Gauleiter of Franconia also showed many humane
+characteristics—that he had a large number of political prisoners
+released from concentration camps, which even caused criminal
+proceedings to be started against him. It should also be borne in
+mind that he treated the prisoners of war and the foreign laborers
+working on his estate very well in every respect.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Whatever the judgment against the Defendant Streicher may be,
+it will concern the fate of a single individual. It seems to be
+established, however, that the German people and this defendant
+were never in agreement on this essential question. The German
+people always disapproved of the aims of this defendant as expressed
+in his publications, and retained its own opinion of and
+attitude toward the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution’s assumption that the tendentious articles in
+<span class='it'>Der Stürmer</span> found an echo or a ready acceptance among the
+<span class='pageno' title='220' id='Page_220'></span>
+German population, or even produced an attitude which would
+readily accept criminal measures, is herewith fully refuted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The overwhelming majority of the German nation preserved
+their sound common sense and showed themselves disinclined
+toward all acts of violence. The nation may therefore claim to be
+declared free of all moral complicity in, and co-responsibility for,
+those crimes before the public tribunal of the world, so as to be
+able again to take its place in the ranks of the nations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I leave the decision on the guilt or innocence of this defendant
+in the hands of the High Tribunal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Sauter for the Defendant Funk.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. FRITZ SAUTER (Counsel for Defendant Funk): Gentlemen
+of the Tribunal, I have the task of examining the case of the
+Defendant Dr. Walter Funk. That is to say, I am to deal with a
+topic which unfortunately is especially dry and prosaic. May I first
+make a short statement.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall on principle refrain from making any statements on legal,
+political, historical, or psychological matters which may be too
+general, although the temptation to make such general statements,
+particularly within the framework of these proceedings, may be
+considerable. General statements of the kind have already been
+made in abundance by my colleagues and will probably be still
+further supplemented. Therefore, I shall limit myself to examining
+and presenting to you from the point of view of the Defense the
+picture which the evidence in this Trial shows of the personality of
+the Defendant Funk, his actions, and their underlying motives.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen of the Tribunal, the entire course of this Trial and
+the particular evidence offered in his own case have shown that the
+Defendant Funk did not play a decisive part in the National
+Socialist regime at any time and in any of the cases indicted here.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk’s authority of decision was always limited by the superior
+powers of others. The defendant’s statement, made during his
+personal examination, that he was allowed to come up to the door,
+but was never permitted to enter, has been shown by the evidence
+to be quite correct.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk was entrusted with tasks by the Party—as distinct from
+the State—only during the last year prior to the seizure of power,
+that is, in 1932. These, however, were of no practical significance, as
+they were of very short duration. Funk was never appointed to
+any Party office after the seizure of power. He was never a member
+of any Party organization—SS, SA, or Corps of Political Leaders.
+Funk was a member of the Reichstag for only a little more than
+6 months shortly before the seizure of power. Consequently he was
+not a member of the Reichstag when the fundamental laws for the
+<span class='pageno' title='221' id='Page_221'></span>
+consolidation of National Socialist power were passed. The Reich
+Cabinet passed the laws for which Funk is held responsible, in
+particular the Enabling Act, at a time when Funk had not yet been
+made a member of the Cabinet. At this, it will be remembered, he
+did not become a member until the close of 1937 by virtue of his
+appointment as Minister of Economics, that is, at a time when no
+further Cabinet sessions were held. As Press Chief of the Reich
+Cabinet Funk had neither a seat nor a vote in the Cabinet and could
+exert no influence whatsoever upon the contents of the bills drafted.
+I refer to Lammers’ statement in this connection. The same applies
+to the racial laws, the so-called Nuremberg Laws.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk’s relations with the Führer only became closer for a period
+of 18 months during which he had to give regular press reports
+to Hitler in his capacity as Press Chief of the Reich Cabinet, that
+is, from February 1933 to August 1934, up to the death of Reich
+President Von Hindenburg. Later, Funk reported to Hitler only on
+very rare occasions. In this connection the witness Dr. Lammers
+makes the following statement:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Later he (Funk) only visited Hitler in his capacity of Reich
+Minister of Economics on very rare occasions. He was
+frequently not invited to attend conferences—even those to
+which he should have been invited. He complained to me
+about this frequently. The Führer often raised objections,
+saying that there were various reasons against Funk and that
+he himself viewed Funk skeptically and did not want him.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That is the testimony given by Dr. Lammers on 8 April 1946.
+When asked whether Funk had often complained to him about his
+unsatisfactory position as Reich Minister for Economics and about
+the anxiety caused him by conditions generally, Dr. Lammers
+replied:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I know that Funk was very much worried and that he
+wanted an opportunity to discuss his anxieties with the
+Führer. He was extremely anxious for an opportunity of
+reporting to the Führer in order to obtain information, at
+least, about the war situation.” (That was in 1943 and 1944).
+And Lammers continues: “With the best intentions in the
+world, Funk could not obtain an audience from the Führer,
+and I was unable to get him to the Führer.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk explains the striking fact that he was invited to attend only
+four or five Führer conferences during the whole of his ministerial
+activity by saying that Hitler did not need him. Up to 1942 Hitler
+issued his instructions in economic affairs to Göring, who in his
+capacity of Delegate for the Four Year Plan was responsible for the
+entire economy. From the beginning of 1942 Hitler also issued
+instructions to Speer, who as Armament Minister had special
+<span class='pageno' title='222' id='Page_222'></span>
+authority to issue directives to all branches of production and from
+1943 personally directed the entire production. Funk therefore
+never played the principal part in the economy of the National
+Socialist Reich, but always only a subordinate role. This was specifically
+confirmed by his Codefendant Göring in his statement on
+16 March:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Naturally, in view of the special powers delegated to me
+(Göring) he had to follow my directives in the field of
+economy and the Reichsbank. The responsibility for the
+directives and policy of the Minister for Economics and
+President of the Reichsbank Funk is entirely mine.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the session of 20 June the Defendant Speer also testified that
+in his capacity as Armament Minister he reserved to himself from
+the very beginning any authority of decision in the most important
+economic spheres such as coal, iron and steel, metal, aluminum, and
+the production of machinery. Prior to Speer’s commission at the
+beginning of 1942, electric power and building were entirely under
+the jurisdiction of Armament Minister Todt.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the greater part, the evidence submitted by the Prosecution
+in the case of the Defendant Funk does not relate to acts personally
+committed by Funk or instructions issued by him, but rather to the
+various and widely differing positions which he occupied. On
+Page 29 of the trial brief the Prosecutor himself declares that the
+argument offered against Funk may be described as inferential.
+The Prosecution starts from the assumption that judging by the
+positions which he had held Funk must have had knowledge of the
+various events which form the subject of the accusation. Generally
+speaking, the Prosecution refers to instructions and directives
+issued by Funk personally only in the case of the application instructions
+which he issued in November 1938 in connection with the
+Four Year Plan decrees for the elimination of Jews from economic
+life. I shall deal with this chapter separately at a later stage.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally, Funk was not invited to attend political and military
+conferences. His position was that of a technical minister with
+very limited power of decision.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As Reich Minister for Economics Funk was subordinated to the
+Four Year Plan, that is, to Göring. Later on, the Armament Minister
+became Funk’s superior. And finally, as was shown by the testimony
+of Göring, Lammers, and Hayler, the Ministry of Economics
+became a regular trade ministry, which dealt mainly with the
+distribution of consumers’ goods and with the technicalities of
+foreign trade. Similarly in the case of the Reichsbank the Four Year
+Plan determined the use of gold and foreign currency. The Reichsbank
+was deprived of its right to decide on the credits to be
+granted to the Reich for the internal financing of the war when
+<span class='pageno' title='223' id='Page_223'></span>
+Funk took over office as its President. Funk is thereby exonerated
+of any responsibility for the financing of the war. The responsible
+agency so far had always been the Reich Minister of Finance: In
+other words, not Funk. Finally, as Plenipotentiary for Economics,
+Funk’s sole task in August 1938 was to co-ordinate the civil
+economic resources for such measures as would guarantee a smooth
+conversion from peace to wartime economy. These consultations
+resulted in the proposals presented by Funk to Hitler on 25 August
+1939 in the letter which has been several times quoted under Document
+Number 699-PS. At his examination Funk stated that this
+letter did not portray matters with complete accuracy, since it was
+a purely private letter, a letter of thanks for birthday congratulations
+received from Hitler. This point will have to be taken up again
+later, as the Prosecution particularly emphasized Funk’s position as
+Plenipotentiary for Economics. The evidence shows that his position
+as Plenipotentiary General was Funk’s most disputed position, but
+also his weakest.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With regard to the occupied territories Funk had no decisive
+authority whatsoever. All the witnesses interrogated on the point
+testified to this. But all witnesses also confirmed that Funk always
+opposed the spoliation of the occupied territories. He fought against
+German purchases in the black markets; he opposed the abolition
+of the foreign exchange relations with Holland, a measure intended
+to facilitate German purchases in Holland; and, as we have heard
+from the witness Neubacher, he organized exports to Greece from
+Germany and the eastern European states, and even sent gold there.
+He also repeatedly opposed the financial overburdening of the
+occupied territories especially in 1942 and 1944, and the raising of
+the occupation costs in France. He defended the currency of the
+occupied countries against reported attempts at devaluation. In the
+case of Denmark he even succeeded in raising the value of the
+currency, in spite of all opposition. Furthermore, Funk fought
+against the arbitrary stabilization of exchange when currency
+arrangements were made with occupied countries. Germany’s
+clearing debt was always recognized by Funk as a true commercial
+debt even with regard to the occupied countries. This is shown
+especially by his proposal, mentioned here, to commercialize this
+clearing debt by a loan to be issued by Germany for subscription
+in all European countries. Funk was also opposed to the overworking
+and especially to the compulsory employment of foreign
+labor in Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel has already testified to this at his interrogation
+here. The witnesses Hayler, Landfried, Puhl, and Neubacher,
+and the Codefendant Seyss-Inquart, have all confirmed that
+these measures taken by Funk had favorable results for the
+<span class='pageno' title='224' id='Page_224'></span>
+occupied countries. According to these statements Funk always
+strove to keep order in the economic and social life of the occupied
+territories and to preserve it as far as possible from disintegration.
+He always disapproved and opposed radical and arbitrary measures
+and favored agreements and compromises. Even during the war
+Funk was always thinking of peace. This statement was made by
+the witnesses Landfried and Hayler, who added that Funk was
+repeatedly reproached for his attitude by the leading State and
+Party offices. The Defendant Speer also testified at his interrogation
+that during the war Funk had employed too many workers in the
+manufacture of consumers’ goods and that it was for this reason
+that Funk had to hand over the management of the consumers’
+goods production in 1943.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That Funk revolted against the horrible “scorched earth” policy
+just as Speer did has been proved to the Court by Speer himself,
+as well as by the witness Hayler on 7 May 1946. This witness
+declared that he had seldom seen Funk so much upset as he was
+when informed of this order for destruction. Hayler testified that
+Funk, in his capacity of Reich Minister of Economics and President
+of the Reichsbank, gave orders that existing stocks should be protected
+from destruction as decreed, in order to insure a supply of
+consumers’ goods necessary for the population and to safeguard
+currency transactions in the German territory which had been
+abandoned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The aim of Funk’s economic policy—one might call it the mainspring
+of his life work—was the formation of a European economic
+community based on a just and natural balance of interest of the
+sovereign states. Even during the war he relentlessly pursued this
+goal, although the exigencies of war and the restraints imposed on
+development by the war naturally impeded these efforts at every
+turn. Funk has given a graphic description of the economic Europe
+which he envisaged and strove to attain in some major speeches on
+economic policy. Extracts from some of these speeches, many of
+which received a hearing even in neutral and enemy countries, are
+included in the document book.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In judging the acts of the Defendant Funk, his whole personality
+must naturally be taken into consideration to some extent in investigating
+the motives from which he acted. Funk was never
+looked upon by the German people—as far as he was known at all—as
+a Party man capable of participating in brutal outrages, using
+methods of violence and terror or amassing fortunes at the expense
+of others. He inclined rather toward art and literature, which
+preference he shared with—for instance—his friend Baldur von
+Schirach. Originally, as you have been told, he wanted to study
+music, and in later years he preferred to have poets and artists in
+<span class='pageno' title='225' id='Page_225'></span>
+his house rather than, men of the Party and the State. In professional
+circles he was known and respected as an economist and a
+man with a wide theoretical and historical knowledge, who had
+risen from journalism and had been a brilliant stylist. His position
+as chief editor of the distinguished <span class='it'>Berliner Börsenzeitung</span> was on
+a sound economic basis; by accepting the office of Press Chief in
+the Reich Cabinet at the beginning of 1933, after Hitler’s assumption
+of power, he even incurred a financial loss. Therefore, he was
+not one of those desperados who were glad to get into a well-paid
+position through Hitler. On the contrary, he made a financial
+sacrifice when he took over the State office offered him, and it
+therefore seems perfectly credible that he did this out of patriotism,
+out of a sense of duty toward his people, and in order to put himself
+at the service of his country during the hard times of distress.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In judging the personality and character of the Defendant Funk,
+it is also significant that he never held or tried to obtain any rank
+in the Party. Other people who took over high State offices in the
+Third Reich were given the title of an SS Gruppenführer, or were
+given, for instance, the rank of SA Obergruppenführer. Funk, on
+the contrary, was only a plain Party member, from 1931 until the
+end of the Third Reich, who carried out his State functions conscientiously,
+but made no effort to obtain any honors within the
+Party.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The only incident with which the Defendant Funk was
+reproached in this connection was the fact that he accepted an
+endowment in 1940, on his fiftieth birthday. In itself, of course,
+that is not a punishable act; but the Tribunal evidently evaluated
+it as a moral charge against the defendant. Therefore, we shall
+briefly define our position with regard to this. We remember how
+this endowment came about: The President and Board of the Reich
+Chamber of Economics (Reichswirtschaftskammer), as the highest
+representatives of German economic life, presented him on his
+fiftieth birthday with a farmhouse in Upper Bavaria and about
+110 acres of ground. This farmhouse, of course, existed for the time
+being only on the paper of the presentation document and had still
+to be built. This presentation was expressly approved by the head
+of the State, Adolf Hitler; therefore it was not made secretly to the
+Reich Minister of Economics, but quite officially, without any suppression
+or secrecy in the matter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The gift subsequently turned out to be an unfortunate one for
+Funk, as the building proved much more expensive than had been
+expected and Funk was required to pay a very high donation tax.
+Funk, who, up to that time, had never incurred debts and whose
+finances had always been well regulated, now found himself
+plunged into debt through this “gift” of a farmhouse. Göring heard
+<span class='pageno' title='226' id='Page_226'></span>
+of it and came to Funk’s assistance with a generous sum. When
+Hitler heard of Funk’s financial difficulties through Minister
+Lammers, he had the cash necessary to settle Funk’s financial
+troubles transferred to him in the form of a gift. With this Funk
+was able to pay his taxes and his debts. He used the remainder
+to create two public endowments, one for dependents of officials of
+the Reichsbank killed in action, the other to the same end for the
+staff of the Ministry of Economics. The farm was also to become an
+endowment at some later date. Funk’s treatment of the matter
+shows his delicacy in this respect too. Even though such an endowment
+could not be legally disputed, he felt that it was better to
+avoid such endowments and to make them over to the public, since
+he could not refuse to accept a gift from the head of the State.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Mr. President, I now turn to a new subject. I would propose to
+have a recess now.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Court will adjourn now.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<h2><span class='pageno' title='227' id='Page_227'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal proposes to go until 4 o’clock
+without a break, if that is convenient.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I have so far defined
+the position of the Defendant Funk in general statements; I am now
+going to deal with the criminal responsibility of the Defendant
+Funk on the separate charges made against him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The first point of the Indictment deals with the support of the
+seizure of power by the Party, that is, the Defendant Funk’s Party
+activities from 1931 up to the end of 1932. The Defendant Funk is
+alleged to have helped the conspirators to seize power. This charge
+deals with the activities of the Defendant Funk from the date of
+his joining the Party in June 1931 up to the seizure of power on
+30 January 1933. The Prosecution maintains that Funk’s activities
+on behalf of the Party during that period furthered the seizure of
+power by the National Socialists. That is correct. The Defendant
+Funk himself, when interrogated on 4 May, gave a detailed explanation
+of his reasons for considering the National Socialist seizure
+of power the only possible way of delivering the German people
+from the grave intellectual, economic, and social distress of that
+time. The economic program of the Party was, in his opinion,
+vague and mainly intended for propaganda. He himself wanted to
+gain recognition for his own economic principles in the Party, in
+order to work through the Party for the benefit of the German
+people. Funk gave a detailed description of these principles during
+his examination. They are based on the idea of private property,
+which is inseparable from the conception of the varying capability
+of a human being.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk demanded the recognition of private initiative and of the
+independence of the creative businessman, added to free competition
+and the leveling of social extremes. He aimed at the elimination
+of Party and class warfare, at a strong Government with full
+authority and responsibility, and at the creation of a uniform
+political will among the people. His conversations with Adolf Hitler
+and other Party leaders convinced him that the Party entirely
+accepted his principles and ideas. In Funk’s opinion he cannot be
+blamed for his support of the Party in its struggle for power. Funk
+believes that the discussions in this Trial furnish absolute proof that
+the Party came to power quite legally. But even the methods used
+by Funk to assist the Party cannot, in his opinion, be condemned.
+In any case the role attributed to him by the Prosecution does
+not fit the facts. The importance of Funk’s activities is at times
+greatly overestimated by them; in many other instances their
+judgment of these activities is completely false.
+<span class='pageno' title='228' id='Page_228'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The evidence offered by the Prosecution consists mainly of
+references and extracts from reference books, and especially from
+a book by Dr. Oestreich, <span class='it'>Walter Funk—A Life for Economy</span>, which
+was submitted to the Tribunal as Document Number 3505-PS,
+USA-653. The core of this evidence is a “Program for Economic
+Reconstruction” by the Defendant Funk, which is printed on
+Page 81 of this book and which the Prosecution calls “the official
+Party declaration in the economic field” and “the economic bible
+for the Party organization.” This so-called “Program for Economic
+Reconstruction” forms the basis for the incorrect accusation made
+by the Prosecution on Page 3 of the trial brief, to the effect that
+the Defendant Funk assisted “in the formulation of the program
+which was publicly proclaimed by the Nazi Party and by Hitler.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This “Program for Economic Reconstruction,” which was read
+word for word during the hearing of the Defendant Funk, actually
+did not contain anything unusual, let alone revolutionary, or
+anything which was in any way characteristic of the National
+Socialist ideology. The program indicates the need for providing
+work, creating productive credits without inflationary consequences,
+balancing public finances, as well as the need for protective measures
+for agriculture and urban real estate, and a redirection of
+economic relations with foreign countries. It is a program which,
+as Funk said in his testimony, might be advocated by any liberal
+or democratic party and government. The Defendant Funk only
+regrets that the Party did not fully subscribe to these principles.
+Later on his economic viewpoint involved him in constant difficulties
+and disputes with various Party offices, especially with the
+German Labor Front and the Party Chancellery, and with Himmler
+and most of the Gauleiter. This is also confirmed by the witness
+Landfried, who described these differences between Funk and the
+Party in detail in his interrogatory. Funk had the reputation in
+the Party of being mainly a liberal and an outsider. During that
+time, that is mainly in 1932, he established relations between Hitler
+and some of the leading personalities of German economic life.
+He also worked to promote understanding for National Socialist
+ideas and to gain support for the Party by trade and industry. By
+virtue of these activities he was frequently described as Hitler’s
+economic adviser. But that was not a Party office or a Party title.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In Document EC-440, USA-874, Funk states that Keppler, who
+was later appointed State Secretary, was considered the Führer’s
+economic adviser for many years before himself. By this reference
+Funk intended to show that the designation “Economic Adviser
+to the Führer” was given by the public to other persons also.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The period during which Funk was given Party assignments
+was a very short one. That these activities were never of decisive
+<span class='pageno' title='229' id='Page_229'></span>
+importance may be deduced from the fact that after the assumption
+of power Funk’s Party activities ceased completely. In other fields,
+such as food and agriculture, finance, and so forth, the Party
+incumbents who entered the civil service as ministers or state
+secretaries, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, retained their Party office, which usually
+acquired greater importance. The elimination of the sole Defendant
+Funk from every Party office as soon as the assumption of
+power was complete shows clearly that the Party leaders did
+not attach much value to Funk’s work in the Party.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In cross-examining the Defendant Funk the Soviet Russian
+Prosecution showed him an article which had appeared on 18 August
+1940 in the magazine <span class='it'>Das Reich</span> on the occasion of his fiftieth
+birthday (USSR-450). In this article the author, an economist by
+the name of Dr. Herle, emphasizes that Funk “as intermediary
+between the Party and economic circles had become a pioneer
+working toward a new spiritual attitude in German economic life.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection we may say that Funk never denied that
+he regarded it as his task to construct an economic system with
+an obligation toward state and community on the one hand, yet
+based on private ownership and private initiative and responsibility
+on the other. Funk always acknowledged and adopted the
+political aims and ideals of National Socialism. The majority of
+the German people embraced these goals and ideologies, as was
+proved by several plebiscites. Funk himself did not suspect that
+all the good intentions and idealistic aims, so often emphasized by
+Hitler when he came into power, would later crumble in the blood
+and smoke of war and sink to such an inconceivable inhuman
+level. Funk testified explicitly that he considered the authoritative
+form of government—by which he meant the strong state, a responsible
+cabinet, the social community, and an economic system with
+social obligations—a prerequisite in order to overcome the grave
+intellectual and economic crisis through which the German people
+were then passing. He always expressly acknowledged that politics
+must have precedence over economics.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 30 January 1933, as Press Chief of the Reich Government,
+Funk took up the State office of a Ministerial Director in the Reich
+Chancellery. Six weeks later, however, the direction of press policy
+passed into the hands of Dr. Goebbels, when the latter became
+Reich Minister for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda; and the
+press department of the Reich Government, which Funk was to
+have directed, was merged in the newly established Ministry for
+Propaganda. For the time being he retained only the right to make
+his press report personally to Reich President Von Hindenburg and
+Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler—until Hindenburg’s death. Then this
+activity also came to a complete standstill, so that the Office of
+<span class='pageno' title='230' id='Page_230'></span>
+Press Chief of the Reich Government existed only on paper. This
+was also expressly confirmed by the Defendant Fritzsche during his
+examination as a witness on 28 June.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The guilt of the defendant is inferred mainly from the fact that
+he was a State Secretary in the Ministry of Propaganda. The hearing
+of evidence has shown, however, that as State Secretary, Funk had
+nothing whatsoever to do with actual propaganda work. He made
+no radio speeches, nor did he speak at public meetings. Press policy,
+on the other hand, was dictated by Dr. Goebbels in person even at
+that time.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even at that time, however, Funk gave particular attention to
+the wishes and complaints of the journalists. He protected the press
+against misuse by official departments and made every effort to
+safeguard the individuality of the press and to enable it to work
+in a responsible manner.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All this has been established by a number of witnesses to whom
+I refer on Pages 17 to 24; in particular by the witnesses Amann,
+Kallus, Fritzsche, Oeser, and Roesen. The two latter witnesses have
+indeed confirmed the fact that Funk as State Secretary in the Ministry
+of Propaganda also worked energetically on behalf of Jews
+and such persons as were oppressed and hindered in their spiritual
+and artistic work by the legislation and cultural policy of the
+National Socialists. Funk did so much on behalf of such people
+that he jeopardized his own official position to such an extent that
+the Ministry actually considered him politically unreliable.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">As to defendant’s activity in the Reich Ministry of Propaganda, the Prosecution
+charges him as follows:</span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p><span class="fs">“By means of such an activity in the Ministry of Propaganda the Defendant
+Funk participated in establishing the power of the conspirators over Germany,
+and is particularly responsible for the persecution of ‘political dissenters’
+and Jews, for the psychological preparation of the people for war, and
+for the weakening of the strength of and will for resistance of the victims
+selected by the conspirators.”</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Also in this point of the accusation, the guilt of the Defendant Funk has been
+derived almost exclusively from the fact that he occupied the position of a state
+secretary in the Ministry of Propaganda. The hearing of evidence, however, has
+shown that Funk had nothing to do with actual propaganda activity in his position
+as State Secretary. Funk did not deliver any speeches, either through the radio
+or in public meetings. The press policy was directed by Dr. Goebbels in person
+ever since the Ministry had been established. However, Funk took care, to a large
+extent, of the wishes and complaints of the journalists. He protected the press
+against trespassing by Government offices and tried to secure for the press an
+individual look and an activity conscious of its responsibilities. This is expressed
+by the digest from the book written by Dr. Paul Oestreich: <span class='gesp'>Walter Funk—A
+Life for Economy</span>, Document 3505-PS, Exhibit USA-653, Document Book
+Funk Number 4b.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Some of Funk’s wordings from that period of his activity in the Ministry of
+Propaganda, as for example, the sentence “the press is no barrel organ” and the
+saying “the press should not be the scapegoat of the government” later have
+become all but household words.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">As State Secretary Funk had, on the whole, only organizational and economic
+tasks, he managed the financial side of the activity of the numerous organizations
+<span class='pageno' title='231' id='Page_231'></span>
+and institutes which were controlled by the Ministry of Propaganda, such as,
+particularly, the Reich Broadcasting Company, further the German Trade Publicity
+Council (Werberat der deutschen Wirtschaft), the State-owned film combines, the
+State-owned theaters and orchestras and the State-owned press agencies and
+newspapers. As to art, and according to his artistic tastes, he occupied himself
+with music and theater. In the direction of the Ministry of Propaganda, a complete
+separation between political tasks on the one hand and organizational and
+economic tasks on the other hand took place. This has been stated in unison by
+all witnesses examined on this point. Minister Dr. Goebbels in person directed
+the propaganda policy, exercising complete, absolute and exclusive control. His
+assistants herein were, not his State Secretary Funk, but his old collaborators
+from the propaganda organization of the Party, who, for the most part, were taken
+over by him in a personal union into the newly created Ministry of Propaganda.
+Funk, however, did not belong to the propaganda department of the Party, neither
+before nor after the Ministry was established. The assertion of Mr. Messersmith
+in his affidavit, submitted under Document 1760-PS, according to which Goebbels
+had incorporated Funk into the Party organization, is erroneous, and can obviously
+be attributed to the fact that Messersmith had, as an outsider, no insight into the
+division of work within the Ministry of Propaganda, and moreover, apparently
+identified readily the propaganda activity of the Party with the propaganda of
+the State Ministry. This has been confirmed by the questionnaire submitted by
+Messersmith, as asked for by the Defendant Funk, on May 7th, 1946, (Document
+Book Funk, Supplement Number 5). This questionnaire shows that Messersmith
+cannot even state whether he had a conversation with the Defendant Funk
+a few times or only once; furthermore, that he does not remember any more what
+topic was discussed at that time, nor in what capacity Funk was present at this
+meeting. With such vague and unreliable statements of a witness nothing, of course,
+can be proven.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">As a proof of the fact that Funk had nothing to do with the actual propaganda
+activity and—as the Defendant Göring has asserted here as a witness—did not play
+any important part at all in comparison to Goebbels, I refer to the affidavit of
+the former Reichsleiter for the press, Max Amann, of April 17th, 1946 (Document
+Book Funk, Exhibit 14). At first, the Prosecution has submitted an affidavit sworn
+by this witness, of December 19th, 1945 (Document 3501-PS); the statements contained
+therein have been, in the new affidavit of April 17th, 1946, supplemented and
+corrected in essential points. In this new statement, submitted to the Prosecution
+and to the Defense, the witness Amann gives evidence that also, according to his
+knowledge, Funk, as State Secretary in the Ministry of Propaganda, had nothing
+to do with the actual propaganda activity. For the rest, the witness confirms the
+statements of the Defendant Funk, namely, that he (Amann) did not know in
+person the distribution of activities and the interior management of the Ministry,
+and that his statements are exclusively based op information by other persons.
+The witness Heinz Kallus, on the other hand, worked for some years as an official
+of the Ministry of Propaganda. Kallus, too, confirms under oath in the answers,
+in the questionary addressed to him (Exhibit Number Funk-18), that on the whole
+Funk was engaged in administration and financial questions, and the same was
+testified by the Defendant Hans Fritzsche during his examination as a witness
+before this Tribunal on June 27th and 28th.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In the trial brief of the Defendant Funk, Page 9—Document 3566-PS—the Prosecution
+submitted the notes of an SS-Scharführer Sigismund as evidence for the
+importance of the position which Funk is supposed to have held in the Ministry of
+Propaganda. An official of this Ministry, by the name of Weinbrenner, is supposed
+to have declared to that SS-Scharführer that it was impossible to know whom
+Minister Goebbels would entrust with the office of radio superintendent, as
+Goebbels took most of the important decisions only in agreement with Under
+Secretary Funk. Now, Dr. Goebbels did not as a matter of course undertake the
+appointment to the leading post in broadcasting without getting in touch with
+Funk, the chairman of the administrative board of the Reich Broadcasting Corporation
+(Reichsrundfunkgesellschaft); this, however, does not prove anything concerning
+the nature and the significance of the activity of the Defendant Funk nor
+of the aims he pursued thereby. After all, the Prosecution has been able to
+submit but one single document bearing the signature of Funk as Under Secretary,
+namely, the fixing of a date for the coming into force of a decree for the execution
+of a law concerning the Reichskulturkammer, of November 9th, 1933 (Document
+3505-PS); hereof the Prosecution deduces a responsibility or, at any rate, a
+<span class='pageno' title='232' id='Page_232'></span>
+co-responsibility of the Defendant Funk for the entire legislation for the control
+and co-ordination of the cultural professions (Kulturberufe).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">This conclusion appears to be wrong; quite apart from the fact that the point
+in question is the fixing of a date for a decree concerning execution, therefore a
+purely formal act, it must be emphasized that this law was decided by the Reich
+Cabinet of which the Defendant Funk at that time was not a member.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Funk stated in his examination that, during the entire duration of his activity
+in the Ministry of Propaganda, he hardly gave his signature more than three
+times representing Dr. Goebbels. For the rest, the Defendant Fritzsche testified
+here as a witness, on June 28th, 1946, that the position of Dr. Goebbels’ long-time
+collaborator and personal advisor Hanke, who later on became Under Secretary
+and Gauleiter, corresponded far more to the usual position of an under secretary
+in the Ministry, than the one of the Defendant Funk. It was Hanke, too, who maintained
+the liaison of Minister Goebbels with the section heads and advisers of
+the Ministry, a task adhering otherwise to the under secretary in a ministry, but
+which was never entrusted to the Defendant Funk, although he was an under
+secretary.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">It is proven by the affidavit of the former editor-in-chief of the <span class='gesp'>Frankfurter
+Zeitung</span>, Albert Oeser (Exhibit Number Funk-1), and of the attorney-at-law
+Dr. Karl Roesen (Exhibit Number Funk-2), as well as by the affidavits of
+the witness Heinz Kallus (Document Funk-18), that the Defendant Funk, in his
+position as an under secretary of the Ministry of Propaganda, energetically undertook
+to help Jews and other persons who were oppressed and thwarted in their
+intellectual or artistic activities by the National Socialist legislation and cultural
+policy, and that he did this under heavy risks to his own position.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Among the persons for whom Funk interceded were not only Jewish editors,
+but also many prominent German artists, and the witness Kallus (cf. his questionnaire
+in the Document Funk-18) mentions in this connection the Jewish proprietors
+of a big Berlin directory publishing firm, whom Funk had given permission to
+carry on with their business, against considerable resistance of the competent
+section of the Ministry and of the German trade publicity council (Werberat der
+deutschen Wirtschaft). The witness Kallus stated further, that, owing to this
+attitude toward the Jewish cultural workers, Funk was “suspect” to Dr. Goebbels
+and to the chief of the press section, Berndt, who was known to be particularly
+radical. Editor-in-chief Oeser explicitly states, as a witness, in his affidavit (Document
+Book Funk Number 1) that he has made his statements voluntarily to prove
+the “human attitude” of the Defendant Funk, and gives the names of eight Jewish
+editors of the <span class='gesp'>Frankfurter Zeitung</span>, whom Funk had given permission
+to carry on with their profession. In this connection, Oeser further remarks:
+“He (Funk) herewith proved his human understanding. Indeed, I have never
+heard from him (Funk), in the course of our conversations, any inhuman utterances.
+Owing to his (Funk’s) concessions, the endangered people obtained, in part
+repeatedly, the possibility to hope and to work anew with us and to prepare,
+without loss of income, their change of profession and their emigration.” Oeser,
+a well-known economic journalist, who always kept completely aloof from the
+Party, explicitly states that Funk, without any doubt, exposed himself by his
+attitude toward the Jews.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">In the cross-examination of the Defendant Funk the Prosecution referred to
+an affidavit, produced by the Prosecution, of an editor called Franz Wolf; this
+witness expressed—Document 3954-PS, Exhibit USA-377—the opinion that Funk
+may well have given those exceptional permissions not out of human sentiments,
+but rather in order to maintain the high standard of the <span class='gesp'>Frankfurter
+Zeitung</span>. By the way, the author of the affidavit was actually one of the
+Jewish editors who were given permission to further exercise their profession
+by Funk. The assumption of the witness Wolf is in direct contradiction to the
+positive statements of the witness Oeser. The Defendant Funk, too, opposed this
+interpretation and has pointed out that at that time such considerations were of no
+importance to him. In later years, when the <span class='gesp'>Frankfurter Zeitung</span> was
+to disappear, he had, so he said, used his influence in order to insure the further
+publishing, out of material considerations too, as this newspaper was, as an economic
+paper, highly esteemed abroad and was the best commercial newspaper of the
+country. However, this does not alter the fact that Funk had, at that time, used
+his influence repeatedly and with success in favor of Oeser and his collaborators,
+for purely humanitarian reasons.</span>
+<span class='pageno' title='233' id='Page_233'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The witness Kallus finally declared in his questionnaire (Page 3 of Document
+Funk-18) that he remembers several occasions where Funk made possible the
+emigration of Jewish people under tolerable conditions. Kallus confirms hereby
+the statements of the witness Luise Funk (Document Book Funk, Exhibit Number
+3), according to which the Defendant Funk often received, in the years
+when he was Under Secretary of State in the Ministry of Propaganda, letters of
+thanks from Jews who had emigrated at that time from Germany and who thanked
+Funk for having given them facilities for liquidating their businesses and for
+having procured them permission to take along abroad considerable parts of
+their fortunes.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Evidence concerning this second part of the Indictment has accordingly shown
+that Funk is guilty in the sense of this part of the Indictment neither in his
+official capacity nor by his actions. He has helped, as far as it was within his
+power, many Jews and many individuals who were endangered and hindered in
+their cultural work, out of their material and spiritual distress, although by doing
+so he jeopardized his own position.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I turn to another subject—the
+charge appearing under Point 4 of my brief, Page 24 onward,
+namely, that he participated in the preparation of wars of aggression;
+a point which is dealt with by Figure 4 of the Indictment. The
+accusation against the Defendant Funk is: “that with full knowledge
+of the aggressive plans of the conspirators he participated in
+the planning and preparation for such wars.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As evidence of this, the Indictment first of all points out that
+Göring’s Ministry of Economics was brought under the Four Year
+Plan as the “high command of the German war economy,” and was
+placed under Funk’s command. The Indictment also states that
+according to the Law for the Defense of the Reich of 4 September
+1938 Funk, in his capacity as Plenipotentiary for Economics, was
+explicitly charged with the mobilization of German economy in
+case of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution’s assertion that the Reich Ministry of Economics
+was brought under the Four Year Plan before it was handed over
+by Göring to Funk is quite correct, but the so-called “high command
+of the German economy” was not in the hands of the Reich Minister
+of Economics, Funk, but entirely in those of the Delegate for the
+Four Year Plan—that is, the Codefendant Göring. Göring has confirmed
+the fact that Funk was obliged to follow his instructions. In
+addition, the most important branches of production were managed—as
+we have already shown—by special plenipotentiaries of
+the Four Year Plan, who were under the control of Göring and
+received their instructions from Göring—not from Funk. The Reich
+Ministry of Economics itself was merely the office which carried
+out the directives of the Four Year Plan. The Defendant Funk has
+testified that some offices were only formally under his supervision
+and functioned in reality as autonomous institutions of the Four
+Year Plan.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk’s position as Plenipotentiary for Economics was vigorously
+disputed from the beginning. When the Defendant Funk was cross-examined,
+Document EC-255 was submitted, a letter from the Reich
+<span class='pageno' title='234' id='Page_234'></span>
+War Minister, Von Blomberg, to the Delegate for the Four Year
+Plan, Göring, dated 29 November 1937, wherein Blomberg proposes
+that the Defendant Funk, who had just then, on 27 November
+1937, been appointed Reich Minister of Economics, should also be
+appointed Plenipotentiary for War Economy. This was not, however,
+done.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Göring himself took over the Reich Ministry of Economics to
+begin with, and only handed it over to the Defendant Funk in February
+1938, 3 months afterward. Then the High Command of the
+Armed Forces—more especially the Army Economic Staff under
+General Thomas, whose name has been mentioned repeatedly—requested
+that the Plenipotentiary for War Economy should be
+bound in the future to follow the directives of the High Command
+in all questions concerning supplies for the Armed Forces. In this
+Document, EC-270, USA-840, the Economic Staff of the High Command
+of the Armed Forces claims a right to direct the Plenipotentiary
+for War Economy in nearly all his fields of activity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Funk tried by means of a conversation with
+Reich Marshal Göring and a letter to Reich Minister Dr. Lammers
+to clarify his position as Plenipotentiary for War Economy, and as
+such claimed to be placed under the direct command of Hitler and
+not bound to abide by the directives of the High Command of the
+Armed Forces. Göring and Lammers concurred with Funk’s opinion.
+It must, however, be emphasized most strongly that this did not
+affect Funk’s subordination to Göring, for all the other supreme
+Reich offices and ministers directly subordinate to Hitler’s command
+were also bound by the directives of the Delegate for the Four Year
+Plan, that is, by Göring’s directives.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is a remarkable fact that according to the Reich Defense Law
+of 4 September 1938—the Second Reich Defense Law—the Defendant
+Funk did not become Plenipotentiary for War Economy, but
+Plenipotentiary for Economics, without the word “War,” and that
+this act explicitly stated that Funk was bound to comply with the
+demands of the OKW. The OKW, therefore, won its battle against
+Funk in the end.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But the individual economic departments, which according to the
+Reich Defense Law were under the direction of the Plenipotentiary
+for Economics for his special assignments, were equally unwilling
+to recognize him. In an interrogatory by the former State Secretary
+Dr. Hans Posse, Funk’s deputy as Plenipotentiary for Economics
+(Document 3819-PS, USA-843) which was produced during the cross-examination
+of the Defendant Funk, Posse states that the Plenipotentiary
+for Economics “never really exercised any function.”
+The ministers and state secretaries of the individual economic
+departments of finance, agriculture, transport, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, did not,
+<span class='pageno' title='235' id='Page_235'></span>
+according to Posse, wish to be placed under Funk’s control, and
+even protested against it. Posse also mentions the disputes which
+Funk had with the Four Year Plan. He calls these conflicts “the
+struggle for power,” which in this connection simply means the
+authority to make decisions concerning the other economic departments.
+This was not a dispute between Göring and Funk; that is
+untrue because obviously Funk as Plenipotentiary for the Economics
+was still subordinate to Göring. Actually, this was a quarrel
+among state secretaries. The individual economic departments
+declared that they were subordinate to the Delegate for the Four
+Year Plan and refused to recognize the right of the Plenipotentiary
+for Economics to give them directives, since Funk himself was
+under the direction of the Four Year Plan. The state secretaries
+of the Four Year Plan supported the departments in their interpretation,
+and this lack of clarity and the overlapping of competencies
+caused the authority to issue directives to pass formally from
+the hands of the Delegate of the Four Year Plan a few months after
+the outbreak of the war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Questioned by the Prosecution as to whether he had been in the
+habit of discussing important matters with Funk, the above-mentioned
+State Secretary Posse replied: “Yes; but these discussions did
+not produce results.” Posse confirms that the authority given to
+Göring was much more extensive and that Göring finally dissolved
+the office of the Plenipotentiary for Economics. According to Funk
+this happened as early as December 1939, a few months after the
+outbreak of the war. Funk retained only the formal right to issue
+decrees. This has also been confirmed by Lammers. Therefore, the
+Codefendant Göring’s statement that he was also of the opinion
+that Funk’s position as Plenipotentiary for Economics could be
+described as having existed only on paper is quite correct.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Naturally the office of the Plenipotentiary for Economics worked in continuous
+business relations with the other economic departments, with the Four Year Plan,
+with the staff of the department for defense economics of the German Supreme
+Command, and with the Plenipotentiary for Administration, that is to say, the
+Reich Minister of the Interior. As proof the Prosecution presented various documents
+showing that at the meetings of the Deputy Plenipotentiary for Economics
+and his staff, questions of finance, war production, labor, and others were discussed.
+In this connection the office of the Plenipotentiary once also treated the
+question of employing prisoners of war in the industry, but this was an entirely
+theoretical discussion (Document Number EC-488, USA Exhibit Number 842).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Why this General Staff economy work, which had to be done in times of
+peace for the eventuality of war, should be incriminating for the Defendant Funk
+is not clear. Besides, until August 1939 he personally did not take any interest in
+the details of these questions. All this work of the Plenipotentiary for Economics
+consisted of general preparations in case of war and did not apply to any special
+war. However, when Funk’s proposition for changing over from peacetime to
+wartime economy was worked out in co-operation with the other economic
+departments in August 1939, the danger of war with Poland was already pressing.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nowhere in the material presented by the Prosecution is there
+a single indication of the fact that the Defendant Funk knew anything
+about military and political conversations and preparations
+<span class='pageno' title='236' id='Page_236'></span>
+which had as their object the planning of war—in particular, a war
+of aggression to be waged by Germany. Funk was never invited to
+take part in any conversations of this kind. He was, in particular,
+not present at the well-known discussion with Göring on 14 October
+1938, which was treated exhaustively by the Prosecution on Page 24
+of the trial brief. According to the Prosecution, Göring during that
+meeting referred to an order issued by Hitler for an unusual increase
+in armaments, especially weapons of attack. The Prosecutor declared
+during the session of 11 January 1946 that at that meeting Göring
+addressed words to Funk which were described as “the words of a
+man already at war.” Several documents included in the Funk
+document book and submitted to the Tribunal prove, however,
+beyond doubt that the Defendant Funk did not attend that meeting
+at all, as he was in Sofia at the time in order to conduct economic
+negotiations with Bulgaria. This exhibit, which the Prosecution
+obviously intended to use as a main exhibit, is thereby invalidated.
+On 25 August 1939, the date of Funk’s letter to Hitler to which I
+referred this morning, the German and Polish armies were already
+completely mobilized and stood face to face with each other. He
+was, therefore, compelled to act in that particular manner, and by
+that time he was no longer able to cancel any of the preparations.
+All this is corroborated by the diary kept by the witness Kallus
+and submitted in the Funk document book under Number 18. The
+Defendant Funk stated here on the witness stand:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It was naturally my duty as Plenipotentiary for Economics
+to do all I could to prevent the civilian section of the economy
+from being shattered in the event of war, and it was
+also my duty as president of the Reichsbank to increase as
+much as possible the Reichsbank’s reserves of gold and foreign
+currency.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He goes on to say:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“That was necessary on account of the general political tension
+at the time, and it was also necessary in case no war
+would come about but only economic sanctions which, in view
+of the political situation at the time, one could and must
+expect.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk likewise says:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It was also my duty as Reich Minister of Economics to increase
+production.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That is an exact quotation from the Defendant Funk’s testimony.
+On this subject the witness Puhl, who was vice president of the
+Reichsbank, states in his interrogatory of 1 May, which is in the
+hands of the Tribunal, that the position of the Reichsbank in the
+last 7 months of Funk’s presidency before the outbreak of the war
+<span class='pageno' title='237' id='Page_237'></span>
+had not been materially strengthened, and that very little business
+had been done in the exchange of foreign assets for gold since January
+1939. The Reichsbank’s cautious policy in regard to gold and
+foreign currency, according to this witness, was in line with its
+customary practice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Puhl’s statement is important for the correct understanding of
+the reference made by Funk, in his letter to Hitler of 25 August
+1939, to the conversion of foreign assets into gold. During the period
+of Funk’s presidency of the Reichsbank the transactions to which
+he alludes were no longer of any importance. The exaggerated
+phrases used by Funk in his letter to Hitler make the contents
+appear much more important than they actually were.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk explained this fact during his examination by saying that
+this letter was a private letter of thanks, that in those days every
+German was under a very great strain owing to the tense political
+events throughout Europe, and that he wanted to inform his Chancellor
+at this moment when the country was in danger of war, that
+he, Funk, had also done his duty. This was the first and only occasion
+on which Funk actively exercised his functions as Plenipotentiary
+for Economics.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Here I must insert something which is based upon some minutes
+which the Prosecution did not submit until the hearing of evidence
+had been concluded; Document 3787-PS. These are the minutes of
+the second meeting of the Reich Defense Council held on 23 June
+1939. Funk, as Plenipotentiary for Economics, attended that meeting
+of the Reich Defense Council, which took place about 2 months
+before the beginning of the war. The text of the minutes, however,
+leaves no doubt whatever that they concern general, and therefore
+mainly theoretical, preparations for any war. Furthermore, to
+appreciate this document it must be remembered that during the
+war which broke out 3 months later the whole of the Defendant
+Funk’s assignments in connection with the distribution of labor
+was transferred to the Four Year Plan, since the main functions
+of the Plenipotentiary for Economics were formally and completely
+abolished, as I have previously shown, shortly after the outbreak
+of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To continue with my brief—the Defendant Funk has explained
+in detail during his examination that up to the very end he did
+not believe that war would come, but that on the contrary he
+thought that the Polish conflict would be settled by diplomatic
+means. The accuracy of this statement is also confirmed by the
+witnesses Landfried, Posse, and Puhl, the defendant’s three closest
+co-workers, in interrogatories submitted to the Court (Exhibit Numbers
+Funk-16 and 17 and Document 3849-PS). The danger of war
+with Russia came to Funk’s knowledge for the first time when he
+<span class='pageno' title='238' id='Page_238'></span>
+heard of Rosenberg’s appointment as plenipotentiary for the unified
+treatment of eastern European problems in April 1941. We remember
+that at that time Lammers and Rosenberg gave the Defendant
+Funk the same explanations, generally speaking, as those stated to
+the Tribunal here by all the witnesses heard on this question. He
+was told that the reason for the preparations for war against Soviet
+Russia was that the Soviet Russians were massing considerable
+forces along the entire border, that they had invaded Bessarabia,
+and that Molotov, in his discussions on the subject of the Baltic Sea
+and the Balkans, had made demands which Germany could not fulfill.
+As Rosenberg stated that the assignment given him by Hitler
+also included economic measures, Funk placed a ministerial director,
+Dr. Schlotterer, at Rosenberg’s disposal as liaison official. Schlotterer
+later took over the direction of the economic section of the
+Rosenberg Ministry and joined the Economic Operations Staff East
+of the Four Year Plan. The Ministry for Economics itself and Funk
+had practically nothing to do with economic questions in the occupied
+East and concerned themselves merely with questions bearing
+on German internal economy. The Ministry for Economics had no
+authority whatever to make decisions in the Occupied Eastern Territories.
+During his cross-examination the Defendant Funk was shown
+an extract from an interrogation of 19 October 1945, dealing with
+the subject “Preparations for War against Russia” (Document Number
+3952-PS, USA-875). In this interrogation Funk stated that the
+Defendant Hess asked him at the end of April 1941 whether he,
+Funk, had heard anything about an impending war against Russia.
+Funk replied: “I have not heard anything definite, but there seems
+to be some discussion along that line.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The explanation of this conversation at the end of April 1941
+between two men who were not informed of the facts may well be
+that at that time Funk did not yet definitely know the reason for
+Rosenberg’s assignment, but knew only of suspicions and rumors.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 28 May 1941 Rosenberg had a meeting with Funk (Document
+1031-PS). In this meeting, as you may recall, they discussed
+the question of how the monetary problem in the East might be
+regulated in the event of war against Russia and the occupation of
+those territories by German forces. Gentlemen, in my opinion it is
+quite natural that in view of an impending war, even a war of
+defense, the authorities responsible for money matters should discuss
+the question of the handling of these matters in case enemy
+territory should be occupied. Funk was opposed to any solution
+likely to give rise to speculation; and he described the suggested
+rate of exchange for marks and rubles as entirely arbitrary. He
+agreed with Rosenberg that the Russian territory should have its
+own national currency as soon as conditions permitted. For the rest
+<span class='pageno' title='239' id='Page_239'></span>
+he demanded further investigation of these problems, especially
+since the matter could not be decided in advance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Here too, therefore, Funk approached matters with his characteristic
+caution and endeavored to find a solution which would create
+stable conditions from the very start. If the necessity for printing
+ruble bills to meet the most urgent demands for currency was mentioned
+in the discussion with Rosenberg—though not by Funk—Funk
+did not see anything either unusual or criminal therein. If
+the currency of a country has been depleted, it is absolutely necessary
+for fresh money to be provided by the power responsible for
+maintaining a stable monetary system. Who made the banknotes
+was of no importance to Funk; the essential point for him was by
+whom the banknotes were issued and in what quantity. Moreover,
+the production of a new banknote requires months of preparation,
+so that the execution of such a plan—which, as I said, was in any
+case not Funk’s—could not have taken place until much later.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A few weeks after this discussion the war actually broke out.
+Funk knew that there was danger of war with Russia. That Germany
+had long been preparing for such a war was however as little
+known to him as the fact that Germany would attack and thus wage
+a preventive war. Funk was informed neither of the march into
+Austria nor of the negotiations in regard to the Sudetenland—in
+September and October 1938 he was not even in Germany—nor was
+he informed of the seizure of the remainder of Czechoslovakia. In
+the case of Poland, he knew that the conflict was acute, but nothing
+more; of Russia the same thing was true. But in both cases he was
+informed even of this only a short time before the actual outbreak
+of war. As far as wars with other countries were concerned, Funk
+received no information whatsoever before the opening of hostilities;
+he was only informed afterward.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All the facts I have mentioned form a clear indication that Funk
+knew nothing of Hitler’s intentions with regard to foreign policy,
+and that he had no knowledge whatsoever of the fact that Hitler
+was planning wars of aggression. In the summer of 1939 Funk certainly
+devoted particular attention to the conversion of German
+economy from a peacetime to a wartime basis. But as an official of
+the Reich, Funk considered it to be not only his right but also his
+duty to prepare the German people for a defensive war and to take
+the necessary economic measures.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>However, the Prosecution believes that it can eliminate all these
+doubts by describing the Reichsregierung or the National Socialist
+Party as a criminal organization which conspired against other
+nations, and whose sole task was to plan and wage wars of aggression,
+to subjugate and enslave foreign nations, and to plunder and
+Germanize other countries. This deduction is erroneous, since those
+<span class='pageno' title='240' id='Page_240'></span>
+plans were devised and executed only by Hitler himself and a few
+of the men closest to him, of the type of Goebbels, Himmler, and
+Bormann. According to the evidence we have heard, there can be
+no doubt that even the highest officials of the State and the Armed
+Forces—and in particular Funk—were not informed of these plans,
+but that these plans were concealed from them by a cunning system
+of secrecy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Any comparison with the secret societies mentioned by the Prosecution,
+which in other countries banded together in criminal organizations,
+as for example the Ku Klux Klan in America, is impossible
+for a further reason. The Ku Klux Klan was organized from the
+start as a secret society for the purpose of terrorizing and committing
+crimes. In 1871, after scarcely 6 years of existence, it was
+expressly forbidden by the North American Government through a
+special law, known as the Ku Klux Klan Act. At that time the
+Government even imposed martial law on it and fought it with
+every possible means. It was an organization with which the Government
+and Congress of the United States never had any dealings.
+A man like Funk would, of course, never have joined a secret
+society, a criminal organization against which the Government was
+fighting. However, the National Socialist Party in Germany was
+never a secret organization, but was a party recognized by the
+Government and considered lawful. The unity between this Party
+and the State was even declared in a special Reich law. Since 1934
+the leader of this Party was at the same time the elected head of
+the Reich, and this head of the State and his Government have been
+constantly and officially recognized as a government by the entire
+world from 1933 on. It was due precisely to this international
+recognition of Hitler by every foreign country—a recognition which
+continued to be extended in part even during the second World
+War—that Funk and millions of other Germans never doubted the
+legality of the Government and that such doubts, if they ever
+entered their minds, were immediately dispelled. Millions of German
+officials and German soldiers assumed, just as Funk did, that
+they were only doing their duty in not withholding from the head
+of the State the recognition accorded to him by every country in
+the world.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">The foreign countries, their statesmen as well as their general staffs, the
+press as well as the intelligence service of other countries, were certainly better
+informed about the German situation and also about the true aims of German
+politics than the German citizen who had no access to foreign newspapers, who
+was not permitted to listen to foreign radio stations if he did not want to land in
+jail or on the scaffold, who for years lived as isolated as in jail and could not
+even trust his neighbors and friends—not even his relatives—and dared not talk
+things over with anybody. Even ministers knew no more about Hitler’s true plans
+than any other fellow citizen and even of major State affairs they mostly learned
+only afterward through the newspapers or the radio. Who could have ever conceived
+the thought that foreign states would maintain diplomatic relations with
+<span class='pageno' title='241' id='Page_241'></span>
+a criminal organization and that official persons of foreign countries should
+recognize and call upon a man in whom they saw the head of a band of conspirators?</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As already mentioned, Funk has never denied that in his plans
+and directives he naturally took into account the possibility of wars
+which might some day have to be waged by Germany, just as it is
+part of the duty of every general staff in the world to take such
+possibilities into consideration. At that time Funk had every reason
+to do so in his capacity as Minister of Economics and Reichsbank
+president; for the world situation since the first World War had
+been so tense, and the conflicting interests of individual nations had
+frequently appeared insurmountable to such a degree that, unless
+he wanted to be accused of neglecting or betraying the interests of
+his own people, every statesman had to make the preparations
+necessary for waging war. A preliminary activity of this kind is,
+therefore, not in itself of criminal significance; and Funk has no
+doubt that during those years the ministers of economics and bank
+presidents of other countries also made—and had to make—similar
+preparations for the event of war. In the case of Funk it is of no
+importance whether or not he for his part ordered such preparations,
+but only whether or not he knew that Hitler was planning aggressive
+wars and intended to wage such aggressive wars in violation
+of existing treaties and in disregard of international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But Funk, as he declared under oath, did not know this, nor did
+he act on this premise. Hitler’s constant affirmations of peace prevented
+such a possibility from entering his mind. Today, of course,
+we know on the basis of the actual events that followed and on the
+basis of the facts established by these proceedings, that those peace
+assertions of Hitler’s, which were still on his lips when he committed
+suicide, were in reality only lies and deception. But at that
+time Funk regarded Hitler’s protestations in favor of peace as perfectly
+genuine. It never occurred to him at that time that he himself
+and the whole German nation could be deceived by Hitler; he
+believed Hitler’s words just as did the entire world, and thus he
+was the victim of that deception just as was the entire world. If
+no blame attaches to foreign statesmen and generals who believed
+Hitler’s protestations, although they certainly were better informed
+on Germany’s rearmament than was Funk, the faith which he himself
+had in the head of the State cannot be called a crime.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I have now examined the Prosecution’s
+accusation that Funk had planned wars of aggression; and
+I turn to another point of the Indictment, which concerns Funk’s
+activities in the occupied territories and the charge of forced labor.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution offered very little evidence against Funk on
+the subject of forced labor or the slave-labor program. In the main
+he is held responsible for the compulsory employment of foreign
+<span class='pageno' title='242' id='Page_242'></span>
+workers on the grounds that he was a member of the Central
+Planning Board from autumn 1943 on. The first session of the
+Central Planning Board at which he was present took place on
+22 November 1943, that is to say, at an advanced stage of the
+war, and after that he very rarely attended meetings. The Defendant
+Speer testified to this, and it is also evident from the minutes
+of the Board, which were very carefully kept. And I should like
+to emphasize the fact that Funk never had anything to do with
+the employment of labor either in his capacity as Minister of
+Economics or as president of the Reichsbank. He was on principle
+opposed to taking in too many workers from the occupied territories,
+especially by force, because this interfered with the
+economic and the social life of these territories. The Codefendant
+Sauckel and the witnesses Landfried and Hayler have confirmed
+this, and it is also shown by the remarks made by Funk himself
+at the meeting held in Lammers’ office on 11 July 1944 (Document
+3819-PS), which was frequently quoted in Court. Here, for instance,
+Funk expressed disapproval of ruthless raids to recruit foreign
+workers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If Funk sent representatives to the Central Planning Board, he
+did so only to insure that the necessary raw materials were allocated
+to the industries engaged in manufacturing consumer’s goods and
+goods for export, but never to deal with questions of foreign
+labor, in which he was not at all interested. Although the Prosecution,
+in cross-examining the witness Hayler, on 7 May 1946, confronted
+him with a statement by Funk during the preliminary
+interrogation of 22 October 1945, Document Number 3544-PS, to
+the effect that he had “not racked his brain” over these labor
+problems, it must also be stated on the part of the Defense that
+in the next sentence of these minutes—in the same breath, so to
+speak—Funk declared that he had always done his utmost to
+prevent workers being taken away from their homeland, in this
+case France. This second sentence, although not quoted by the
+Prosecution, seems to be of special importance because it clearly
+reveals Funk’s disapproval of the compulsory measures used in
+connection with the utilization of foreign labor. The Defendant
+Speer, however, testified before the Tribunal on 20 June that the
+Central Planning Board made no plans at all for the utilization
+of labor. Only occasional discussions on questions concerning the
+utilization of labor took place here. The records containing the
+actual results of the negotiations and decisions of the Central
+Planning Board have not been introduced by the Prosecution. It
+has been shown that Funk, who attended only a few of the meetings
+of the Central Planning Board, never received the full notes
+but only the minutes, which revealed nothing. Before Speer was
+<span class='pageno' title='243' id='Page_243'></span>
+responsible for decisions on war production, and before Sauckel
+became Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor—that
+is, before 1942—the question of recruiting labor for production
+was dealt with by the Four Year Plan, that is, by Göring and not
+by Funk. Later on applications for workers required, as Speer
+has testified, were usually made by the industries directly to the
+offices controlling the allocation of labor. While Funk was still
+in charge of production in the Reich Ministry for Economics and
+working in accordance with the directives of the Four Year Plan,
+questions concerning the allocation of labor were not dealt with
+by the Reich Ministry for Economics at all, but by the Plenipotentiary
+General appointed under the Four Year Plan for the
+various branches of industry—that is, by Göring—by means of
+direct negotiation with the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation
+of Labor. Speer clarified this in connection with Document
+Sauckel Number 12. He also clarified the fact that several branches
+of industry, such as overground and underground construction not
+falling within the competency of the Reich Minister of Economics,
+were cited in this document as belonging to it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Some other items had been rectified previously already by Sauckel’s defense
+counsel. The various economic offices (Wirtschaftsämter) likewise did not request
+manpower from the Reich Ministry of Economics. They were, however, not offices
+of the Reich Ministry of Economics, but were incorporated in the so-called intermediate
+instance, that is, in the provincial authorities, or in the Gauleitungen.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">An important point in this connection is the establishment of the fact that
+up to 1943, that is, up to the time in which Funk was at all competent in questions
+of production, foreign workers came to Germany through recruitment solely upon
+the basis of a voluntary decision. With respect to this, I refer to the decree of the
+Reich Minister for Labor promulgated on 30 July 1940, presented in Funk’s book of
+documents under Number 12, in which the conformity with obligations internationally
+agreed upon is specifically pointed out.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally it must be stated that Funk, at the time when he joined
+the Central Planning Board, no longer had any production assignments
+and could therefore no longer claim workers, so that in
+consequence he had no further interest in this aspect of the Central
+Planning Board’s activities.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Regarding Funk’s attitude toward the economy of occupied territory, and
+measures taken by him to insure the maintenance of orderly economic conditions
+and especially of stable conditions of currency, I refer to the questionnaires Landfried
+(Exhibit Number Funk-16) and Puhl (Exhibit Number Funk-17), as well as to
+testimony of the witnesses Hayler, Neubacher, and Seyss-Inquart. I will refer only
+to Document 2263-PS, introduced by the Prosecution during cross-examination of
+the Defendant Funk, a letter from the Under Secretary of the Ministry of Economics
+to the Armed Forces High Command of 6 June 1942, in which the transfer of
+100 million Reichsmark from occupation money is requested for purchases by Roges
+Raw Material Incorporated (Rohstoffhandelsgesellschaft) on the black market in
+France.</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Here we deal with the purchases in occupied territories mentioned before,
+resulting from instructions by the Four Year Plan. These, however, represent
+exactly those purchases against which Funk protested. His protests finally culminated
+in the decision of the Delegate for the Four Year Plan (Göring) to prohibit
+any such further purchases. As is known, Funk personally had no authority
+to issue instructions for the occupied territories. Moreover such controlled
+purchases by authorities must be looked upon in a different light from the
+<span class='pageno' title='244' id='Page_244'></span>
+uncontrolled purchases of the various State, Party, and Armed Forces agencies,
+against which Funk fought time and again (Questionnaire Landfried, Document
+Book Number Funk-16).</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Summarily it must be said that the evidence submitted has
+proved beyond doubt that the Defendant Funk took a great many
+measures to prevent the exploitation of occupied territories and
+that the fact that he succeeded in preventing the devaluation of
+currency in occupied countries was in itself enough to protect them
+from suffering damage to an extent which cannot be evaluated in
+detail.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With that, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I leave this point of the
+Indictment against Funk and turn to a further charge against
+him, namely, his participation in the elimination of Jews from
+economic life in November and December 1938, which forms Point 3
+of the Indictment against him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen, the charges which the Prosecution has made against
+Funk contain many details with which, in view of the time at
+my disposal, I am unable to deal fully. With regard to such details
+I shall refer to statements made by Funk himself in this connection.
+First of all, however, I must deal more fully with what
+seems to me the most important of all the charges made against
+Funk, namely, that of playing a part in the persecution of the
+Jews. The Defendant Funk considers this to be the most important
+factor in his trial.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen, no one in Germany has ever asserted that Funk
+was one of those fanatical anti-Semites who took part in the
+pogroms against the Jews or who approved of these proceedings
+and profited by them; Funk always condemned such actions. This
+can be explained not only by his natural disposition and the
+environment in which he grew up, but also by his years of work
+as a journalist, mainly in connection with that section of the press
+which dealt with economic policy and consequently kept him in
+continuous touch with the Jewish circles of importance to economic
+life. Experts in that field know, and still have respect for, Funk
+who even at that time showed an attitude that was free of all
+anti-Semitism, and friendly toward the Jews rather than hostile.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is tragic to a certain extent that in spite of this the name
+Funk, of all names, has been repeatedly connected in this Trial with
+the decree of November 1933, as a result of which the Jews were
+eliminated from economic life. Whether he liked it or not, all
+questions concerning the treatment of Jews in the economic life
+of Germany were under the jurisdiction of his department as
+Minister for Economics. As an official it was his duty to issue the
+necessary executive instructions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This was certainly particularly difficult for Funk, in view of
+his tolerant attitude. At that time he had already been a civil
+<span class='pageno' title='245' id='Page_245'></span>
+servant of the Reich Propaganda Ministry and the Ministry for
+Economics for 8 years, and yet, during all that time, the Prosecution
+could not cite a single instance of any display of anti-Semitism
+on Funk’s part or any evidence of his having urged
+or approved of the use of force, terrorism, or injustice against the
+Jews. On the contrary, we know from the statements of various
+witnesses that Funk repeatedly interceded for his Jewish fellow citizens
+in the course of these years; that he looked after them
+and tried in their interests to alleviate hardships, to prevent
+encroachments on their rights, and to spare the lives and careers
+of human beings, even if they were Jews or political opponents
+of his own.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is, therefore, not surprising that this man, with his wide
+experience in the economic field, this man of far-reaching knowledge,
+with his frankly tolerant views, was most painfully affected
+when on 10 November 1938 he had to witness the destruction
+of Jewish homes and shops in Berlin, and when he received one
+report after another confirming the fact that Goebbels and his
+clique, exploiting the indignation of the populace over the
+assassination of a German by a Jew, were organizing such pogroms
+throughout Germany, and that these outrages were leading not
+only to the destruction of Jewish property, but also to the murder
+of many Jews and to the persecution of many thousands of innocent
+citizens.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The affidavit of this assistant, Ministerialrat Kallus (Document
+Book Number Funk-15) of 9 December 1945, and that of Frau Luise
+Funk of 5 November 1945 (Funk Document Book Number 3), prove
+clearly that Funk condemned such excesses most severely, that he
+was incensed to the extent of calling them filthy outrages even
+when addressing Dr. Goebbels himself, and that he threatened to
+resign in the event of a repetition. Even at that time he told the
+mighty Goebbels to his face that one should be ashamed of being
+a German.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All this, Gentlemen, expressed the justified indignation of a
+man who for years had made every effort to insure moderation
+toward Jews and political opponents and had received many a
+letter of gratitude for so doing—a man who had fought for years
+to prevent terrorism, to secure for all his fellow citizens the rights
+to which they were entitled, and to raise the standard of German
+economic life—and who now saw all his efforts frustrated in a
+single night by the brutal fanaticism of a Dr. Goebbels.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk himself, during his interrogation, gave us a vivid description
+of how, ever since he entered office as Minister of Economics
+in February 1938, he had been subjected to continuous
+pressure by Goebbels and Dr. Ley to eliminate the Jews from the
+<span class='pageno' title='246' id='Page_246'></span>
+economic life of the country in the same way as they had been
+eliminated in 1933 from its cultural life.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The witness Dr. Hayler stated here that Himmler also found
+fault with Funk for this. Funk himself testified to the difficulties
+which again and again occurred during those years with workers
+stirred up by propaganda, who were sometimes no longer willing
+to work under Jewish managers, or did not dare to do so; and
+how, in these oppressive conditions, numerous Jewish owners sold
+their businesses—frequently at cut prices—to people who seemed
+to Funk as the Minister of Economics entirely unfit to acquire or
+manage such businesses. Funk tried again and again to stem this
+overwhelming development. He made continual efforts to put a
+brake on this process of Aryanization; to provide for a reasonable
+and just settlement for Jewish owners of businesses; and to allow
+them to emigrate from Germany with their property. But Funk
+realized more and more clearly every day that he was too weak to
+stop this movement and that the radical elements around Dr. Goebbels
+and Dr. Ley were gaining the upper hand, in which they were
+unfortunately able to rely on Hitler’s authority. Hitler had allowed
+himself in the course of time to be won over more and more to
+the policy of radical treatment of the Jewish question by a few
+irresponsible advisers who are not sitting in the dock today.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The events of 9 November 1938 burst like a bombshell into this
+fight between Funk and other considerate people on the one side,
+and Goebbels and Ley on the other. As Dr. Goebbels himself
+admitted later to Fritzsche, they were aimed directly at the person
+of the Defendant Funk, who was thus to be confronted with a
+<span class='it'>fait accompli</span>. As the witness Landfried testified, Dr. Goebbels did
+in fact attain his ends through this operation of November 1938.
+Goebbels was able to refer later to Hitler’s own order for the Jews
+to be completely excluded from the economic life of Germany,
+although Funk, as the minister concerned, repeatedly made allusion
+to the relations with foreign countries upon which the German
+Reich and its economy depended.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The orders necessary to carry out this program were given by
+Göring in his capacity of Delegate for the Four Year Plan, on the
+direct orders of Hitler. Funk never had any doubt that in this
+particular affair Göring also was to a certain degree only a puppet,
+because he had always known Göring to be a man who condemned
+extreme radicalism in this particular question of the Jews. Funk’s
+views on this point were shared by wide circles of the German
+people, and the fateful Göring meeting of 12 November 1938 (Document
+1816-PS) proved this to be correct. This document has been
+mentioned here repeatedly. At a meeting which preceded that of
+12 November 1938, Göring sharply condemned the acts of terrorism
+<span class='pageno' title='247' id='Page_247'></span>
+which had occurred and declared to the Gauleiter present that he
+would make every Gauleiter personally responsible for acts of
+violence committed in his district. But what was the good of that?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the course of the second meeting, the minutes of which were
+submitted to the Tribunal under Number 1816-PS, Goebbels ultimately
+succeeded in imposing his radical demands; and the course
+taken by this meeting forced Funk to admit that the complete
+elimination of the Jews from German economic life could no longer
+be delayed for the simple reason that the circles in power had
+become far too fanatical. It became evident to Funk that legislative
+measures were necessary if the Jews were to be protected
+from further acts of terrorism, looting, and violence and if they
+were to get any reasonable compensation. During the Göring meeting
+of 12 November 1938, Funk repeatedly expressed his views
+again, as is shown by the records. It was due to the efforts made
+by the Defendant Funk, with the support of Göring, that Jewish
+businesses were reopened for the time being, that the whole procedure
+was taken out of the hands of the arbitrary local agencies and
+put on a legal basis throughout Germany, and finally that in order
+to gain time in which to carry out this action a definite date was
+set for its completion. Anyone who reads carefully the minutes of
+the Göring meeting of 12 November 1938 will, in spite of their
+incorrect and incomplete formulation, be able to find definite and
+repeated indications of Funk’s moderating influence; namely, his
+insistence—repeatedly mentioned in the minutes—on the reopening
+of Jewish stores, his proposal that the Jews be allowed to retain at
+least their securities, and finally his attitude to Heydrich’s demand
+that the Jews be placed in ghettos. The minutes of 12 November
+1938 prove beyond doubt that it was Funk who opposed Heydrich’s
+proposal by saying: “We don’t need ghettos. Surely the Jews could
+move closer together among themselves. The existence of 3 million
+Jewish people among no less than 70 million Germans can be
+regulated without ghettos.” This is a literal quotation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk therefore wanted to save the Jews at least from being
+interned in ghettos. It must be admitted that at that time Funk
+did not entirely succeed in securing recognition for his point of view,
+so that the proposal that the Jews should be allowed to retain their
+securities, for instance, was turned down, although Funk pointed
+out, as the minutes show, that to realize the Jewish securities would
+suddenly flood the German stock market with securities to the value
+of 500 million Reichsmark and would, therefore, have serious consequences
+for the German stock market. The decisive question in
+judging the Defendant Funk is not so much his success as the fact
+that he made an obvious effort to save for the Jews all that could
+be saved in the circumstances; and we must not lose sight of the
+<span class='pageno' title='248' id='Page_248'></span>
+fact that in all those measures Funk acted only in his capacity as
+Minister of Economics, that is, as an official who merely gave the
+order to execute a command which Göring as Delegate of the Four
+Year Plan had issued on the orders of Hitler. Funk found himself
+in exactly the same position of constraint, as, for example, the Reich
+Minister of Finance, Graf Schwerin von Krosigk, who at that time
+had to order the punitive levy of 1,000 million Reichsmark to be
+paid by the Jews, or the Reich Minister of Justice and the Reich
+Minister of the Interior, both of whom issued similar executive
+instructions in their respective spheres. The Tribunal must decide
+the difficult legal question of whether a state official whose government
+has been legally recognized by all the governments of the
+world is liable to legal punishment for putting into effect a law—and
+I emphasize the word “law”—passed in accordance with the legislative
+system of this state. This legal problem is entirely different
+from the other question, dealt with in the Charter and by the Prosecution,
+as to whether or not the fact that an official order was given
+by a superior can serve as an excuse. I might add here that I shall
+not discuss this legal question because I shall leave it to the other
+members of the Defense. I shall discuss only whether an official
+who puts into effect a law passed by the internationally recognized
+government of his country thereby becomes liable to punishment.
+That is an entirely different problem from the one dealt with by
+the Charter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen, since this has not been dealt with before, I have to
+state the following; I read at the bottom of Page 50: Our natural
+sense of justice fully approves that a citizen, an official, or even a
+soldier, cannot defend himself by reference to the official order
+given him by his superior if this order obviously implies an illegal
+act, and especially a crime; and if in the existing circumstances and
+in due consideration of all the accompanying facts, the subordinate
+realizes, or should realize, that the official order is contrary to
+the law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the latter condition exists, in other words, if the official order
+obviously constitutes a breach of the law, it may in general be fully
+approved that the subordinate is not accorded the right to refer to
+his superior’s official order as an excuse and to maintain that he
+was only carrying out that order. In that respect this stipulation
+of the Charter contains nothing essentially new, but only the confirmation
+and further development of legal principles which are
+recognized to a varying extent in the penal codes of most civilized
+nations today. A certain amount of precaution, however, seems to
+be indicated in this matter, for it should not be forgotten, on the
+other hand, that obedience to the orders of a superior—not obedience
+to the law, but to a superior—is, and must in future remain
+<span class='pageno' title='249' id='Page_249'></span>
+the foundation of every government in all nations if the orderly
+functioning of the state administrative apparatus is to be secured;
+and that it would be dangerous for the civil servant to decide for
+himself whether to keep his oath of allegiance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But, Gentlemen, in our case something different is involved: We
+are dealing here with the obedience of the citizen and especially
+of the civil servant, such as Funk was at that time, to a national
+law, which was legally promulgated in accordance with the constitutional
+rules of this State. If we wish to find a just and correct
+answer to this complicated juridical question, which so far has not
+been treated in literature, it will be pertinent to disregard entirely
+conditions in Germany and the present Trial, and to ask ourselves
+what decision would be given in a case where a civil servant of a
+different country—not Germany—carried out a law. Let us assume
+for instance, that some foreign country embracing a minority promulgated,
+in accordance with its constitution, a law exiling from
+its territory all members of this minority, or confiscating for the
+benefit of the state the property of such inhabitants, or turning over
+to the state or partitioning among other citizens the large agricultural
+estates of such inhabitants. Let us assume that such a case
+exists and let us ask ourselves: Does the civil servant in this nation
+really commit a crime if he carries out this lawful order? Is it
+really the duty of the official charged with the execution of this law
+to refuse to obey the law and to declare that in his personal opinion
+the law concerned is a crime against humanity, or has he even the
+right to do so? In such a case, Gentlemen, would any state today
+grant its civil servants permission to examine whether the law proclaimed
+is contrary to the principles of humanity or to the fluctuating
+norms of international law? What state would tolerate the
+refusal of its civil servants for such a reason to execute a law
+already proclaimed?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class="fs">Or another example: Let us assume that the laws of a nation decree that certain
+new weapons are to be introduced into the armed forces, or that more warships
+are to be built, or that some preparations have to be made for war. Should
+an individual civil servant really have the right to refuse the execution of the
+law, even perhaps to sabotage its execution, and then to say, by way of explanation,
+that in his personal opinion concerning international law it involved the
+preparation of an aggressive war, consequently an international crime?</span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will have to decide these legal problems. But Funk
+may point out in his own defense the fact that by reason of his
+entire ideology and background it was especially painful to him
+to issue these executive instructions, although he believed he was
+only doing his duty as a civil servant.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection I wish to remind you of Funk’s circular of
+6 February 1939 (Document 3498-PS, Trial Brief Funk, Page, 19),
+where he emphasizes to his officials that it was their duty to “insure
+that it was carried out in a correct manner in every respect” and
+<span class='pageno' title='250' id='Page_250'></span>
+where he already feels impelled to disclaim personal responsibility
+for these measures by expressly emphasizing: “How far and how
+rapidly the powers conferred by the Four Year Plan are to be
+exercised will depend on the instructions to be given by me in
+accordance with the directives of the Delegate for the Four Year
+Plan.” This special reference made by the Defendant Funk to the
+legal decrees of the Four Year Plan, which was authorized to promulgate
+laws, originated in the defendant’s desire to express formally
+and solemnly, and to establish for the future, the fact that in issuing
+the executive instructions in 1938 he was a victim of his obedience
+to the State, a victim of his loyalty to the laws of the State to which
+he had sworn allegiance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Funk’s circular of 6 February 1939, already mentioned on Page 19
+of the trial brief, clearly expresses the qualms of conscience which
+had gripped Funk in those days, although he had not incriminated
+himself—qualms which, during his interrogation by an American
+officer on 22 October 1945, led to his complete nervous collapse, so
+that Funk was unable to restrain his tears and told the interrogating
+officer: “Yes, I am guilty; I should have resigned at that time.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These same qualms of conscience gripped the defendant throughout
+the entire Trial and are still haunting him; and we remember
+that in the session of 6 May 1946, when this point was discussed,
+Funk was so deeply shaken that he could hardly continue talking and
+finally declared here before you, Gentlemen, that at that moment
+he fully realized that this, meaning the atrocities of November 1938,
+was the starting point of the chain of events leading to those horrible
+and frightful things of which we have learned here, some of
+which he too had already heard of during his imprisonment, and
+which culminated in Auschwitz. He felt, as he said during his interrogation
+on 22 October 1945, “deep shame and heavy guilt,” and
+he still feels it today; but he had put the will of the State and the
+laws of the State above his own feelings and above the voice of
+conscience since he, as a civil servant, was tied by duty to the State.
+He felt these ties all the more strongly as these legal measures were
+particularly necessary for the protection of the Jews in order to
+save them from losing their rights completely, and from suffering
+further despotism and violence. These are the very words of the
+Defendant Funk; and they represent his actual feelings. Today
+Funk still feels that it was a terrible tragedy that he of all people
+was charged with these things—he who never during his entire life said
+a spiteful word against a Jew, but had wherever he could
+always worked for tolerance and equality for the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If during his interrogation on 22 October 1945 Funk said: “I am
+guilty,” it need not be investigated here whether the defendant
+intended these words to apply to his criminal guilt, or only to a
+<span class='pageno' title='251' id='Page_251'></span>
+moral guilt which he saw in the fact that he had remained in an
+office which compelled him to carry out laws incompatible with his
+own philosophy of life. Funk was not in a position to decide for
+himself the complicated legal question of whether an official of an
+internationally acknowledged state can be punished at all if he
+only carries out laws passed in accordance with the legal constitution
+of this state. For the Defendant Funk his “guilt” did not lie
+in the fact that he had signed the executive instructions in November
+1938, since this had been his duty as an official, rather did he
+consider himself guilty because he had remained a member of the
+Government although he found the acts of terror which had occurred
+intolerable, and abhorred them; he was not involved in the
+“conflict of conscience,” of which he spoke when he was interrogated,
+because he acted according to the laws which he considered
+necessary under the conditions prevailing at the time. This conflict
+was a result of the fact that he had not, in this difficult situation,
+listened to the voice of his conscience and had not resigned
+his ministerial office. But the decisive reasons for his attitude and
+his final decision to remain in office in spite of his feelings about
+the matter were certainly not material considerations. His reputation
+as a journalist and his abilities as such would easily have
+enabled him to find another suitable position. Much is to be said
+for the opinion that the Defendant was held in office above all by
+the thought that his resignation would in no way improve matters,
+but that on the contrary the administration would become still
+more radical under an unsuitable and fanatical successor, while by
+staying in office he might hope to alleviate much distress.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These considerations, which may have guided the Defendant
+Funk in the first place, were certainly correct up to a point. His
+State Secretary, Dr. Landfried, at least has testified that later on
+too Funk often expressed serious misgivings concerning the action
+taken against the Jews in November 1938 and showed very strong
+disapproval of all excesses and infringements of the law committed
+by various Government agencies in carrying out the action. Funk
+could talk openly to his confidant Landfried, and he often complained
+to him that he had no power to prevent such excesses. But,
+as he said to Landfried: “We of the Ministry of Economics should
+take particular care to see that no one makes illicit profits out of
+the Aryanization—that is, the transfer to non-Jewish ownership—of
+business firms.” And Ministerialrat Kallus described in his deposition
+of 19 April 1946 the various measures taken at that time by
+Funk to protect the interests of Jewish owners. Kallus also told us
+that Funk even made personal efforts to insure that his orders were
+carried out by his subordinates in a proper manner.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen, thus a sense of duty on the one hand, and humane
+feeling on the other, were the motives which kept the defendant in
+<span class='pageno' title='252' id='Page_252'></span>
+office and thus brought him into a situation where he is today
+charged with criminal action.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Mr. President, I am now coming to a new subject and I have
+altogether about 15 more pages. Does the Court wish to adjourn
+now? It is 6 minutes to 4.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Can you finish it by that time, Dr. Sauter?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: There are 15 more pages; I should say about 8 or
+9 minutes. On further thought, Mr. President, it will take about
+half an hour.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn at this time.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 15 July 1946 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' title='253' id='Page_253'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>ONE HUNDRED<br/> AND SEVENTY-EIGHTH DAY</span><br/> Monday, 15 July 1946</h1></div>
+
+<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>MARSHAL: May it please the Tribunal, the Defendant Ribbentrop
+is absent today.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would it be convenient to Counsel for the
+Prosecution and the Defense if at 2 o’clock today we were to deal
+with those interrogatories and affidavits which have come in since
+the last applications were made?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE (Deputy Chief Prosecutor for the
+United Kingdom): My Lord, it would be perfectly convenient for
+the Prosecution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Sauter, do you think it would be convenient
+for the Defense Counsel to deal with those matters at 2
+o’clock?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Certainly, Mr. President; I will inform the other
+defense counsel that these applications will be discussed at 2 o’clock.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. RUDOLF DIX (Counsel for Defendant Schacht): I agree with
+my colleague, Dr. Sauter, that this should be done. But if this is
+done at 2 o’clock it will interrupt my final speech. I should be very
+grateful if it could be done immediately after Dr. Sauter finishes
+his speech, so that I could present my plea coherently. It would be
+very awkward if I were interrupted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Certainly, Dr. Dix. Very well; we will do
+it immediately after Dr. Sauter’s plea.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: May I speak now, Mr. President?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, Dr. Sauter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: May it please the Tribunal; before the adjournment
+on Friday, I explained in conclusion the position and the
+attitude of the Defendant Funk with respect to the Jewish question.
+On this occasion I pointed out that in connection with the executive
+instructions issued late in 1938 on the legal exclusion of the Jews
+from economic life, the Defendant Funk acted only in his capacity
+as a Reich official and in the performance of the duties of that
+office.
+<span class='pageno' title='254' id='Page_254'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On Friday, I finished my statements in that respect with the
+words:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was a sense of duty on the one hand, and humane feeling on
+the other, which kept the Defendant Funk in office and thus brought
+him into a situation where he is today charged with criminal action.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I turn to the last chapter of
+my appraisal of the Defendant Funk, of his motives and actions,
+and will now deal with the gold deliveries by the SS to the Reichsbank,
+and with the relation of the Defendant Funk to the concentration
+camp question. That is to say, I am going to refer to Page 58
+of the written speech which has been submitted to you.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is a peculiar tragedy in the life of the Defendant Funk that
+he was not only forced by fate in the year 1938 to issue executive
+instructions for laws which he always inwardly condemned and
+repudiated more than anybody else, but that once again, in the year
+1942, he became involved in a particularly horrible manner with
+Jewish persecutions. I am thinking now of the deposits made by
+the SS in the Reichsbank, that is to say, the matter on which a film
+was shown here of the steel vault of the Frankfurt Branch of the
+Reichsbank and about which two witnesses have testified, namely,
+Vice President Emil Puhl and Reichsbank Councillor Albert Thoms.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Funk was already examined about this matter
+of the gold deposits at the preliminary proceedings on 4 June 1945,
+(see 2828-PS); at that time, however, no details were disclosed to
+him, and Funk made the same statement then as he did before this
+Tribunal, namely, that he was only briefly told about the matter
+in question on a few occasions, and that he had not attached any
+importance to it at all. That is also the reason why the Defendant
+Funk could not at first recall those happenings very well during
+the proceedings here. He did not know anything more about them
+than he had already said.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nevertheless, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, Funk had to expect
+that this matter would be brought up in the Trial, at any rate in
+the cross-examination. And this was actually done by the American
+Prosecution on 7 May 1946, who submitted an affidavit by the
+witness Emil Puhl, Vice President of the Reichsbank, in which at
+first sight Puhl appeared to make serious accusations against the
+Defendant Funk. Now it is remarkable that since the beginning
+of this Trial the Defendant Funk has repeatedly referred to this
+very witness Puhl for various points, and that since December 1945
+he has repeatedly requested that the latter be interrogated.
+Measured by ordinary human standards, Funk would certainly not
+have done this if he had had a bad conscience and had reason to
+expect to be compromised in the most damaging way by his own
+<span class='pageno' title='255' id='Page_255'></span>
+witness regarding the concentration camp matter. But the oral
+examination of the witness Emil Puhl here before this Tribunal
+showed beyond a doubt that Puhl could no longer in any way
+maintain the incriminating statements in his affidavit, as far as the
+character of the Defendant Funk and his knowledge of the particulars
+of the SS deposits were concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is true that Funk, as he recalled after Puhl’s testimony (and
+concerning this I submitted on 17 June 1946 a corrected copy of his
+sworn testimony), was once asked by Reichsführer SS Himmler
+whether articles of value which had been seized by the SS in the
+Eastern Territories could be deposited in the vaults of the Reichsbank.
+Funk answered this question in the affirmative and told Himmler
+that he should delegate somebody to discuss the matter with Vice
+President Puhl, and settle the details. Himmler at that time told
+Funk that his Gruppenführer Pohl could do this and that the latter
+would get in touch with Vice President Puhl. That was all that
+Funk at that time, I believe in 1942, had discussed with Reichsführer
+SS Himmler and which he on that occasion also repeated
+to his Vice President Puhl who was actually directing the business
+of the Reichsbank and therefore responsible for this affair.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There was nothing extraordinary in this question of Reichsführer
+SS Himmler, at least nothing which Funk could recognize. For, as
+far as Funk knew, the SS was at that time in charge of the entire
+police service in the Occupied Eastern Territories. For that reason
+it often had to confiscate valuables just as the ordinary police did
+in the interior, that is, within Germany. Moreover, all gold coins,
+foreign currency, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, in the Occupied Eastern Territories had
+to be turned in according to law, and these deliveries in the Eastern
+Territories were naturally made to the SS, because there were no
+other state offices equipped for that purpose. Funk also knew that
+the concentration camps were under the direction of the SS and
+thought that the valuables which were to be given to the Reichsbank
+by the SS for safekeeping belonged very probably to that
+category of valuables which the entire population was obliged to
+deliver.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally, as has been ascertained in the course of this Trial, the
+SS was constantly just as much engaged in the fighting in the East
+as the Armed Forces, and like the latter the SS had also collected
+so-called booty in the abandoned and destroyed towns of the East
+and delivered it to the Reich. Therefore, there was nothing at all
+extraordinary for Funk in the fact that the SS possessed gold and
+foreign currency and brought it in for delivery in the regular way.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, the essential point in this whole business is the question
+whether the Defendant Funk knew or saw that among the objects
+delivered by the SS there were unusual quantities of gold spectacle
+<span class='pageno' title='256' id='Page_256'></span>
+frames, gold teeth, and similar objects which had come into the
+hands of the SS not through legal but criminal confiscations. If—and
+I emphasize, Gentlemen, if—it could be proven that the
+Defendant Funk had seen such objects in the deposits of the SS,
+this would naturally have caused him some surprise. But we heard
+the witness Puhl say in the most positive way that the Defendant
+Funk had no knowledge of this and, indeed, that Vice President
+Puhl himself knew no further details about it. In any case Funk
+never saw what particular gold objects and what quantities the SS
+delivered.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, it has been said against Funk that he himself entered the
+vaults of the Berlin Reichsbank several times, and from this one
+felt entitled to draw the conclusion that he must have seen what
+objects had been delivered to the Reichsbank by the SS. This conclusion
+is obviously wrong because the evidence shows that during
+the entire period of the war Funk went to the vaults of the Reichsbank
+only a very few times for the purpose of showing these vaults
+and the bullion of the Reichsbank stored there to special visitors,
+especially foreign guests. But on those few visits to the vaults he
+never saw the deposits of the SS. He never observed what in
+particular the SS had deposited in his bank. This is established
+beyond doubt, not only by the sworn statement of the Defendant
+Funk himself, but also by the oral testimony of Vice President Puhl
+and Reichsbank Councillor Thoms here in this courtroom. This
+Prosecution witness, who is certainly free from suspicion and who
+by his own admission volunteered to testify, has declared here under
+oath that the valuables were delivered by the SS in locked trunks,
+boxes, and bags and were also stored away in these containers, and
+that Funk was never present in the vaults when the bank employees
+made an inventory of the contents of an individual box or trunk.
+The witness Thoms, who was in charge of these vaults, never saw
+the Defendant Funk there at all. Therefore, Funk neither knew of
+the proportions which the deliveries of the SS gradually assumed
+in the course of time, nor did he know that the deposits contained
+jewelry, pearls, and precious stones, and also spectacle frames and
+gold teeth. He never saw any of those things and none of his
+officials ever reported to him about them either.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now it is the opinion of the Prosecution that Funk, as President
+of the Reichsbank, surely must have known what was kept in the
+vaults of his bank; but this conclusion is also evidently mistaken
+and does not take into consideration actual conditions in a large
+central issuing bank. Funk, who was also Reich Minister of
+Economics, had in his capacity as President of the Reichsbank no
+occasion whatever to bother about the deposit of an individual
+customer, even if this happened to belong to the SS. As President
+<span class='pageno' title='257' id='Page_257'></span>
+of the Reichsbank he did not bother about any deposits of other
+clients of his bank either, since this was not his job. On only one
+occasion, following a suggestion of his Vice President Puhl, he asked
+Reichsführer SS Himmler—this was during his second conversation
+with him—whether the valuables deposited by the SS in the Reichsbank
+could be converted into cash in the legal course of business
+at the Reichsbank. Himmler gave his permission and Funk passed
+this information on to his Vice President Puhl. But in this matter
+he was only thinking of gold coins and foreign currency, that is to
+say, of those particular valuables which had to be turned in to
+the Reichsbank as a matter of course in the German Reich and
+which could be and had to be converted into cash by the Reichsbank.
+The idea never occurred to Funk that the deposits might
+contain gold teeth or other such remarkable objects which had their
+origin in criminal acts in concentration camps. He heard about these
+things to his horror for the first time here in the courtroom during
+the Trial.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The only remaining point in the statement of the witness Puhl
+which might excite a certain amount of suspicion, Your Honors,
+was the question of preserving secrecy, which in fact played a very
+important part indeed in the examination of the witness. Vice
+President Puhl stated here at the beginning of his testimony that
+the Defendant Funk had told him that the matter of the SS
+deposits must be kept especially secret. Funk, on the other hand,
+has always denied this in the most insistent manner and declared
+under oath that he never talked to Puhl at all about any such
+secrecy. Thus at the very beginning, here in the courtroom, we
+had one statement pitted against another, oath against oath. Vice
+President Puhl’s statements regarding this point, however, seemed
+somewhat contradictory from the beginning. For on one occasion
+Vice President Puhl said that this secrecy had not struck him as
+anything extraordinary, since after all secrecy is preserved about
+everything that occurs in a bank. In answer to a special question,
+Puhl then stated repeatedly that he did not notice at all that the
+Defendant Funk had supposedly spoken about preserving secrecy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When, however, the affidavit of the witness Thoms of 8 May
+1945 was read and pointed out to the witness Puhl, the latter
+finally stated here under oath on 15 May 1946 that it was plainly
+visible from this affidavit that the desire for secrecy emanated
+from the SS. The SS considered it important that this business
+should be transacted secretly. The SS, as Puhl said, had been the
+ones originally responsible for the imposition of secrecy. This
+was the literal conclusion of the witness Puhl’s sworn statement
+and at the end of it he again confirmed that the obligation for
+secrecy was desired and imposed by the SS.
+<span class='pageno' title='258' id='Page_258'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The initial contradiction regarding this point between the statements
+of the Defendant Funk and those of the witness Puhl was
+hereby completely eliminated, Your Honors, in favor of the
+defendant. Puhl himself could no longer maintain his original
+assertion that it was Funk who had ordered the SS deposits to be
+kept secret. Therefore, in arriving at your verdict, you must
+proceed from the premise that the statement of the Defendant
+Funk is correct in this point also and deserves preference, for he
+has declared under oath from the very beginning and with the
+utmost certainty that he himself knew nothing about keeping
+anything secret and that he had never spoken of any such secrecy
+to Puhl, either. Moreover, there was absolutely no reason for Funk
+to say anything to Puhl about any special secrecy, since Funk was
+obviously of the opinion that the valuables involved were only of
+the kind which had to be turned in and confiscated, and which
+came within the regular lawful business of the Reichsbank and need
+not be kept secret, regardless of whether these things which had
+to be turned in were the property of a prisoner in a concentration
+camp or the property of a free individual.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was never made clear by the evidence submitted why the SS
+on their part stressed the importance of preserving secrecy to Vice
+President Puhl and why, furthermore, the SS opened the deposit in
+the name of Melmer instead of in the name of the SS, and the
+Prosecution for their part did not attach any importance to clearing
+up this point. However, in any case, the demand of the SS for
+secrecy evidently did not strike Vice President Puhl as unusual any
+more than it did the witness Thoms who had nothing at all to do
+with the matter but who confirmed the fact that this secrecy was
+nothing unusual. But nevertheless, Your Honors, one thing is still
+a fact, namely, that nothing was kept secret from the numerous
+employees of the Reichsbank about exactly what kinds of objects
+were involved. On the contrary, the Reichsbank personnel was even
+entrusted by Vice President Puhl with the task of sorting the
+valuables delivered and converting them into cash at the pawn shop.
+Dozens of Reichsbank officials who regularly entered the vaults
+could see the various articles every day, and the Reichshauptkasse,
+an institution entirely separate from the Reichsbank, from time to
+time settled accounts for the conversion of valuables into cash with
+the Reich Ministry of Finance in a quite open and thoroughly
+routine way. Naturally, the Defendant Funk did not know, and still
+does not know today, whether and to what extent agreements had
+been reached between the Finance Minister and Reichsführer SS
+Himmler for accounting for the gold articles to the Reich. He was
+never interested in it, and indeed it did not concern him.
+<span class='pageno' title='259' id='Page_259'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From all these facts, as shown by the evidence, one can readily
+conclude that Funk himself knew nothing about the things which
+were turned over to the Reichsbank at the time, and that even Vice
+President Puhl and Reichsbank Councillor Thoms did not think
+there was anything bad connected with the things, although Thoms,
+at least, had seen of what the deposits actually consisted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For this reason there is no longer any need to examine the
+obvious question as to whether the initial statements of Puhl with
+regard to the deposits of the SS should not have been received
+with a certain skepticism from the very beginning. Puhl apparently
+had the understandable desire at least by his written affidavit to
+shift responsibility from himself to the shoulders of his President
+Funk in order to free himself of his own responsibility for the
+unpleasant facts of the case when he was told during his imprisonment
+that the gold articles of the SS consisted mostly of spectacle
+frames and gold teeth and had been taken from victims of concentration
+camps. At the beginning, even Puhl apparently did not
+see anything wrong in the whole business. For him the matter was
+an ordinary business transaction of the Reichsbank for the account
+of the Reich, which he dealt with in the same manner as he dealt
+with gold articles and foreign currency that had been confiscated
+by the Customs Investigation Office or the Office of Control for
+Foreign Currency or any other State authority. Gentlemen, whatever
+one may judge the responsibility of Vice President Puhl to be,
+at all events these things lie outside the responsibility of the
+Defendant Funk who is the only one with whom you are concerned
+in connection with this point here. In the period after this time Funk
+had only two or three very brief and unimportant conversations with
+Puhl regarding these gold deposits with a view to converting into
+cash gold coins and foreign currency delivered in the regular way.
+Outside of this, Funk did not concern himself at all with this whole
+matter any more. He knew even less about the matter than Puhl,
+and it is not without significance that Puhl declared here under
+oath that he would never have permitted these gold objects to be
+deposited in the Reichsbank at all if he had had the slightest notion
+that the things had been taken from concentration camp victims
+under criminal circumstances by the SS. If Vice President Puhl
+did not know that and could not have guessed it, then Funk could
+have known even less about it, and Puhl’s initial statement which
+was to the effect that—as he said at the time—“the gold articles
+had been accepted by the Reichsbank with Funk’s knowledge and
+agreement and had been converted into cash with the assistance
+of the Reichsbank personnel,” was a grossly misleading statement
+to the Prosecution. Subsequently during his imprisonment when
+Puhl first learned of the true circumstances, he surely must have
+<span class='pageno' title='260' id='Page_260'></span>
+felt the same compunctions as Funk, however innocent the latter
+was in the case. In conclusion, Puhl declared here under oath that
+he would not have tolerated such transactions either, and that he
+would have brought the matter to the attention of the Directorate
+of the Reichsbank as well as to that of President Funk if he had
+known that the valuables were taken from victims of concentration
+camps and had been informed about the nature of these valuables.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In connection with this topic, therefore, I come to the following
+conclusion: The Reichsbank certainly transacted business for the
+account of the Reich, the subject matter of which was derived from
+criminal acts of the SS; but the Defendant Funk knew nothing of
+this. He would not have tolerated such transactions had he known
+the true circumstances. Therefore, he cannot be made criminally
+responsible for this.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same is true, Your Honors, with regard to Reichsbank
+credits for the business agencies of the SS, concerning which I shall
+limit myself to a few sentences. In his written affidavit of 3 May
+1946 the witness Puhl has given a completely misleading account
+of this matter also. For he stated originally that credits of 10 to
+12 million Reichsmark furnished by the Gold Discount Bank upon
+the instruction of the Defendant Funk were used—and I am now
+quoting literally: “for financing production in SS factories by
+workers from concentration camps.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In his oral examination as a witness, Puhl then was asked
+whether Funk had any knowledge that persons from concentration
+camps were employed in these factories at all. In reply to this, Puhl
+declared literally: “I am inclined to assume this, but I am not in a
+position to know it.” Therefore, he was not able to give any definite
+evidence concerning Funk’s knowledge, but only to express a conjecture.
+In contrast to this, Funk’s own statement in regard to this
+matter is quite clear and convincing. It was to the effect that he
+knew, indeed, about the request for credit by the SS, and that he
+even granted it, but that he knew nothing about the nature of the
+SS enterprises concerned and about the people who were employed
+in them. Funk stated this under oath. Accordingly, this credit
+transaction, which moreover occurred about 2 years before the
+affair of the SS gold deposits, that is, prior to 1940, incriminates
+neither the Defendant Funk nor the witness Vice President Puhl.
+At that time, in 1940, neither of them was acquainted with the
+conditions in the concentration camps. They only learned about
+them much later, that is, in the course of this Trial. Nor did the
+Defendant Funk know that persons from the concentration camps
+were working in the afore-mentioned SS factories for which the
+credit was intended.
+<span class='pageno' title='261' id='Page_261'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen, in this connection it appears necessary to devote a
+few more sentences to a discussion of the question whether Funk
+ever visited a concentration camp. The witness Dr. Blaha, who
+was examined here, stated that Dr. Funk was once in Dachau in
+the first half of 1944. This visit was supposed to have occurred as
+a sequel to a conference of the Finance Ministers at Berchtesgaden,
+or in some other place in this region, in which Funk is said to have
+participated. Yet, Gentlemen, when he was examined here, the
+witness Dr. Blaha was unable to say that he had personally seen
+the Defendant Funk in Dachau, but had only heard from camp
+inmates at Dachau—that is, from other persons—that the Reich
+Minister of Economics, Funk, was with many other visitors allegedly
+present. He did not see him; nor would he have known him if he
+had. From the very beginning Funk himself has flatly denied this
+visit to Dachau. He also stated this under oath, and the affidavit
+made by his constant companion Dr. Schwedler (contained in the
+Funk document book under Number 13 submitted to you) proves
+beyond a doubt that Funk never was in a concentration camp.
+Dr. Schwedler is in a position to know this, as at that time he was
+the constant companion of the defendant and knew where Funk
+was from day to day. Moreover, Funk was never a Finance Minister,
+as the witness Dr. Blaha assumed, and never took part in a conference
+of Finance Ministers. Therefore, it appears beyond any
+doubt that what the witness Dr. Blaha stated here purely from
+hearsay is based on false information, or he has confused Funk
+with another visitor, which was very easily possible since the
+Defendant Funk was comparatively unknown to the public. The
+conclusion, therefore, is that Funk never visited a concentration
+camp and never personally became aware of the conditions prevailing
+in such camps.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, by this assertion Funk by no means wishes to allege that
+he knew nothing at all about the existence of concentration camps.
+Funk was naturally cognizant of the fact, just as almost any other
+German, that there were concentration camps in Germany after
+1933; just as he knew that there were and still are penitentiaries,
+prisons, and other penal institutions in Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But what he did not know, and what I want to stress here, was
+the very large number of such concentration camps and the
+hundreds of thousands, even millions, of their inmates. Equally
+unknown to him were the countless atrocities committed in these
+camps, which first became known only in this Trial. In particular
+it was only during this Trial that Funk learned that there were
+extermination camps which murdered millions of Jews. Funk had no
+knowledge of this; he has stated this under oath and it also appears
+absolutely credible, for one of the most important results of this
+<span class='pageno' title='262' id='Page_262'></span>
+Trial, in the opinion of the Defense, consists in providing proof of
+the fact that the German people in general knew nothing about
+the large number of concentration camps or the conditions within
+them, but that on the contrary those conditions were kept secret
+in such a cunning and cruel way that even the highest officials of
+the Reich including the very ministers knew nothing about them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Your Honors, the Defense have now presented their views on
+that part of the Indictment which, had it been true, would have
+tragically incriminated the man Funk. One may think as one
+pleases about acts of violence during a political and economic
+struggle, especially in stormy revolutionary periods, but in the
+opinion of the Defendant Funk himself there can be no disagreement
+on one point, namely, with regard to the concentration camp
+atrocities committed for years, especially against the Jewish population.
+Anyone who participated in such unheard-of atrocities should
+be made to atone for them in the severest way, according to the
+opinion of the entire German people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That is also the point of view of the Defendant Funk, which
+he expressed here on 6 May 1946 when he replied to the American
+prosecutor from the witness stand that as a man and as a German
+he felt deeply guilty and shamed for the crimes which Germans
+committed against millions of poor people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen, I have now reached the end of my consideration
+of the Funk case as far as criminal law is concerned, and that is
+the duty of the Defense in this Trial.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The examination of the evidence with regard to the Funk case
+has, in the opinion of the defendant, produced proof that a legal
+guilt, a criminal guilt, on his part does not exist, and that he can
+ask you for his acquittal with a clear conscience because he has
+never committed any criminal acts in his life.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Your task as judges will now be to find a just verdict for the
+Defendant Funk, a verdict which will not make him atone for the
+crimes of others, crimes he could not prevent and which he may
+not even have known about, but a verdict which only establishes
+the degree of his own guilt and not the degree of his political guilt,
+but of his criminal guilt which is the sole object of these proceedings.
+This verdict should be valid not only for today but also
+recognized as just in the future when we shall view these terrible
+events in the proper perspective and dispassionately as we would
+ancient history; a verdict, Your Honors, which will not only satisfy
+the nations which you represent, but which will also be recognized
+as just and wise by the German people as a whole; a verdict, finally,
+which is not only destructive, retaliatory, and which will sow
+hatred for the future, but one which will make it possible for the
+<span class='pageno' title='263' id='Page_263'></span>
+German people to move forward toward a happier future of human
+dignity and charity, of equality and peace.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Dodd, will you or Sir David deal with
+this. Sir David, I have got a document drawn up by the General
+Secretary which shows in the first place, in the case of the Defendant
+Göring, that there are four interrogatories which have been submitted,
+and to which the Prosecution has not objected. Is that right?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is so, My Lord, so there is
+no further comment with regard to that first application.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Then, with reference to the Defendant
+Ribbentrop, there are two affidavits to which there is no objection,
+and there are three further affidavits which have not been received,
+I understand.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is so, My Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And one document to which the defendants’
+counsel wants to refer in its entirety, namely, TC-75, is that right?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord, that is so. There
+is no objection to that.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Perhaps I had better go on to the end of the
+documents and then call upon Dr. Horn for what he has got to say
+about those three, because as far as I can see, there are only these
+three documents and an affidavit for Seyss-Inquart from a man
+called Erwin Schotter, and another from a man called Adalbert
+Joppich, which have not yet been received.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is so, My Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And three letters from Seyss-Inquart to
+Himmler which have not yet been produced.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is so, My Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Also, in the case of Fritzsche there are two
+interrogatories of Delmar and Feldscher which have not yet been
+received.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, with regard to the
+three letters of the Defendant Seyss-Inquart, they have been
+received, but they have not yet been translated into French, and I
+think, My Lord, the simplest way would be if the Tribunal took
+it that provisionally there is no objection but that the French
+Delegation reserve their right to make any objection if, upon
+receiving the translation, they find there is any objection to make.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, the French Delegation
+will let the Tribunal know if they find there is any objection.
+<span class='pageno' title='264' id='Page_264'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Now, with reference to the rest, so far
+as the Prosecution are concerned, what are the objections, if any?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I think the only
+objection there is concerns the application of Dr. Servatius for the
+Defendant Sauckel. Your Lordship sees that after the interrogatories
+granted by the Tribunal there are certain documents
+which were introduced on 3 July by the Defendant Sauckel to be
+considered by the Tribunal, and then there is a number which is
+lettered “A” to “I.” The Prosecution suggests that these documents
+are cumulative of the large number of documents already introduced
+on behalf of this defendant, and, My Lord ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT [<span class='it'>Interposing</span>]: Just one minute, Sir David.
+These documents “A” to “I,” were they applied for after the case
+had been closed?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: They were submitted on 3 July,
+Sir. That would be after the case had been closed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: But that was at the time, was it not, when
+we were asking for supplementaries?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, at the very end.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: That very day?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes. My Lord, I am sorry, but
+the case was not technically closed, for that day was open for any
+defendant to put in.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Are these documents which you have just
+been referring to—“A” to “I”—are they already all in the document
+book?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Dr. Servatius tells me they are.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I have just been having a word with Dr. Servatius and
+he says that the one to which he attaches the greatest importance
+is “A,” the decree by the Defendant Sauckel as to return transportation
+of sick foreign workers. My Lord, I am quite prepared on that
+assurance by Dr. Servatius not to make any objection to number
+“A,” and Dr. Servatius, on the other hand, says that he does not
+press for the others.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lord, there is another application which has just come in on
+behalf of the Defendant Sauckel for a document. It is an affidavit
+by the defendant himself, dated 29 June 1946. The Prosecution have
+no objection to the application.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I think the only other matter with regard to the
+Defendant Sauckel is with regard to an affidavit from a witness
+called Falkenhorst. My Lord, that again, the Prosecution submits,
+is cumulative.
+<span class='pageno' title='265' id='Page_265'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You say Falkenhorst?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Falkenhorst, Sir. My Lord, it
+is the very last application on my list.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. ROBERT SERVATIUS (Counsel for Defendant Sauckel): Mr.
+President, may I make a statement concerning the witness Falkenhorst?
+This witness was called for Bormann; I waived his examination
+and submitted this affidavit with the approval of the Tribunal,
+and since, in my opinion, it was approved, I waived the witness.
+I assume that this is quite clear and is confirmed by the Prosecution
+also.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do you mean, Dr. Servatius, that the affidavit
+from Falkenhorst had already been granted before?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I assume it was granted at that time. The
+witness was waiting outside and I was asked whether I would like
+to question him, and I said in reply that I had an affidavit which
+was limited to one particular incident and it would be sufficient if
+I could submit the affidavit. He was the last witness who was
+supposed to be examined here, after the end of the actual hearing
+of evidence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I do not insist in the
+opposition in these circumstances. My Lord, that is all the comment
+the Prosecution have to make.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What about these two affidavits asked for by
+Dr. Steinbauer from Erwin Schotter and Adalbert Joppich?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, we have not got
+these yet. As I understand it, they have been admitted by the Tribunal
+subject to any objection, and I am afraid we cannot tell until
+we have seen them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I see; well, then for the rest you have no
+other objections?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: No other objections.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Sir David, we have just had another document
+placed before us which contains an application on behalf of
+the Defendant Sauckel to call as a witness his son Friedrich Sauckel.
+The Prosecution has objected to that on the ground of irrelevance
+and cumulativeness.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord, that is the
+position.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It did not seem, on consideration of the outline of the evidence,
+that the evidence of the defendant’s son would contribute anything
+fresh.
+<span class='pageno' title='266' id='Page_266'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And that application was made after the
+3 July? No, I see that is wrong. It was submitted before, but it was
+not mentioned on 3 July.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: Mr. President, it was an application to bring
+the witness here from England, since presumably he can give
+information regarding a number of things. I have not yet made a
+formal application. It was just a request to have him brought from
+England to Nuremberg for the purpose of finding out whether he
+knows anything of importance, as he claims.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I would not make
+objection to the defendant’s son being brought here for the purpose
+of Dr. Servatius’ having a talk with him and seeing whether he can
+contribute anything.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The difficulty that these sorts of applications
+put the Tribunal in is that the case never closes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord, I quite agree.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I did not know that the witness was in England.
+He was a prisoner and there had been no news about him
+previously.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Then, Sir David, do we have an affidavit
+from the Defendant Sauckel himself which you have already dealt
+with?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Then there is an affidavit by the Defendant
+Jodl on behalf of Kaltenbrunner; the application has been received
+at the General Secretary’s office on 5 July.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: That was after the last date when the
+defendants’ counsel were asked for their applications.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Well, My Lord, I am afraid I
+have not been able to collect the views of the Prosecution on that
+point.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lord, the substance of that affidavit was contained in Dr.
+Kauffmann’s speech. I do not think it really has any materiality,
+I mean that there is any real—that there can be any objection to the
+affidavit, because I am almost positive I remember this passage
+occurring, or an equivalent passage, giving the Defendant Jodl’s
+views on Kaltenbrunner in Dr. Kauffmann’s speech. My Lord, therefore,
+I do not think we should occupy time discussing it and therefore
+I think we should let the affidavit go in.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well. Then there is an application from
+the Defendant Rosenberg for a document entitled “Tradition in
+Present Times.” That has been objected to as cumulative.
+<span class='pageno' title='267' id='Page_267'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Thoma, are you wanting to say anything
+in support of that application or is it sufficiently covered by your
+speech?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. THOMA: I am of the opinion that it has been sufficiently
+dealt with in my speech.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Then, Dr. Horn, there are two affidavits, one
+from Ribbentrop and one from Schulze, not yet put in. Do you want
+them?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. MARTIN HORN (Counsel for Defendant Von Ribbentrop):
+Mr. President, there must be some mistake about the Schulze affidavit.
+I have not submitted any Schulze affidavit or made any
+application for it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It was a mistake. Then, as to Ribbentrop’s
+affidavit, are you asking as to that or have we already dealt with
+that?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. HORN: No, I am asking that official cognizance be taken of
+the affidavit of Ribbentrop, and of Document TC-75. The other two
+affidavits of Thadden and Best have already been approved.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Why do you desire the Defendant Ribbentrop
+to make an affidavit? He has given his evidence in full. Is
+it something that has arisen since?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. HORN: The Defendant Ribbentrop only commented on a few
+documents which were submitted to him during his cross-examination
+when he had an opportunity to speak only very briefly about
+them. I did not want to make my final speech any longer with a
+detailed discussion of the other documents and, therefore, I have
+submitted this affidavit and beg the Tribunal to approve it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Then, with regard to TC-75 ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, that is one of our
+original British documents. I have no objection to Dr. Horn using it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: How about the translation, though? I suppose
+it is a German document, is it not?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. HORN: Yes, it is a German document which was only
+translated in part and I have referred to the entire contents in my
+final plea.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Is it a very long document or not?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. HORN: No, it has only nine pages, Mr. President. The
+Prosecution submitted one page of the document to the Court in
+evidence. Then later I ascertained that there were two copies of the
+document. I then took the second copy, which represents the
+<span class='pageno' title='268' id='Page_268'></span>
+complete document, and submitted it to the Tribunal, and have had
+it translated.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: It has been translated?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. HORN: Yes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well then, that is all right then.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, Dr. Steinbauer, what about these two affidavits that you
+are asking for, one from Erwin Schotter and another from Adalbert
+Joppich?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. GUSTAV STEINBAUER (Counsel for Defendant Seyss-Inquart):
+I have submitted the two documents for translation and
+since the Translation Division is very busy I have not received the
+translation yet. But I should like to submit the two originals to the
+Tribunal under the numbers already given, Seyss-Inquart-112
+and 113.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Has the Prosecution seen the substance of
+the affidavits or not?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: No, My Lord, we have not. My
+Lord, they are very short affidavits. I will ask someone to read them
+in German through the day and let the Tribunal know before the
+Tribunal rises tonight.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Was the application made before 3 July, or
+when was it made?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. STEINBAUER: Yes, on 3 July exactly. I received both of
+these two documents on 3 July through the General Secretary and
+presented them on the same day.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will consider the matter then
+and they will be glad to hear from the Prosecution if they have any
+objection.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. STEINBAUER: Mr. President, may I present one more document
+on this occasion? The Tribunal had approved the interrogation
+of Dr. Reuter and the day before yesterday I received the
+answer with the questions of the Prosecution ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What was it you were saying, Dr. Steinbauer?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. STEINBAUER: That I received the approved document containing
+the interrogation of the witness, Dr. Reuter, on Saturday in
+a German and English translation. I should like to submit the
+original to the Tribunal under Number 114.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: What is the name of the person who was
+interrogated?
+<span class='pageno' title='269' id='Page_269'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. STEINBAUER: The physician, Dr. Gero Reuter. He was
+questioned about health conditions in the Netherlands. The Tribunal
+expressly granted me that interrogatory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, that will be considered, then.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. STEINBAUER: Then I shall submit it to the Court under
+Number 114.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Sir David, perhaps you can look at that later.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Certainly, My Lord. I understood
+that the Tribunal had already approved and that this was
+just putting in the answer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, that is all.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Then, My Lord, there can be no
+objection.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I ought to say that in order to save time, all
+these documents which we are now dealing with must be taken to
+be offered in evidence now because some of these defendants’ cases
+have been finally dealt with.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Yes, My Lord.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: And they must, therefore, be given the
+appropriate numbers as exhibits, and defendants’ counsel must see
+to that. They must give numbers to them and give them in with
+those numbers to the General Secretary so that the documents will
+be identified as exhibits on the record.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I appreciate that.
+I gather that Dr. Steinbauer has just given that the Number 114.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, and the same applies to all the other
+defendants’ counsel, the counsel for Göring and Ribbentrop and the
+counsel for Raeder and the other defendants, because these are
+dealing with a considerable number of interrogatories and affidavits,
+all of which ought to have exhibit numbers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If Your Lordship pleases.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lord, Dr. Siemers just wanted to know that his applications
+were covered. I think he is quite safe.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Well, then, the only thing that remains
+is Dr. Fritz’s on behalf of the Defendant Fritzsche. There are two
+interrogatories which have not been received, as I understand, from
+Delmar and Feldscher. Those have been granted, and the interrogatories
+and the answers will be put in when you get them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: That is the way I understand
+it, My Lord.
+<span class='pageno' title='270' id='Page_270'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, then, the Tribunal will consider all
+these matters and make the appropriate order upon it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: If Your Lordship pleases.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now. Wait a minute, wait a
+minute!</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. EGON KUBUSCHOK (Counsel for Defendant Von Papen):
+In the case of the Defendant Von Papen there are still a number
+of interrogatories which have not been received. In the meantime,
+I have received four interrogatories with answers, but they are still
+with the Translation Division. Three interrogatories have not yet
+come back. I request an opportunity to present them later on.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: They have been granted before, I suppose?
+Have they been granted?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KUBUSCHOK: Yes, they had already been granted, with the
+exception of one affidavit which I have also dealt with here but
+which has not yet been translated and has been in the Translation
+Division for some time.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes, but the application for that interrogatory
+had been allowed, I suppose?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. KUBUSCHOK: I presented this application recently. I was
+told to have this affidavit translated, but I have not yet received
+the translation. I shall submit this document together with the
+others as soon as I receive them from the Translation Division.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well. We will adjourn now.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Go on, Dr. Dix.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: Mr. President, Gentlemen of the Tribunal. A mere
+glance at the dock reveals the singularity of Schacht’s case and the
+story of his imprisonment and defense. There in the dock sit Kaltenbrunner
+and Schacht. Whatever the powers of the Defendant
+Kaltenbrunner may have been, he was in any case Chief of the
+Reich Security Main Office. Until those May days of 1945, Schacht
+was a prisoner of the Reich Security Main Office in various
+concentration camps. It is surely a rare and grotesque picture
+to see jailor and prisoner sharing a bench in the dock. At the
+very start of the Trial this remarkable picture alone must have
+given cause for reflection to all those participating in the Trial:
+judges, prosecutors, and defense counsel alike.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schacht was banished to a concentration camp on the order of
+Hitler, as has been established here. The charge against him was
+<span class='pageno' title='271' id='Page_271'></span>
+high treason against the Hitler regime. The judicial authority, the
+Peoples’ Court, headed by that bloodthirsty judge, Freisler, would
+have convicted him, had not his imprisonment turned into detention
+by the victorious Allied Powers. Since the summer of 1944 I was
+assigned to defend Schacht before Adolf Hitler’s Peoples’ Court; in
+the summer of 1945 I was asked to conduct his defense before the
+International Military Tribunal. This, too, is in itself a self-contradictory
+state of affairs. This, too, compels all those participating
+in the Trial to reflect on the personality of Schacht. One involuntarily
+recalls the fate of Seneca; Nero, as a counterpart to Hitler,
+put Seneca on trial for revolutionary activities. After the death
+of Nero, Seneca was charged with complicity in Nero’s misgovernment
+and cruelties, in short, with conspiring with Nero. A certain
+wry humor is not lacking in the fact that Seneca was then declared
+a pagan saint by early Christianity as early as the fourth century.
+Although Schacht does not indulge in such expectations, this
+historical precedent nevertheless forces us to remain always conscious
+of the fact that the sentence to be pronounced by this High
+Court will also have to be justified before the judgment seat of
+history.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The picture of the Third Reich has been revealed to the Tribunal
+in a thorough and careful presentation of evidence. It is a picture
+with a great deal of background. An opportunity was given to
+depict this background also, as far as it was possible within the
+limits of such a thorough-going investigation entailing a judicial
+presentation of evidence which, to be sure, though thorough enough,
+was nevertheless concluded as soon as possible according to the
+requirements of the Charter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In order to learn what it was like under Hitler in German countries,
+there is still enough which has been left to the intuition of the
+Court. It is not possible, and never will be possible, to understand
+Hitler Germany from a constitutional point of view, according to
+the scholarly conceptions and views of people with a legal mind.
+As a scholarly topic, “The Constitution under Adolf Hitler” is a
+<span class='it'>lucus a non lucendo</span>. Mark my words, “The Constitution”—that
+is, the reduction of the Hitler State to a legal system, and not the
+attempt as made in the final plea by Jahrreiss, to explain the
+tyranny of a despot under the aspect of legal research. A scientific
+sociology of the Third Reich would, although feasible, be very
+difficult and therefore has not yet appeared.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Only very few Germans living in Germany knew the conditions
+and the distribution of power within those circles of people who
+were seemingly or actually called upon to contribute their share
+toward the formation of a political will. Most Germans will be
+surprised when this picture is unveiled. How much less possible
+<span class='pageno' title='272' id='Page_272'></span>
+was it for a foreigner to form a correct judgment of the constitutional,
+sociological, and inner political conditions of Hitler Germany
+at the time when the Indictment was presented. But a correct judgment
+of these things was the prerequisite for an Indictment correctly
+founded in both fact and law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I am of the opinion that the members of the Prosecution were
+thereby confronted with a task which defied solution. I am furthermore
+of the opinion that the Prosecution would never have presented
+their criminal charges against the defendants under the count
+of a conspiracy if they had been able to see the distribution of
+political power in Hitler Germany in the same way as this may
+perhaps be today possible, although with great difficulty, for an
+intelligent, politically gifted observer and listener at this Trial.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A conspiracy within the meaning of the Indictment was, as a
+practical matter, not possible in Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich, as my
+colleagues have already pointed out. The only thing possible in the
+Third Reich was a conspiracy by the opposition against Adolf
+Hitler and the regime. Several such conspiracies were formed, as
+was here proven. The relationship between conspirators is somewhat
+different than that between an accomplice and the chief perpetrator.
+The part to be played by the individual conspirator
+in the execution of the common plan may vary. Some, or a single
+one, of the conspirators may hold a leading position within the
+conspiracy. At all times, however, co-operation is necessary. Common
+usage of the term in itself precludes speaking of a conspiracy
+when only one commands and all the others are merely executive
+agents.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I am, therefore, of the opinion that that which was defined as a
+crime here in this hall can never constitute the elements of a
+conspiracy according to criminal law. Other legal factors which
+might enter into the question are of no interest to me as defense
+counsel for the Defendant Schacht, because no criminal charge
+whatsoever can be brought against Schacht personally, as an individual,
+and without connecting him with deeds of others—in other
+words merely on the basis of his own actions. Schacht himself
+desired only the permissible and the beneficial, and his actions
+served these intentions. To the extent that he erred politically, he
+is in all candor prepared for the verdict of history. Yet even the
+greatest dynamics of international law cannot penalize political
+error. If it did this the profession of the statesman and politician
+would become impossible. World history is more affected by
+mistakes and errors than by correct perceptions. According to
+Lessing’s wise words, the perception of absolute truth is God’s
+privilege. There remains for man as his greatest blessing only the
+<span class='pageno' title='273' id='Page_273'></span>
+quest for truth. <span class='it'>Nescis, mi fili, quanta stultitia mundus regitur</span>, as
+old Axel Oxenstierna once said, and he was probably right.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schacht declared here that he felt that he had been most grossly
+deceived by Adolf Hitler. He thereby admitted that certain of his
+decisions and actions had been wrong. The Prosecution disputes
+Schacht’s good faith and imputes to him the <span class='it'>dolus</span> of having
+deliberately worked for a war of aggression as Adolf Hitler’s
+financial agent, thereby becoming by implication criminally responsible,
+from the point of view of the conspiracy, for all the cruelties
+and atrocities which were committed by others during this war. The
+Prosecution itself was not able to produce any direct proof of these
+allegations. They attempted to do so first by means of alleged
+documentary evidence in the form of misinterpreted statements by
+Schacht, torn from their context. For this the Prosecution referred
+to witnesses who could not be made available for examination
+before this Court because some of them were absent and some had
+died. I recall, for example, the affidavits of Messersmith and Fuller,
+and Dodd’s diary notes. Their lack of value as evidence was clearly
+set forth to the Tribunal by Schacht during his examination. In the
+interest of saving time I do not wish to repeat things which have
+already been said, and which surely must still be within the
+recollection of the Court.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution further attempted to base its charges on actions
+of Schacht which had been established beyond reasonable doubt. All
+these arguments of the Prosecution are mistaken conclusions from
+allegedly incriminating circumstances. I shall confine myself to an
+enumeration of the most essential wrong conclusions. The others
+either result from these directly or by analogy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schacht was opposed to the Treaty of Versailles, says the Prosecution.
+That he was indeed. The Prosecution does not hold this
+opposition in itself against him. However, it concludes from this
+that Schacht wanted to do away with the treaty by force. Schacht
+favored colonial activity, says the Prosecution. He did so indeed.
+They do not reproach him for this, either, but conclude from this
+fact that he wanted to conquer the colonies by force, and so it
+goes on.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schacht as President of the Reichsbank and Minister of Economics
+co-operated with Hitler, consequently he endorsed Nazi ideology.
+Schacht was a member of the Reich Defense Council, consequently
+he was in favor of a war of aggression. Schacht helped to finance
+rearmament during its first phase until early in 1938, consequently
+he wanted war. Schacht welcomed the union with Austria, consequently
+he approved of a policy of violence against that country.
+Schacht devised the “New Plan” in commercial policy, consequently
+<span class='pageno' title='274' id='Page_274'></span>
+he wanted to procure raw materials for armament. Schacht was concerned
+about the possibilities of livelihood for the excess population
+in central Europe, consequently he wanted to attack and conquer
+foreign countries and to annihilate foreign peoples. Over and over
+again Schacht warned the world against an anti-German policy of
+oppression and the moral defamation of Germany, consequently
+Schacht threatened war. Because no written evidence has been
+found that Schacht resigned from his official positions as a result of
+his antagonism to war, the conclusion is that he resigned from these
+official positions merely because of his rivalry with Göring.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The list of these false conclusions could be continued <span class='it'>ad infinitum</span>.
+It finds its culmination in the fallacy that Hitler would never
+have come to power if it had not been for Schacht, that Hitler would
+never have been able to rearm if Schacht had not helped. But,
+Gentlemen, this kind of evaluation of evidence would convict an
+automobile manufacturer because a taxi driver, while drunk, ran
+over a pedestrian. In his speeches or writings Schacht never
+advocated violence or even war. It is true that after Versailles he
+pointed out again and again the dangers which would result from
+the moral outlawing and economic exclusion of Germany. In this
+opinion he is in the best international company. It is not necessary
+for me to cite before this Tribunal the numerous voices, not of Germans,
+but of members of the victor states, heard soon after the Versailles
+Treaty and all in the same tone as the warnings of Schacht.
+Moreover, the correctness of these objections to that treaty will be
+absolutely valid for all time. At no time did Schacht however
+recommend, or even declare possible, other ways than those of a
+peaceful understanding and collaboration. As an avowed economic
+politician, it was clearer to him than to anybody else that war can
+never solve anything, not even if it is won. In all of Schacht’s
+utterances his pacifist attitude was expressed again and again;
+perhaps the shortest and most striking of them was that statement
+at the Berlin Congress of the International Chamber of Commerce,
+when Schacht in the presence of Hitler, Göring, and other exponents
+of the Government called out to the assembly: “Believe me, my
+friends, all nations desire to live, not to die!” This pronounced
+pacifist attitude of Schacht is indeed confirmed by all witnesses and
+affidavits.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the few in the world—and I purposely say in the world, not
+only in Germany—who from the very beginning recognized Hitler
+and his Government for what they were, it certainly was a cause
+for anxiety and sorrow, or at the very least puzzling, to see a man
+like Schacht placing his services and his great professional ability
+at the disposal of Adolf Hitler after he had come to power. The
+witness Gisevius also shared this anxiety, as he has testified here.
+<span class='pageno' title='275' id='Page_275'></span>
+Later on he convinced himself of Schacht’s honorable intentions
+through the latter’s upright and courageous behavior in 1938 and
+1939. In his interrogation Schacht outlined for us the reasons which
+caused him to act in this manner. I need not and do not wish to
+repeat them in the interest of saving time. The evidence has not
+shown anything which would refute the veracity of this presentation
+by Schacht. On the contrary, I only refer for example to the affidavit
+of State Secretary Schmid, Exhibit Number 41 of my document
+book, containing detailed statements on this subject on Page 2, which
+are in complete agreement with Schacht’s description. A consideration
+of the remaining testimony and affidavits as a whole leads to
+the same result. In order to understand the manner in which Schacht
+acted at that time both directly after the seizure of power as well
+as after he had recognized Hitler and his disastrous activity, it is
+absolutely necessary to form a clear picture of Adolf Hitler’s pernicious
+spell and his system of government. For both are the soil in
+which Schacht’s actions grew, and by which alone they can be
+explained. I realize that one could speak about this for days and
+write volumes about it if one wished to treat the subject exhaustively.
+However, I also realize that before this Tribunal short
+references and spotlights will be sufficient in order to gain the
+Tribunal’s understanding.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The disintegrating collapse of imperial Germany in 1918 presented
+the German people, who were heterogeneously composed and
+had never become an organic unit, with a parliamentary democratic
+form of constitution. I venture to assert that all political thinking
+which is not directed by selfish motives must strive for democracy,
+if this is also understood to include the protection of justice,
+tolerance toward those of different convictions, freedom of thought,
+and the political development of humanity. These are the highest
+timeless ideals which, however, in their very constitutional forms
+actually harbor dangers in themselves. When democracy appeared
+for the first time on the European continent, reactionary political
+thinkers like Prince Metternich and the like opposed every democratic
+impulse, because they saw only the dangers of democracy and
+not its educative qualities and historical necessity. In pointing to
+these dangers they were unfortunately right. Perhaps the cleverest
+nation which ever lived, the Greeks of antiquity, had already
+pointed out the danger of democracy developing through demagogy
+to tyranny; and probably all philosophizing political thinkers from
+Aristotle to Thomas Aquinas, and down to the present time, have
+pointed out the danger of this development. This danger becomes
+all the greater if democratic freedom in the theoretical constitutional
+sense does not arise and grow organically, but becomes more or less
+a chance gift to a nation.
+<span class='pageno' title='276' id='Page_276'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>En fait d’histoire il vaut mieux continuer que recommencer</span>,
+a great French thinker once said. Unfortunately, this has made
+Germany the latest and, it is to be hoped, the last example of a
+tyranny of a single despot established by means of a diabolical
+demagogy. For there is no doubt that the Hitler regime was the
+despotism of an individual, whose parallel is to be found only in
+ancient Asia. In order to understand the attitude of any individual
+toward this Government—not only that of Schacht and of the Germans,
+but that of any person and any government in the world
+which has collaborated with Hitler, and on the part of the foreign
+countries such collaboration based on confidence was much greater
+toward Hitler than toward any government of the intermediate
+Reich or of the State of the Weimar Constitution—it is necessary
+to analyze the personality of this despot, this political Pied Piper,
+this brilliant demagogue who, as Schacht testified here in his interrogation
+with understandable agitation, not only deceived him, but
+also the German people and the whole world. In order to accomplish
+this deceit, Hitler was forced to bring under the spell of his personality
+innumerable clever and politically trained individuals
+besides Schacht, even those outside the German frontiers. He
+succeeded in doing this even with prominent foreigners, including
+those in leading political positions. I shall refrain from citing names
+and quotations to prove this point. The fact is generally known to
+the Tribunal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall now skip the next lines and continue on Line 10 of the
+same page. How was this influence of Hitler possible, both in Germany
+and abroad? Of course, Faust also succumbed to Mephistopheles.
+In Germany, all the circumstances of the conditions prevailing
+at that time, which have been described here in the evidence
+given by Schacht and others, favored this influence. The complete
+collapse of the parliamentary party system and the resulting
+necessity, felt already at the time by the existing Government, of
+having to rule by emergency decrees enacted without parliamentary
+participation, thus establishing a dictatorship of ministerial bureaucracy
+as a forerunner of the Hitler dictatorship, produced in nearly
+every quarter a cry for stronger leadership. The economic crisis and
+unemployment opened the ears of the masses, as misery always does,
+to demagogic insinuations. The complete lethargy and inactivity of
+the center and leftist parties of the time also created among critical
+and intelligent observers, of whom Schacht assuredly was one,
+the inward readiness and longing to welcome spirited political
+“dynamics” and activity. If someone, like the sharp-witted
+and perspicacious Schacht, already at that time discovered faults
+and dark sides, he could hope, as Schacht did, by his very
+active penetration into the Movement or by co-operation with
+<span class='pageno' title='277' id='Page_277'></span>
+leading State departments quickly and easily to combat these shady
+aspects, which in any case beset every revolutionary movement.
+“When the eagle soars, vermin settle on his wings,” replied the late
+Minister of Justice Gürtner, quoting from Conrad Ferdinand Meyer’s
+novel Pescara, when I pointed out these shady sides to him after
+the seizure of power. These considerations are in themselves
+reasonable and plausible. The fact that they contained a political
+error even in Schacht’s case does not deprive them of their good
+faith and honest convictions. However, we ought not to forget that
+here, during the proceedings, we heard of a message from the
+American Consul General Messersmith, dating from 1933, in which
+he joyfully hails the report that decent and sensible people are now
+joining the Party too, as this gave reason to hope that radicalism
+would thereby cease. I refer to the relevant document submitted
+here by the Prosecution, Document Number L-198, report Number
+1184 by the American Consul General Messersmith to the Secretary
+of State in Washington.</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Since the election on March 5th, some of the more important
+thinking people in various parts of Germany have allied
+themselves with the National Socialist movement, in the hope
+of tempering its radicalism by their action within rather than
+from without the Party.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But what Messersmith very reasonably says of ordinary Party
+members of that time, naturally applies also, <span class='it'>mutatis mutandis</span>, to
+the man who offered his co-operation in a leading Government post.
+The reasons Schacht gave for his decision at the time to accept the
+post of President of the Reichsbank and later of Reich Minister of
+Economics are, therefore, thoroughly credible in themselves and have
+no immoral or criminal implication. Schacht, indeed, has acknowledged
+his activity. He only lacked the intuition to recognize at the
+outset the personalities of Hitler and some of his henchmen for what
+they were. But that is no punishable act; neither does it indicate
+any criminal intention. This intuition was lacking in most people
+both within and without the German frontiers. The possession of
+intuition is a matter of good fortune and a divine gift unfathomable
+by reason. Every man has his limitations, even the most intelligent.
+Schacht is certainly very intelligent, but in this case reason prevailed
+at the cost of intuition. In the last analysis this process can only
+be fully appreciated when those mysterious forces are taken into
+account which affect world events, and of which Wallenstein says:
+“The earth belongs to the evil spirit, not to the good” where he
+speaks of “the sinister powers of evil which lurk in the bowels of
+the earth.” Adolf Hitler was a prominent example of these powers
+of darkness and his influence was all the more nefarious since he
+<span class='pageno' title='278' id='Page_278'></span>
+lacked the grandeur which accompanies Satan. He remained a half-educated,
+completely earth-bound bourgeois who also lacked any
+sense of the law. The Defendant Frank said truly of him that he
+hated jurists, because the jurist appeared to him as a man of law,
+as a disturbing factor in the face of his power. Thus he could
+promise everything to everybody and not keep his promise, for a
+promise to him meant only a technical instrument of power, and
+signified no legal or moral obligation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Neither was the pernicious influence of Himmler and Bormann
+detected by Schacht at this time, or probably by anybody else. Yet
+all those crimes that are now covered by the Indictment matured
+within this very trio, for to Himmler politics were identical with
+murder, and in his purely biological view he regarded human society
+as a breeding farm and never as a social and ethical community.
+A personality like Adolf Hitler, and his effect upon men, even
+including such intelligent men as Schacht, can only be correctly
+judged by following the prophetic vision of the poet, as I have
+already just tried to do, thereby achieving insight otherwise
+inaccessible to the mind of man. The demon undoubtedly became
+incarnate in Adolf Hitler to the detriment of Germany and the world,
+and perhaps I can summarize by quoting—and this is absolutely
+necessary for an understanding of Schacht’s conduct, as well as that
+of all those others who deliberately and in all purity of heart offered
+their services to Hitler—a passage from Goethe, which in a few
+words sums up and discloses the mystery. Here lies the key to the
+understanding of all those who flocked to follow Hitler. May I quote
+from “Poetry and Truth,” Part 4, Book 20, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Although the demoniac can manifest itself in everything
+material and immaterial, and indeed be singularly apparent
+in beasts, it assumes its most extraordinary form when associated
+with man, and constitutes a power which if not contrary
+to is yet a disturbing element in the moral world order.
+There are innumerable names for the phenomena which are
+brought to light in this way. For all philosophies and religions
+have tried both in prose and in poetry to solve this riddle
+and to dispose of the matter once and for all, which they
+may well continue to do in the future. But the demoniac
+assumes its most dreadful form when it manifests itself preponderantly
+in any one human being. During my lifetime
+I have had occasion to observe several such persons, either
+closely or from afar. They are not always the most distinguished
+persons, either in intellect or in talent, and they
+rarely excel by their goodness of heart; yet a tremendous
+force emanates from them, and they exercise an incredible
+power over every creature and even over the elements, and
+<span class='pageno' title='279' id='Page_279'></span>
+none can tell how far such influence will extend. No coalition
+of moral forces can prevail against them; it is in vain that
+the better part of humanity attempts to put them in disrepute
+as victims of deception, or as impostors. The masses
+are attracted to them. They seldom or never find contemporary
+equals, and nothing short of the universe itself, against
+which they begin the fight, can overcome them; and these
+observations may perhaps have inspired that curious but
+monstrous saying: <span class='it'>Nemo contra Deum, nisi Deus ipse</span>.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I think I have demonstrated that the fact that he served Hitler
+does not incriminate Schacht and that it can by no means be concluded
+from this act that at that time he embodied the criminal
+deeds of Hitler and his regime into his own intentions. He did
+not even think them possible. Therefore he followed no dolus
+eventualis either; on the contrary: Insofar as the violent character
+of the regime disturbed him he believed he would be able, through
+his appointment to an important post, to contribute to the abolition
+and prevention of those attendant phenomena of which he also
+disapproved, and to aid Germany’s recovery within his sphere of
+activity in a decent and peaceful manner.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That being the case, not the slightest reproach could be made
+against him for not only serving Hitler after the seizure of power,
+but also for helping him to gain control. This latter charge is,
+therefore, completely immaterial as evidence of criminal behavior
+or of criminal intent. However, there is no need for this argument
+at all, since as a matter of fact Schacht did not help Hitler to gain
+power. Hitler was in power when Schacht began to work for him.
+Hitler’s victory was already assured when the July elections of the
+Reichstag in 1932 brought him no less than 230 seats. These represented
+about 40 percent of the total votes. There had been no such
+election result for any party for decades. But the immediate political
+future was thereby established under a Government headed by
+Hitler, thanks to the very rules of the German democratic Constitution
+and every other democratic constitution. Any other path was
+beset with the danger of civil war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was only natural that Schacht, who at that time honestly
+believed in Hitler’s political mission, did not wish to take this path.
+It was likewise natural that he should take an active part whenever
+he believed that thereby he might be able to prevent harmful radicalism
+in the economic political domain. A wise French statesman
+says:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Every epoch confronts us in some way with the task of
+creating benefits or preventing abuses. For this reason, in
+my opinion, a patriotic man can and must serve any government
+which his country appoints for itself.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='280' id='Page_280'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>By serving Hitler, Schacht, in his opinion, was serving his
+country and not Hitler. This opinion may have been the greatest
+of mistakes, and it has subsequently revealed itself as completely
+erroneous as far as Hitler was concerned, yet Schacht can never
+be criminally charged for acting as he did at that time, neither
+directly nor circumstantially. And indeed we must not forget that
+the Hitler of 1933 not only seemed to be a different man from the
+Hitler of 1938 or even of 1941, but actually was different. Schacht
+has already referred during his interrogation to this transformation,
+which was caused by the poison of mass worship. Moreover, the
+transformation of such personalities is a psychological law. History
+proves this in Nero, Constantine the Great, and many others. In
+the case of Hitler there exist many irreproachable witnesses for
+the truth of this fact, irreproachable in the sense that a purpose
+or an intention to violate the law, to raise terrorism to a principle,
+and to attack mankind with a war of aggression, can never be
+imputed to them. I merely wish to quote a few of them. I could
+multiply the quotations a hundredfold. In 1934 Lord Rothermere
+wrote an article in the <span class='it'>Daily Mail</span>, entitled: “Adolf Hitler from
+Close By.” I quote only a few sentences:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The most prominent figure in the world today is Adolf
+Hitler ... Hitler stands in direct line with those great leaders
+of mankind who seldom appear more than once in two or
+three centuries ... it is delightful to see that Hitler’s speech
+has considerably brightened his popularity in England.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Dix, I thought the Tribunal had refused
+to allow the writings of Lord Rothermere to be put in evidence
+or used.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: I interpreted the decision of the High Tribunal barring
+quotations from Lord Rothermere from the document book to
+mean—and this is also the reason given in the Indictment—that this
+was a matter for argument which should not be submitted in
+evidence as a fact, and that it would be irrelevant in the hearing
+of the evidence that Rothermere and others were of this opinion;
+and from this I drew the conclusion—and I am still of the opinion
+today that this conclusion is correct—that in the course of my argument,
+that is, in the course of my appraisal of the evidence, I could
+cite passages from the literature of the entire world, insofar as it
+is known, in order to support a line of thought. That Rothermere
+said that is not a fact which I want to submit to the Tribunal as
+evidence, but only in support of the assertion forming part of my
+argument that not only Schacht but also other intelligent and
+prominent people, even outside of Germany, at first had the same
+opinion of Hitler’s personality ...
+<span class='pageno' title='281' id='Page_281'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Dix, the Tribunal has already indicated
+its refusal to allow this to be used as evidence, because it does not
+pay any attention to the opinions expressed by this author. Therefore,
+we think it would be better if you went on to some other part
+of your argument.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: Then I ask—the Tribunal surely has a translation of
+my final speech before it—that I be allowed to quote a short passage
+from Sumner Welles, and then a passage, which seems very important
+to me, from the book written by the last British Ambassador.
+I should be very grateful if I could quote both of these two passages
+for, if one wants to prove that even an intelligent man can hold
+a certain opinion and is entitled to hold it, then I do not know but
+what the most obvious and convincing proof for that lies in the
+fact that other intelligent and completely objective people also held
+the same view. I shall lose an important point of my argument if
+I am not permitted to quote the two short passages, and I should
+like to ask that they be heard briefly; it is only the quotation from
+Sumner Welles and Henderson.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I have not said anything about Sumner
+Welles. It was only because we had expressly excluded the writings
+on this subject of Lord Rothermere that we thought it was inappropriate
+that you should quote him. I do not think we excluded these
+other books to which you here refer in your speech and therefore
+we thought you might go on to that.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: I quote from Sumner Welles’ book <span class='it'>Time for Decision</span>,
+published in New York in 1944:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Economic circles in each of the western European democracies
+and the New World welcomed Hitlerism.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And it is only right, when Great Britain’s last Ambassador in
+Berlin, even during the war, states on Page 25 of his book:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It would be highly unjust not to recognize that a great
+number of those who joined Hitler and worked for him and
+his Nazi regime were honest idealists.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Further on he makes this interesting remark:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is possible that Hitler was an idealist himself in the
+beginning.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And the Government of the United Kingdom would surely never
+have concluded a naval treaty with Hitler Germany in April 1935,
+and therewith have contributed in the interests of justice to a
+modification of the Versailles Treaty, if they had not had entire
+confidence in Hitler and his Government. Finally, the same holds
+true for all the international treaties concluded by Hitler, including
+the treaty concluded with Russia in August 1939. And it is a
+striking fact, even today, that so intelligent a man of such high
+<span class='pageno' title='282' id='Page_282'></span>
+ethical standing as the late British Prime Minister Chamberlain
+declared in a speech as late as January 1939—at a time when
+Schacht had already long been treading the dark paths of conspiracy
+against Hitler, in the face of the events of 1938—that he had
+gained the definite impression from Hitler’s recent speech that these
+were not the words of a man who was making preparations to
+plunge Europe into another war. I do not doubt that these words
+were not spoken as a matter of tactics, but reflected the speaker’s
+true opinion. Such examples could be quoted in great number. Is it
+desired to deny to a German, in 1933 and the following years, the
+right to come to the same opinion about Hitler in good faith?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact that Schacht did not enter office as Minister of Economies
+until after 30 June 1934 is not inconsistent with this either.
+Only in retrospect does the full enormity of these events become
+clear. In June 1934 we were still in the midst of revolutionary
+turmoil, and history will be able to show similar occurrences in
+any revolution of this kind. I do not have to give detailed proof
+of this, nor do I wish to do so. The events of 30 June provided just
+as little, if not less, motive for Schacht to turn away from Hitler
+with disgust, as they did for the governments in the world who
+not only continued diplomatic relations with Hitler in full confidence,
+but also rendered him great honors and allowed him to
+score important successes in foreign policy, especially after 1934.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If Schacht, however, cannot be criminally charged with the
+fact that he placed himself at the disposal of Hitler’s Government,
+it is surely completely superfluous, indeed it would be beside the
+point, to attempt to make long statements in excuse of individual
+acts, such as his petition addressed to the Reich President in 1932,
+or his letter to Hitler in the same year. Anybody who knows life
+can find a thoroughly natural explanation for them in the fundamental
+attitude of Schacht. If this attitude is proved to be unobjectionable
+from the point of view of criminal law and the rules
+of evidence, then no such documents can be used in argument
+against Schacht. It is the principle that matters. The same holds
+true for Schacht’s participation in the so-called meeting of industrialists.
+On this subject I should only like to remark by way of
+correction that Schacht neither presided at this meeting nor
+administered these funds exclusively for the National Socialist
+Party.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now one witness here has passed judgment on Schacht’s attitude
+toward the seizure and consolidation of power during this
+period:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Schacht was an untrustworthy person,” he said. “Schacht
+betrayed the cause of democracy at that time. I therefore
+<span class='pageno' title='283' id='Page_283'></span>
+refused in 1943 to join a Government proposing to overthrow
+Hitler with Schacht’s participation.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This was the former Minister Severing who, according to his
+own statement, relinquished his ministerial chair and premises on
+20 July 1932, when the Berlin Chief of Police and two police officers
+called on him, demanding his withdrawal with the assertion that
+they had been authorized to do so by the Reich President. Severing
+withdrew, as he said himself, to avoid bloodshed. In spite of the
+great respect which I feel toward Severing’s clean political character,
+I am forced to my regret to deny him any right to pass competent
+judgment on statesmen who, unlike him and his Government
+coalition, did not remain lethargically passive. Severing and his
+political friends indeed bear a disproportionately greater responsibility
+than Hjalmar Schacht for Adolf Hitler’s seizure of power
+because of their indecision and, finally, their lack of political ideas;
+but they do not have to answer for this to any judge except history.
+And this responsibility will be all the greater since the witness
+indeed makes the claim that at that time he had already recognized
+that Hitler’s accession to power meant war. If one may really
+believe that he possessed this correct political intuition, then his
+responsibility, and that of his political friends, will be all the greater
+in view of their passivity on that and later occasions, and again
+this responsibility will be disproportionately greater than that of
+Hjalmar Schacht. Our German workers are certainly no greater
+cowards than the Dutch. Our hearts rejoiced to hear a witness here
+describe the manly courage of Dutch workers who dared to strike
+under the very bayonets of the invading army. The following which
+Severing and his political friends deservedly had in the German
+working class might perhaps have induced them not to watch the
+dissolution of the trade unions with such dull passivity as was the
+case in 1933, had only their natural leaders such as Severing and
+his colleagues been a little more daring and willing to expose
+themselves. In the last resort, the Kapp revolt in 1923 was also
+overcome by the general strike of the workmen. The Hitler regime
+was not so strong in 1933 that it did not have to fear the truth of
+the poet’s words addressed to the workers: “All wheels stand still
+at your strong arm’s will.” The National Socialist Government at
+that time was quite well informed about this and was consequently
+apprehensive. This is also apparent from Göring’s interrogation on
+13 October 1945, the transcript of which was quoted and submitted
+by Professor Kempner on 16 January 1946. Göring said: “You must
+consider that at that time the activity of the Communists was extraordinarily
+strong and that our new Government as such was not
+very secure.” But even this strong arm which I have just mentioned
+required a guidance which was denied to the working class and for
+<span class='pageno' title='284' id='Page_284'></span>
+which men like Severing would have been indicated. In all justice
+they will have to account for their passivity, not before the judge
+in a criminal court, but before history. I do not presume to pass
+a final judgment. I confine myself to revealing this problem and to
+attributing a full and embarrassing measure of self-righteousness
+to the witness Severing, although I respect him as a man, if he
+feels himself called upon to accuse others, when studying the question
+as to who from the view point of history is guilty of the seizure
+and consolidation of power by Nazism—especially if, in contrast
+to Schacht, he intuitively foresaw the later evolution of Hitler—instead
+of submitting himself with humility to the judgment of
+history, relying on his undoubtedly unimpeachable views and his
+undoubtedly pure intentions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Let us always bear in mind, in the interest of historical truth,
+that especially at the beginning of the Nazi rule there were only
+two power groups, with the exception of foreign intervention, which
+could perhaps have liberated Germany, namely, the Army and the
+working class, provided, of course, that both were under the proper
+leadership.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I had to go into more detail on this point because such a detrimental
+remark by such a blameless and distinguished man as Severing
+brings with it the danger of unjust deductions regarding my
+client. It would have been agreeable to me if I could have been
+spared this discussion of Severing’s incriminating testimony. Severing
+has further brought the charge of political opportunism against
+Schacht. In politics, to be sure, the boundary between opportunism
+and statesmanlike conduct dictated by expediency is very fluid.
+Before appraising Schacht’s conduct in 1932 and 1933 as opportunistic,
+his past should also have been considered. After 1923 this
+past lived in the public eye. It has partly been a subject of these
+proceedings, partly it is already known to the Court. This past speaks
+rather for the fact that Schacht does what he judges to be right,
+not only with a great disregard of consequences, but also with great
+courage. Indeed, he has also proved this courage as a conspirator
+against Hitler, as is bound to appear from an examination of this
+activity as conspirator, and as Gisevius expressly described here.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But let us go back with Schacht to the year 1923. At that time
+he stabilized the mark against all parties interested in inflation; in
+1924 he blocked credits against all hoarders of foreign currency;
+in 1927 he deprived the exchange speculators of the credit basis for
+their exchange manipulations. From 1925 to 1929 he fought against
+the debt and expenditure policy of the municipalities and thereby
+incurred the enmity of all the mayors. In 1929 he signed the Young
+Plan and thus defied the opposition of the heavy industry circles
+and continuing this policy, he fought openly since 1934 against the
+<span class='pageno' title='285' id='Page_285'></span>
+perversions and abuses of the Nazi ideology and never personally
+carried out a plan or an order which was contrary to his conscience
+or his sense of justice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Every statesman must make certain concessions during a time
+of fanaticism. Certain sticklers for morality—of whom there are
+many today—who demand a steely hardness for the protection of
+principles, should not forget that steel has two qualities, not only
+solidity but also flexibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My Lord, I have now finished one particular section; the next
+one would take longer. I certainly will not finish it until after
+1 o’clock. I should be grateful if Your Lordship would call the noon
+recess now. I am now coming to Appendix Number 1 ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Dix, I think you had better go on until
+1 o’clock.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: Your Honors, in the translated copy which you have
+before you, there are two appendices at the end. I had to employ
+this device because the matters dealt with in this annex occurred
+after I had given my speech to be translated. Therefore, I had to
+work in my comments on this subject somehow, and could only do
+it by way of an appendix.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And so I now come to the reading of Appendix 1, which is
+at the back, and to the opinion of the testimony of Gisevius as
+expressed by my colleague, Dr. Nelte, since I am here concerned
+with evaluating the testimony of witnesses.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Insofar as my colleague Dr. Nelte criticized the objective reliability
+of the testimony of Gisevius regarding his statements incriminating
+the Defendants Keitel, Göring, and so on, I refrain from
+any statements. The Prosecution may take any standpoint it desires.
+This is not my task.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But now Dr. Nelte has also attacked the subjective credibility of
+Gisevius in the personal character of this witness and thus also
+indirectly the reliability of his testimony concerning Dr. Schacht.
+This demands a statement of my opinion, and a statement of a very
+fundamental nature.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Your Honors, it is here that minds part company. A gap that
+cannot be bridged opens up between Schacht’s standpoint and the
+standpoint of all those who adopt the train of thought with which
+Dr. Nelte attempts to discredit the character of Gisevius, the
+deceased Canaris, Oster, Nebe, and others. I most certainly owe it
+to my client, Dr. Schacht, to state the following fundamental point
+very clearly and unequivocally:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Patriotism means loyalty to one’s fatherland and people and
+fight without quarter against anyone who criminally leads one’s
+fatherland and people into misery and destruction. Such a leader
+<span class='pageno' title='286' id='Page_286'></span>
+is an enemy of the fatherland; his actions are infinitely more dangerous
+than those of any enemy in war. Every method is justified
+against such a criminal State leadership, and the motto must be:
+<span class='it'>à corsaire, corsaire et demi</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>High treason against such a State leadership is true and genuine
+patriotism and as such highly moral, even during war. Who could
+still entertain the slightest doubt after the findings of this Trial,
+and finally after the testimony of Speer about Hitler’s cynical
+remarks regarding the destruction of the German people, that Adolf
+Hitler was the greatest enemy of his people, in short, a criminal
+toward this people, and that to remove him any means were justified
+and any, literally any, deed was patriotic. All those on the
+defendant’s bench who do not recognize this are worlds apart from
+Schacht.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I had to make this point in order to clear the atmosphere. After
+this fundamental clarification I can refrain from refuting details
+in Dr. Nelte’s attacks against Dr. Gisevius. Insofar as Dr. Nelte fails
+to see any willingness for active service among these resistance
+groups to which Dr. Schacht belonged, I need only point to the many
+hundreds who were hanged on 20 July alone; Schacht numbers
+among the very few survivors, and he too was to be liquidated in
+Flossenbürg. I point to the dead victims of the political judiciary
+of the Hitlerian State whose numbers run into thousands. Truly,
+the waging of a war of conspiracy against Hitler and the necessity
+for cunning and dissimulation in connection therewith were no less
+dangerous to life and limb than exposing one’s self at the front.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During the very fair cross-examination conducted by my colleague,
+Dr. Kubuschok, Gisevius immediately admitted his mistake
+resulting from the ban on publication, in the affair of Papen’s resignation.
+I have nothing more to say about this.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal recessed until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<h2><span class='pageno' title='287' id='Page_287'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: May it please the Tribunal, I had concluded with the
+consideration of the probative value of the statements made here by
+the witnesses Severing and Gisevius.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, on concluding the evaluation of Schacht’s conduct up to
+about 1935 and entering the period from 1935 to 1937, I would
+emphasize once more that in order to save time I will not repeat
+the arguments which were presented to the Tribunal in detail
+during the cross-examination, as for instance the nonparticipation
+of Schacht in the legislation which led to the total disregard for
+international law, because this took place before his entry into
+the Cabinet. The decisive event for the stabilization of Hitler’s
+power, the merging of the offices of the Reich President and of the
+Chancellor of the Reich in the person of Hitler, also lay outside his
+co-operation and responsibility. By this decree the Army took its
+oath to Hitler. The Chancellor of the Reich not only had police
+authority as heretofore but also authority over the Army. It is not
+my task to investigate who bears the political responsibility and
+thus the historic guilt for this law; in any case, it is not Schacht.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All the basic anti-Jewish laws were also enacted before he
+entered into office as a minister. He was completely surprised by
+the subsequent Nuremberg Laws. The decree dealing with the
+exclusion of the Jews from German economic life dated 12 November
+1938 and the ordinance concerning the use of Jewish property
+and possessions of 3 December 1938 were issued after he had left
+his post as Minister of Economics and thus without his active collaboration.
+The same applies to the decree excluding Jews from
+the Reich Labor Service, which moreover probably hardly inconvenienced
+them. The law providing for the death penalty for secret
+reserves of foreign exchange, the so-called Law of Betrayal of the
+People, was not directed specifically against the Jews but solely
+against big industry and high finance; also it was not evolved by
+Schacht but by the Minister of Finance. Schacht did not want to
+effect a breach of relations on account of such laws because he
+believed it was his duty to perform a more important task. In any
+case, this can hardly be regarded as important, for in the Jewish
+question Schacht, by his public speeches and his reports to Hitler,
+showed such a favorable attitude toward the Jews that it would be
+unjust to disqualify him politically and morally for such a reason,
+much less from the angle of criminal law. As examples I would
+remind you of the Reichsbank speech after the anti-Jewish pogrom
+in November 1938, the speech at Königsberg, the memoranda of the
+year 1935, and so forth. In the Third Reich Schacht was considered
+the most courageous and active protector of the Jews. I only remind
+<span class='pageno' title='288' id='Page_288'></span>
+you of the letter of the Frankfurt businessman, Merton, which was
+submitted to the Court, and of the illuminating statement of the
+witness Hayler. According to the latter, when Hayler reproached
+Himmler for the events of November 1938, he replied that after all
+it had been the fault of the economic administration that matters
+had reached such a point. Of a man like Herr Schacht one could
+not expect anything better than that he should exercise a constant
+restraining influence in the Jewish question and be opposed to the
+will of the Party.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In response to my further inquiry Justice Jackson defined this
+specific charge of the Prosecution as follows: Schacht is not being
+charged with anti-Semitism, but for activities which have a causal
+connection with the atrocities committed against the Jews within
+the framework of the planned war of aggression. Thus it follows
+that a denial of guilt as to a war of aggression leads with compelling
+logic to the denial of any guilt as to the atrocities which
+were committed against the Jews during the war. Justice Jackson
+made some phases of the legislation in respect to the Jews during
+Schacht’s term as Minister the subject of his cross-examination. I
+shall refrain from this part of the cross-examination; going into the
+questions put to Schacht and answered by him is irrelevant according
+to the Charter and the previously mentioned authentic interpretation
+of this part of the Indictment by Justice Jackson. The
+anti-Semitic legislation of the Third Reich and the personal attitude
+of an individual defendant toward it are, according to the
+Charter, relevant in these proceedings only insofar as they are connected
+with other crimes which are subject to punishment according
+to the Charter, as for example the conspiracy to wage war, mass
+extermination, and so forth. According to the Charter they cannot
+constitute an offense in themselves, not even one against humanity.
+Only those defendants are punishable for their deeds who can be
+proved to have participated in the planning of a war of aggression
+with its resulting inhuman consequences for the Jews. A prerequisite
+for their conviction on this account, however, is that they
+recognized and desired this goal and its result. There exists no
+purely objective liability for the outcome in criminal law. According
+to the Charter, he who desired the war and thus also the
+inhuman actions connected with it is punishable; but the incriminating
+activity must always have occurred in the course of the
+execution of such a plan. This purely legal consideration in itself
+excludes the conviction of Schacht on the grounds of atrocities
+against the Jews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another discrepancy between the Prosecution, especially with
+regard to the statements of Justice Jackson, and myself must likewise
+be clarified at this point, otherwise we will be talking at cross
+<span class='pageno' title='289' id='Page_289'></span>
+purposes. During the cross-examination Justice Jackson repeatedly
+pointed out that the defendant is not being charged with anti-Semitism
+as such, that he is not being charged with his opposition
+to the Treaty of Versailles, that he is not being charged with his
+ideas and statements on the so-called Lebensraum problem as
+representing the food problem of the central European nations,
+that he is not being charged with his colonial aspirations; but that
+he is being charged with all this only to the extent that it served,
+with his knowledge and desire, for the preparation of a war of
+aggression. By this objection Justice Jackson meant to preclude
+certain questions and discussions. This would have been justified
+and I too could now forego such arguments, were not the Prosecution
+taking away with one hand what it is giving with the other,
+because in the course of argumentation all this, namely, Schacht’s
+alleged anti-Semitism, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>, is used as indirect proof, that is,
+as circumstantial evidence that Schacht had prepared and desired
+this war of aggression. The Prosecution of course does not count
+all that as a criminal fact in itself, but as indirect proof, as circumstantial
+evidence. Therefore in evaluating the evidence, I must also
+treat these problems. I think I have finished dealing with the Jewish
+question. With regard to the problem of Lebensraum, in order to
+save time, I can probably refer to what Schacht has stated here
+during his interrogation in justification of his statements and activities
+in this respect. The colonial problem was the subject of cross-examination
+by Justice Jackson insofar as he tried to prove that
+colonial activity by Germany was impossible without world domination,
+or at least the military domination of the seas. Further
+development of this train of thought would result in the Defendant
+Schacht being charged with the fact that his striving for colonies
+logically depended on the planning of a war of aggression. That is
+a false conclusion. I think that Justice Jackson’s conception of
+colonial policy is too imperialistic. Anyone desiring colonies for
+his country without attendant domination of the world or the sea
+bases his colonial activity on a lasting state of peace with the
+stronger maritime powers. He must necessarily believe in peace
+with these powers. Germany also possessed colonies from 1884 until
+the first World War; her merchant marine carried on the necessary
+traffic with these colonies. Her merchant marine before this war
+would also have been sufficient. Aviation, in reply to Justice Jackson’s
+question, would not have been essential. Nothing supports the
+presumption that in his desire for colonies Schacht would have
+striven to eliminate foreign naval supremacy by means of war. In
+view of his general conduct one can hardly credit him with being
+as foolish as all that. France and Holland likewise possess colonies,
+the sea routes of which they certainly do not control.
+<span class='pageno' title='290' id='Page_290'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This charge of the Prosecution is therefore inconclusive. Moreover,
+the Tribunal knows that during the years before the war
+nearly all the statesmen of the victorious powers were sympathetic
+to these colonial aspirations of Germany, as is shown in many of
+their public speeches.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to the subject of rearmament, that is, to the activity
+of Schacht in his capacity as President of the Reichsbank and Reich
+Minister of Economics until 1937, in other words, up to the time
+when he changed from a loyal servant of Adolf Hitler to a traitor
+against him and took to the dark ways of artifice and dissimulation
+while making preparations for an attempt on his life.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution considers the violation of the Versailles Treaty,
+the Locarno Pact, and other treaties as indirect proof, that is, as
+circumstantial evidence, of his criminal intention to wage a war
+of aggression. This involves first the question of whether any treaty
+violations took place and, if so, whether these treaty violations must
+be judged as indications of an intent to wage a war of aggression on
+the part of members of the Reich Government, Schacht included. It
+is impossible, and also unnecessary, to discuss exhaustively in this
+plea the problem of whether actual treaty violations were committed
+and to what extent. My colleague Dr. Horn has already
+touched upon this question. A short remark can serve to show at
+least the problematical nature of this question. This again is important
+for a proper evaluation. There are no lasting treaties,
+neither in the domain of civil jurisdiction nor, still less, in the
+domain of international law. The <span class='it'>clausula rebus sic stantibus</span> often
+plays a much more important role in the domain of international
+law affecting the political intercourse between nations than in private
+dealings between individuals. One must be very careful not
+to apply, offhand, the relatively narrow principles of civil law to
+the breadth and depth of international law. International law has
+its own dynamics. The highly political intercourse between nations
+is subject to other juridical aspects than the commercial and personal
+relations between individuals. The most striking proof of the
+correctness of this thesis is the juridical basis of the Indictment,
+particularly insofar as it deals with the sentence <span class='it'>nulla poena sine
+lege poenale</span> and demands, instead of sanctions, the individual
+punishment of the leading statesmen of an aggressor nation. Whoever
+upholds the conception of the Prosecution in this respect,
+acknowledges the dynamics of international law and the fact that
+international law develops according to a process of its own.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>History has taught us that treaties based on international law
+do not usually come to an end by a formal repeal but succumb to
+the development of events. They inevitably sink into oblivion. In
+specific instances opinions may differ as to whether this is the case
+<span class='pageno' title='291' id='Page_291'></span>
+or not; but that does not affect the basic truth of this statement.
+The militarization of the Rhineland and the introduction of general
+conscription, the extent of rearmament which Schacht approved of
+and strived for, the voluntary “Anschluss” of Austria to Germany,
+which was also basically desired by Schacht, all of these certainly
+are offenses against the meaning and text of the above-mentioned
+pacts, particularly the Versailles Treaty. If, however, such violations
+are only answered by formal protestations, and otherwise
+very friendly relations continue to exist and honors are even conferred
+upon the offending nation, and if agreements are concluded
+which alter the basic stipulations of such a treaty, as for instance
+the Naval Pact with Great Britain, the view is fully justified that
+because of all this such a treaty is gradually reaching a state of
+obsolescence and extinction, or at least there is cause for such a
+subjective point of view.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I beg you to consider that the prerequisite for the conclusion
+of an armament pact, as for instance the Naval Pact with Great
+Britain, is the military sovereignty of both nations. The denial
+of such sovereignty to Germany was, however, one of the main
+aspects of the Versailles Treaty. I do not wish to speak here about
+the justice or injustice of this treaty. I know the Court’s wish,
+or rather prohibition, in regard to this matter, and of course I shall
+observe it. But I must speak about the legal possibility and therefore
+the innocence, criminally speaking, of Schacht’s personal opinions
+on the question of treaty violation. Even if, therefore, one
+still wished to defend the point of view that the said treaties
+have not become obsolete, one cannot, at least as far as its inherent
+honesty is concerned, doubt the justification of an opinion to the
+contrary. But if this is recognized, these treaty violations no
+longer provide any proof of the criminal intention of a war of
+aggression. And that is all that matters. For the violation of
+treaties in itself is not considered a punishable act by the Charter.
+Here, too, Schacht can justify his good faith by referring to the
+same or similar views on the part of leading foreign statesmen,
+in whom it is therefore logically impossible to assume the existence
+of a suspicion as to a desire for aggression on the part of Germany.
+Here again I must limit myself to a few instances, since
+a complete enumeration would exceed the time limit of this plea.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The first of the violations of the Versailles Treaty is supposedly
+the reintroduction of general conscription. With regard to this
+measure, the British Foreign Secretary, Sir John Simon, with a
+statesman’s far-sighted objectivity, gave the following reply, which
+was universally made known in reports by the press and radio
+and which therefore is valid as legal evidence:
+<span class='pageno' title='292' id='Page_292'></span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“There is no doubt that an agreed reduction of the armaments
+of other big nations was to follow upon the forced
+disarmament of Germany.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This remark contains a confirmation of the juridical point of
+view I developed a while ago, in spite of the criticism of Hitler’s
+action that follows. The same applies to the fact that the visit
+of Sir John Simon and Mr. Anthony Eden to Berlin took place
+8 days after this so-called treaty violation, namely, on 24 March
+1935. It would not have taken place if this measure of Hitler’s
+had been considered abroad as militarily aggressive. I will just
+mention in passing the history of the treatment of this question
+by the Council of the League of Nations, which is well known.
+Should Schacht, as a German and a German Minister, judge it
+in a manner different from that of the foreign Governments?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A second treaty violation by Hitler was the occupation of the
+Rhineland, also in March 1935. This action did not only violate
+the Versailles Treaty ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: [<span class='it'>Interposing</span>] The date of the occupation
+of the Rhineland was not March 1935, but March 1936.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: I cannot ascertain that at the moment.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The point in question is that this action took place, namely, the
+occupation of the Rhineland. This action was not only a breach
+of the Treaty of Versailles but also of the Locarno Pact, that is,
+of an undoubtedly voluntarily contracted treaty. Two days later
+Mr. Baldwin stated in the House of Commons, in a speech made
+public and therefore valid as legal evidence, that, while Germany’s
+conduct could not be excused, there was no reason to assume that
+this action contained a threat of hostilities. Was Schacht, a German
+and a German Minister, to take a different and more skeptical
+attitude in regard to the aggressive significance of the act than
+foreign statesmen? And particularly when he was forced to note
+the fact, which is now history and is universally known, that 10
+days after this breach of treaty the Locarno Powers, except Germany,
+submitted to the Council of the League of Nations a memorandum
+which proposed the reduction of the number of German
+troops in the Rhineland to 36,500 men and only endeavored to
+avoid the strengthening of the SA and SS in the Rhineland and
+the erection of fortifications and airfields. Should not this memorandum
+be interpreted as a ratification of an alleged breach of
+the treaty?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A third breach of the treaty was the fortification of Helgoland,
+which was hardly observed by the contracting parties, and merely
+called forth from Mr. Eden, in the now famous public speech
+before the House of Commons on 29 July 1936, the remark that
+<span class='pageno' title='293' id='Page_293'></span>
+it was not considered favorable to increase the difficulties of the
+proceedings by individual questions like the one under discussion.
+Was the German Minister Schacht to take another and more
+rigorous attitude?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And what about the terroristic annexation of Austria in March
+1938 when, moreover, Schacht was no longer Reich Minister for
+Economics? If foreign countries had gathered from this action the
+conviction that Hitler was preparing a war of aggression, they
+would not have abstained from threatening to use force. Was the
+German Minister Schacht to hold a different and stricter opinion?
+He did, in fact, have a different opinion at the time and was
+already eagerly at work with Witzleben and others to eliminate
+Adolf Hitler and his regime by means of a Putsch; an effort on
+the part of these patriotic conspirators which was frustrated, as
+the unequivocal testimony of the witness Gisevius has shown,
+because Hitler was able to record one success after another in
+foreign politics.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I merely remind you of the unequivocal evidence of Gisevius
+regarding the effects of the Munich Agreement on the influence
+of the opposition group of which Schacht was a leader; I remind
+you of the evidence of Gisevius regarding the warnings and
+hints in this connection sent across the German frontiers to responsible
+personalities of foreign countries. Is it fair to require from
+the German Minister Schacht a more critical attitude to those
+political developments than that adopted by foreign countries
+whose interests had been injured? As we know from Gisevius,
+from Vocke, and from all the affidavits submitted, he did have
+this critical attitude from 1937 on, in which year he took to the
+dark ways of a conspirator. I remind you of his first contact with
+the then General Von Kluge. I could give many examples such as
+those just mentioned. I do not criticize this attitude of foreign
+countries; that is not for me to do, quite apart from the fact
+that I have complete understanding for the pacifist attitude it
+reveals, which is fully aware of its responsibilities. It is, however,
+my duty to point out that no warlike intention can be imputed
+to Schacht on account of his opinions and attitude, when the same
+opinions and the same attitude can be identified as belonging to
+the foreign countries whose interests had been injured. If foreign
+countries could entertain the hope of maintaining further friendly
+relations with Hitler, the same right must be conceded to Schacht
+as far as he claims it. He does not, however, claim it for himself,
+at least not after the Fritsch crisis of 1938.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>After that time he, in contrast to the foreign countries, had a
+very clear idea of the danger, which fact, according to the evidence
+of Gisevius, is undeniable, and he personally risked his
+<span class='pageno' title='294' id='Page_294'></span>
+life and liberty to maintain peace by attempting to overthrow
+Hitler. The fact that all these Putsch actions before the war and
+after the outbreak of war were unsuccessful cannot, according to
+the evidence submitted, be considered his fault. The responsibility
+for the failure of this German resistance movement does not lie
+with the latter but elsewhere, within and without the German
+frontiers. I shall return to this later.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There remains, therefore, the fact of rearmament as such. Here,
+too, I can refer essentially to the statements Schacht made in
+justifying himself during his cross-examination. This was exhaustive,
+and a repetition would be superfluous. It is therefore also
+completely superfluous to enter into an academic discussion as
+to whether Schacht’s views were right; that is to say, whether it
+is correct that a certain amount of military force sufficient for
+defensive purposes is necessary for any country and was particularly
+necessary for Germany, and whether he was correct in his
+opinion that the nonfulfillment by the parties to the Versailles
+Treaty of the obligation to disarm justified the rearmament of
+Germany. The sole point in question is whether these opinions
+and motives of Schacht’s were honest, or whether he pursued secret
+aggressive intentions under cover of this defensive armament. But
+these proceedings have established absolutely nothing to disprove
+the honesty of these opinions and motives. Of course, one can
+question the fact whether the quotation “<span class='it'>si vis pacem, para bellum</span>”
+has absolute validity; or whether objectively any pronounced rearmament
+does not carry an inherent danger of war, since good
+armies with competent officers naturally strive for a chance for
+real action. Of course, one can defend the thesis that moral strength
+is stronger than any armed strength. The cohesion of the British
+Empire and the world-wide influence of the Vatican’s foreign
+policy could perhaps be cited as proof of this. All these questions
+carry a certain relativity in themselves; at any rate, one thing
+is certain: Even today in all large countries of the world the warning
+is constantly repeated that one must be militarily strong in
+order to preserve peace. Nations whose individualism and love of
+liberty rejected general conscription and a strong standing army
+now act to the contrary and honestly believe that they thereby
+serve peace. Let us take as an example a nation whose love of
+peace absolutely no one in the world, even the most mistrustful,
+can question, namely, Switzerland. Yet this peace-loving nation
+has always taken pride in maintaining the defense capacity of its
+people with the very intention of protecting its freedom and independence
+in a peaceful manner. One may academically call this
+idea of discouraging foreign aggression by the maintenance of a
+sufficiently strong defensive army imperialistic. It is, at any rate,
+<span class='pageno' title='295' id='Page_295'></span>
+honestly entertained by peaceful and liberty-loving nations and
+perhaps serves the cause of peace more effectively than many so-called
+antimilitaristic and pacifist doctrines. This sound point of
+view has really nothing to do with militarism. Whoever today
+recognizes this viewpoint as justified for great and small nations
+cannot contest the honesty of this view on the part of Schacht in
+the years 1935 to 1938. I have no more to say about this.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I also need not give a wearisome enumeration of figures and
+make specialized technical statements to the effect that this part
+of rearmament which Schacht first financed with 9,000 million, and
+then reluctantly with a further 3,000 million Reichsmark, was by
+no means sufficient for a war of aggression, in fact, not even
+for an effective defense of the German frontiers. The answers
+that the witnesses Keitel, Bodenschatz, Milch, General Thomas,
+Kesselring, et cetera, have given to this in their depositions and
+affidavits are available and have been submitted to, or officially
+brought to the attention of, the Tribunal. In this respect they are
+unanimously agreed that even at the outbreak of war—that is,
+18 months later—Germany was not sufficiently armed for an
+aggressive war; that therefore, when Hitler led this nation into
+a war of aggression in August 1939, it was not only a crime
+against humanity but also against his own people, the people with
+whose leadership he was entrusted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Therefore I also consider it superfluous to go into long discussions
+as to whether Blomberg’s statement that Schacht was aware
+of the progress of rearmament is correct, or the statement of
+Schacht and Vocke that this was not so. I accept without further
+discussion the sincerity of Blomberg’s statement. But since he had
+more to do with the technical side of rearmament than the Reichsbank
+had, general experience would seem to indicate that the
+memory of Schacht and Vocke is more reliable on this point
+than Blomberg’s, to whom this report to the Reichsbank was a
+matter of secondary importance for his department. For the Reichsbank
+the desire to be informed about the technical progress of the
+armament as well as about the financial expenditure was a very
+important matter. One remembers such facts better than unimportant
+secondary matters. In any case it is established that until the
+budget year 1937-38 only 21,000 millions were spent on armament,
+of which 12,000 millions were financed by credits of the Reichsbank,
+and that, according to Generaloberst Jodl’s statement of
+5 June, on 1 April 1938 only 27 or 28 divisions were ready, whereas
+in 1939 there were already 73 or 75 divisions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It needs no expert to show that this volume of expenditure
+and armament on 1 April 1938 was entirely insufficient for a war
+of aggression. Indeed Hitler was of the same opinion when in
+<span class='pageno' title='296' id='Page_296'></span>
+his memorandum of August 1936, which has been submitted to
+the Court, and which was handed to Speer in 1944, he pointed out,
+along with many derogatory remarks about Schacht’s conduct of
+economic affairs, that 4 precious years had gone by, that we had
+had time enough in these 4 years to determine what we could
+not do, and that he hereby gave orders that the German Army
+must be ready for action in 4 years, that is, in the course of the
+year 1940.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should like to remind the Court that after Schacht’s withdrawal
+as President of the Reichsbank, 31,500 millions were spent
+on armament during the two budget years 1938-39 and 1939-40.
+The issuing and expenditure of money on armament therefore
+continued without Schacht, and indeed to a considerably greater
+extent. Schacht had once written to Blomberg that he was not a
+money-making machine.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He exercised constant pressure on Blomberg along this line. I
+refer only to his letter to Blomberg on 21 December 1935, which
+has been submitted to the Tribunal. He exercised a restraining
+influence by means of explanatory lectures to officers of the War
+Ministry and of the Armed Forces Academy. He refused the railway
+loan of 1936 requested by the Minister of Communications,
+which was indirectly in the interest of armament; and he stopped
+the credits of the Reichsbank as early as the beginning of 1937,
+concluding them by compromising on a final grant of 3,000 millions.
+He refused the credit which the Reich Minister of Finance requested
+from him in December 1938.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He created an automatic brake for armament expenditure
+through the mefo bills, which from the technical and financial
+point of view was a somewhat bold measure, although legally
+tenable. These served at first to finance the armament expenditure
+but restricted further armament expenditure after their expiration
+on 1 April 1939 because the Reich was obligated to redeem them.
+Schacht’s foresight proved true. The increase in employment
+brought such a rise in the state revenues that it would not have
+been difficult to liquidate the mefo bills at their expiration 5 years
+later. Keitel’s statement has proved that during the budget year
+beginning 1 April 1938, 5,000 million marks more were spent for
+armament than during the preceding year, although as from
+1 April 1938 the Reichsbank credits had completely ceased. Half
+of the 5,000 millions would have sufficed to redeem the mefo bills
+which matured during the budget year beginning 1 April 1939.
+The use of this money for further rearmament would have been
+avoided; but this was exactly what Schacht intended. From the
+beginning he had limited the validity of the mefo bills to 5 years;
+he stopped the credit assistance of the Reichsbank on 1 April 1939
+<span class='pageno' title='297' id='Page_297'></span>
+in order to limit armament. It was impossible for Schacht to
+foresee that Hitler would simply break a strict credit obligation
+and not redeem the bills. These facts in themselves show that his
+attempts to resign could have had no other reason than opposition
+to any further armament, and the refusal to accept responsibility
+for it. In this sense the assertion of the Prosecution that he wanted
+to evade responsibility is completely correct.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nothing indicates that any other motives than those which
+are obvious from the facts just mentioned caused him to make
+this attempt to relinquish his duties. If the Prosecution maintains
+that the reason was his antagonism to Göring, this is also correct
+insofar as Schacht was an opponent of the Four Year Plan, of
+which Göring was the chief. That the reason was rivalry of power
+is a pure supposition, an interpretation of actual events which
+justifies the quotation: “Interpret to your heart’s content; should
+you fail to explain, you will at least insinuate.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Reichsbank memorandum of November 1938, which led to
+the dismissal of Schacht and most of his collaborators including
+Vocke, is also unequivocally and forcibly opposed to armament. It
+naturally had to contain reasons for this which were derived from
+the departmental jurisdiction of the Reichsbank. Its aim was
+obvious. Hence Hitler’s remark, “This is mutiny.” The memorandum
+ends with the demand for control of the capital and loan
+market as well as the management of taxation by the Reichsbank.
+Compliance with this demand would have deprived Hitler of every
+possibility of raising money for further armament, and therefore
+this demand was unacceptable to him. Schacht and his colleagues
+knew this. Accordingly, they deliberately sought a break by this
+step. Schacht now bore no further responsibility. From now on
+he could devote himself exclusively to the plans for a <span class='it'>coup d’état</span>
+by the conspiracy group to which he belonged. He became a traitor
+to Hitler. By remaining Minister without Portfolio, he hoped to
+learn more about what went on than if he resigned altogether;
+this was vital for the aims of his conspiracy group. I shall return
+to this point later.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact of armament, as such, therefore, proves absolutely
+nothing for the assertion of the Prosecution that Schacht deliberately
+contributed to the preparation of a war of aggression.
+Simultaneous economic armament, however, belongs of necessity
+to armament in the modern sense. On the German side this was
+already recognized for the first time at the beginning of the first
+World War by two very important German Jews, the founder of
+the Hamburg-America Line, Albert Ballin, and the great German
+industrialist, Rathenau. This is the same Rathenau who made the
+wonderful speech on peace during the Genoa Conference, which
+<span class='pageno' title='298' id='Page_298'></span>
+was received with wild applause by the delegates of those very
+powers which had opposed his country but 4 years previously
+as enemies, and who, as German Foreign Minister, was the victim
+of an anti-Semitic outrage in the early twenties. I probably can
+assume that the personality of Albert Ballin is known to the Court.
+Both men recognized, at the very outbreak of the first World War,
+the error of omitting economic mobilization. Rathenau then organized
+the so-called War Raw Materials Department of the War Ministry.
+The first Plenipotentiary General for War Economy, for this
+is what he really was, was thus ideologically a pacifist; and certainly
+since that time there is probably no mobilization plan by any
+nation which does not provide for the purely military armament to
+be accompanied by a corresponding economic preparation for war.
+Therefore, the designation of a Plenipotentiary General for War
+Economy, even if he had taken up his duties, which as the evidence
+demonstrates most convincingly he never did but remained a dummy,
+does not show anything in the way of proof that the intention to
+wage a war of aggression existed. This post is equally necessary
+when arming for defense. The same applies to the institution of
+the Reich Defense Council, the Reich Defense Committee, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.
+As such they are the same harmless, matter-of-course factors. They
+have no incriminating value. Only their misuse for the purpose of
+a war of aggression would be incriminating. However, Schacht’s
+criminal intention in this respect has not been established, nor has
+anything else been found. I therefore refrain from going into details
+on this subject.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In conclusion, the Prosecution sees something incriminating in
+the so-called maintenance of secrecy regarding certain mobilization
+measures and mobilization arrangements, as for example the second
+Reich Defense Law. Here, too, a natural and worldly-wise way of
+thinking deprives these findings of any incriminating character. All
+nations are accustomed to treat mobilization and armament measures
+as secret. Upon further consideration and after closer observation
+this practice can, of course, be recognized as a very superfluous
+routine matter. Only plans and technical details can be really kept
+secret. The fact of rearmament as such can never be kept secret.
+The same applies to the existence of a large body which is to serve
+the purpose of this rearmament. Either it becomes known because
+it starts to function, or, like the ominous Defense Council, it remains
+hidden and secret only because it does not function.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the memoirs of a Czarist officer regarding his experiences in
+the Russo-Japanese war I found the following humorous observation:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“If I, as a member of the General Staff, wished an incident
+to become known, I had it classified as ‘secret’ and my wish
+<span class='pageno' title='299' id='Page_299'></span>
+was fulfilled. If I wished to keep something secret, which was
+almost an impossibility, I unobtrusively gave it free circulation
+and occasionally my wish was fulfilled.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One should not quibble in a vacuum; but if one wishes to find
+the truth, one must take into account the teachings of experience
+based on hard facts.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus, the fact of the military activation of Germany after the
+seizure of power by Hitler and the subsequent rearmament was
+never a secret to the world. The main proceedings have produced
+a great deal of evidence to this effect. We know the report of Consul
+General Messersmith; we know his sworn testimony of 30 August
+1945, submitted by the Prosecution under Number 2385-PS, according
+to which the armament program—he speaks of a giant armament
+program immediately following the seizure of power—and the rapid
+development of the air program had been apparent to everybody;
+it had been impossible to move in the streets of Berlin or in any
+other city of importance in Germany without seeing pilots or aviators
+in training. He expressly states, on Page 8 of his testimony,
+that this giant German rearmament program was never a secret
+and was quite publicly announced in the spring of 1935.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I would like to remind you, amongst a great deal of other evidence,
+of the remark of Ambassador Dodd, who contends that he
+pointed out to Schacht that the German Government had bought
+high-grade airplanes from American airplane manufacturers for 1
+million dollars and had paid for them in gold. Even if Ambassador
+Dodd perhaps made a mistake in this detail, yet all this still proves
+that German rearmament—the extent of which was surely even
+overestimated abroad at that time—must have been, at the very
+best, an open secret.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Therefore it is not even necessary to refer to the mutual visits
+of the Chiefs of General Staffs, to which Milch and Bodenschatz
+testified, the visits of the Chief of the British Intelligence Service,
+Courtney, the permanent presence in Berlin of military attachés of
+nearly all countries, in order to recognize that the so-called secret
+rearmament was quite public and only safeguarded a few technical
+secrets, as did rearmament in every state. The outside world knew
+of the existence of this rearmament and, in any case, considered it
+to be compatible with world peace longer than Schacht himself did.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is not for me to criticize the attitude of the outside world, nor
+is it my intention to do so. Each part on the stage of life has its
+own rules of tact, including the part played by the defendant and
+his defense counsel. Their task is to establish a defense, and not to
+bring charges and make an attack. In connection therewith I expressly
+wish to guard against a possible misunderstanding to the
+effect that I want to appear as an accuser, a critic, or a know-it-all
+<span class='pageno' title='300' id='Page_300'></span>
+in any way. I present all this only from the aspect of my submission
+that the indirect circumstantial evidence submitted by the
+Prosecution is not conclusive.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Furthermore, the Prosecution argues that Schacht was a member
+of the Reich Cabinet, at least as Minister without Portfolio from the
+time of his dismissal in January 1938, as Minister of Economics, until
+January 1943. The Prosecution makes the Reich Cabinet responsible—criminally
+responsible—for the belligerent invasions of Hitler.
+This argumentation has an attractively convincing power for somebody
+who starts with the normal concept of a Reich Cabinet. The
+effect disappears once it has been ascertained that the so-called
+Reich Cabinet was not a cabinet in the usual sense applying to a
+constitutional state.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Judgments should not, however, be based on outward appearances
+and form—not on fiction, but only on actually established conditions.
+This makes it necessary to penetrate sociologically the
+nature of the Hitler regime and to examine whether a member of
+the Reich Cabinet, hence of the Reich Government as such, must
+in this capacity bear the same criminal responsibility as if he were
+in any other normal state set-up, be it a democratic republic or a
+democratic monarchy or a constitutional monarchy or a monarchy
+which, although absolute, was nevertheless founded on law, or some
+other constitutionally based set-up which bears the character of a
+somehow lawful state based on a constitution. We are thus obliged
+to investigate the actual sociological structure of the Hitler regime.
+We have heard an account on the Führer Order (Führerbefehl) in
+this connection by Professor Jahrreiss. Here, too, I want to avoid
+repetition and would only state the following in abbreviated form:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I want to say first of all, in order to avoid once more the danger
+of a misunderstanding, that when I speak of the Hitler regime here
+I do so without referring in any way to the persons sitting in the
+dock; naturally with the exception of Schacht. For the latter, I do
+so in the negative sense, for he did not belong to the regime as such,
+in spite of the fact that he was a member of the Reich Government
+and President of the Reichsbank. I leave the question completely
+open as to whether any of the other defendants should be considered
+a member or supporter of the regime. That question is subject only
+to the judgment of the Tribunal and the evaluation of the defense
+counsel for each case.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At the very beginning of my argument I indicated that, even for
+a person who lived in Germany during the Hitler regime, it is difficult
+to differentiate between the ostensible distribution of power
+and the actual underlying influence, since this requires a great deal
+of political intuition; it is bound to be impossible to judge for people
+who lived outside Germany and can only be arrived at through the
+<span class='pageno' title='301' id='Page_301'></span>
+findings resulting from the presentation of evidence before this Tribunal.
+We have established here that the Reich Cabinet, whom
+Hitler termed a club of defeatists, was convened for the last time
+in 1938 and that it met then only to receive a communication from
+Hitler. For actual deliberation and the passing of a resolution it
+had last been convened in 1937. We have also established that Hitler
+deliberately kept all news of political importance from the Reich
+Cabinet, as is proved quite unequivocally by the so-called Hossbach
+minutes of 10 November. During this meeting the Führer called the
+attention of the chiefs of the branches of the Wehrmacht and the
+Reich Foreign Minister, who were present—Schacht, of course, was
+not present and did not learn about the Hossbach minutes until he
+came here—to the fact that the subject for deliberation was of such
+great importance that it would result in full Cabinet meetings in
+other countries but that, just because of its great significance, he
+had decided not to discuss the matter with the Reich Cabinet.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus, at least after 1937, the members of the Reich Cabinet can
+no longer be considered the architects and supporters of the political
+aspirations of the Reich. The same holds true for the members
+of the Reich Defense Council, which as such was nothing but a
+bureaucratic and routine affair. Accordingly Hitler, in the spring
+of 1939, explicitly excluded the Reich Defense Council also from
+further war preparations, saying: “Preparations will be made on the
+basis of peacetime legislation.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Despotism and tyranny showed themselves in unadulterated form
+as from 1938. It is a characteristic quality of the Fascist as well
+as the National Socialist regime, to have the political will concentrated
+in the head of the Party, who with the help of this Party
+subjugates and becomes master of the State and the nation. Justice
+Jackson also recognized this when he stated, on 28 February 1946,
+that the apex of power rested with a power group outside the State
+and the Constitution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To speak, in the case of such a regime, of a responsible Reich
+Government and of free citizens who, through some organizations
+or others, could exert influence on the formation of the political
+will, would be to proceed from entirely wrong hypotheses. Intangible
+elements devoid of all sense of responsibility usually gain
+influence on the head of the State and Party in such regimes. The
+formation of the political will can be recognized in its crystallized
+form only in the head of the State himself; all around him is
+shrouded in a haze. It is another characteristic of such a regime—and
+this again belongs to its inner untruthfulness—that beneath
+the surface of seemingly absolute harmony and union several power
+groups fight against each other. Hitler not only tolerated such
+<span class='pageno' title='302' id='Page_302'></span>
+opposing groups, he even encouraged them and made use of them
+as a basis for his power.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One of the defendants spoke here of the unity of the German
+people during this war in contrast with the first World War, but
+I must stress in reply that hardly at any time during its history
+was the German nation so torn internally as it was during the Third
+Reich. The apparent unity was merely the quiet of a churchyard,
+enforced through terror. The conflicts between the individual high
+functionaries of the German people, which we have ascertained
+here, reflect the inner strife-torn condition of the German nation,
+carefully concealed through the terror wielded by the Gestapo.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To give only a few examples: We were confronted here with the
+conflicts between Himmler and Frank, between Himmler and Keitel,
+between Sauckel and Seldte, between Schellenberg and Canaris,
+between Bormann and Lammers, between SA and SS, between
+Wehrmacht and SS, between SD and Justice, between Ribbentrop
+and Neurath, and so on and so forth. The list could be continued
+ad libitum.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even ideologically the Party in itself was divided into pronounced
+oppositional groups, which was shown already at the very
+beginning of the presentation of evidence by Göring’s testimony.
+These oppositions were fundamental, and they were not bridged by
+Hitler but rather deepened. They were the instrument from which
+he elicited his power. The ministers were not responsible governing
+persons, as in any other state where law is the foundation; they
+were nothing but employees with specialized training who had to
+obey orders. And if a departmental minister, as in the case of
+Schacht, did not wish to submit to this, it resulted in conflict and
+resignation from his post.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For this very reason no minister could in the long run take full
+responsibility for his department, because he was not exclusively
+competent for it. A minister, in accordance with constitutional law,
+must first of all have access to the head of State; and he must have
+the right to report to him in person. He must be in a position to
+reject interference and influences coming from irresponsible sources.
+None of the characteristics applicable to a minister apply to the
+so-called ministers of Adolf Hitler. The Four Year Plan came as
+a surprise to Schacht. Similarly, the Minister of Justice was surprised
+by so extremely important a law as the Nuremberg Decrees.
+Ministers were not in a position to appoint their staffs independently.
+The appointment of every civil service employee required the consent
+of the Party Chancellery. The intervention and influence of
+all possible agencies and persons of the various Chancelleries—Chancellery
+of the Führer, Party Chancellery, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>—asserted
+<span class='pageno' title='303' id='Page_303'></span>
+themselves. They, however, were agencies placed above the ministries
+and they could not be controlled. Special delegates governed
+over the heads of the departmental chiefs. Ministers, even the Chief
+of the Reich Chancellery, as we have heard from Lammers, might
+wait for months for an audience, while Herr Bormann and Herr
+Himmler had free access to Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The anticamera and camarilla, indispensable accessories of all
+absolutism, have at all times been difficult to fathom as to the
+personal responsibility of the individual circles of which they are
+composed. The irresponsible influences exerted over and affecting
+Hitler were absolutely intangible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Generaloberst Jodl described to us here how Hitler’s sudden
+actions, caused by some urge and attended by the most serious
+consequences, could be traced back to influences of an entirely obscure
+and unknown sort, such as pure chance, conversations at a
+tea party, or the like. For the objective facts this bears out what
+I already mentioned in the beginning. And so this state of affairs
+precludes even the possibility of the planning of a crime such as
+a war of aggression within a clearly defined circle of persons, much
+less within the so-called Reich Government. But where no planning
+is possible, there can be no plot, no conspiracy either, the most
+striking characteristic of which is this very common planning, even
+though the participants have different and varied roles. Let us
+assume the broadest conceivable interpretation of the ostensible
+exterior characteristics of the conspiracy. I am following Justice
+Jackson’s line of reasoning. He who takes part in a counterfeiters’
+plot is guilty of conspiracy, even through he may have written only
+a letter or acted as bearer of the letter. He who participates in a
+plot for robbing a bank is guilty of murder if, in the course of the
+execution, not he but a third party in the group of planners commits
+murder. At all times, however, the prerequisite is a body
+of persons capable of evolving a common plan. Such a thing was
+not possible for Adolf Hitler’s ministers; it was not possible at all
+under Hitler. From this it follows that no conspirator could participate
+in Hitler’s crime of having forced upon his own people and
+the world a war of aggression, except those who served Hitler as
+assistants.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The forces at work in the Third Reich as depicted thus permit
+in thesis only the assumption that there existed a punishable complicity
+or punishable assistance, not, however, a punishable group
+offense such as a conspiracy. Whether such complicity or such
+punishable aid in the crime of a war of aggression committed by
+Hitler exists for individual defendants personally can only be
+investigated and decided in each individual case. It is my task to
+investigate this only in the case of Schacht.
+<span class='pageno' title='304' id='Page_304'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A collective crime such as conspiracy is, however, excluded as
+inconceivable and impossible in the light of the actual conditions as
+already established. But even if this were not the case, the subjective
+aspect of the deed is completely lacking in the case of
+Schacht. Even if the objective facts of a conspiracy were to exist
+for a certain circle of the accused and even with the most liberal
+interpretation of the concept of conspiracy, it is still essential that
+the conspirator should include the plan of conspiracy and the aims
+of the conspiracy within his will, at least in the form of <span class='it'>dolus eventualis</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The strict facts constituting a conspiracy can best be illustrated
+by comparison with a pirate ship. In reality every crew member
+of the pirate ship, even a subordinate, is guilty and an outlaw. But
+a person who did not even know that he was on a pirate ship but
+believed himself to be on a peaceful merchant vessel, is not guilty
+of piracy. He is equally innocent if, after realizing the pirate
+character of the ship, he has done everything he could to prevent
+any piracy, as well as to leave the pirate ship. Schacht did both.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As far as that is concerned, research on conspiracy also recognizes
+that a person is not guilty who has withdrawn from the conspiracy
+by a positive act before attainment of the goal of the conspiracy,
+even if he did co-operate previously in the preparation of the plan
+for conspiracy, which was not the case with Schacht. In this connection,
+I also consider as being in my favor Mr. Justice Jackson’s
+answer when I put up for discussion, during Schacht’s interrogation,
+the question whether the persecution of the Jews is also charged
+to Schacht. Mr. Justice Jackson said, yes, if Schacht had helped
+prepare the war of aggression before he withdrew from this plan
+for aggression and its group of conspirators and went over unreservedly
+to the opposition group, that is, to the conspiracy against
+Hitler. This desertion would then be the positive act which I have
+mentioned whereby a person at first participating in a conspiracy
+would separate himself from it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This legal problem does not even enter into consideration as
+far as Schacht is concerned, because the evidence has shown that
+he never desired to participate in the preparation for a war of
+aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As already stated, this accusation of the subjective fact of the
+conspiracy has not been proved either by direct or by indirect evidence.
+For the events up to the year 1938 I can point to the statements
+made previously. It has been proved that from 1938 on, at
+the latest, Schacht fought the bitterest struggle imaginable against
+any possibility of war in such a form that he attempted to overthrow
+the person responsible for this risk of war and this will for
+aggression and, thereby, the regime.
+<span class='pageno' title='305' id='Page_305'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Your Lordship, I have now arrived at the end of a section, if
+Your Lordship would care to announce a recess now.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. DIX: I beg your pardon for being late, but I was detained
+at the entrance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen of the Tribunal, I have arrived at the discussion of
+the beginning of the opposition by means of the various Putsch
+actions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is quite irrelevant and of incidental importance to investigate
+whether the attempts at a Putsch, which occurred at shorter or
+longer intervals during the war, would have been instrumental in
+securing better peace terms for Germany. This is absolutely
+meaningless for the criminal evaluation of Schacht’s course of
+action. Doubtlessly, according to human reckoning, a successful
+prewar Putsch would have prevented the outbreak of war; and a
+successful Putsch after the outbreak of war would at least have
+shortened the duration of the war. Therefore such skeptical considerations
+about the political value of these Putsch attempts do not
+disprove the seriousness of the plans and intentions for a Putsch,
+and that is all that counts in a criminal legal evaluation. For it
+proves first of all that a person who has been pursuing them since
+1938, and even since 1937, if one includes the attempt with Kluge,
+could not possibly previously have had warlike intentions. One
+does not try to overthrow a regime because it involves the danger
+of war, if previously one has oneself worked toward a war. One
+does so only if by all one’s actions, even that of financing armament,
+one wished to serve peace. For this reason these repeated
+Putsch attempts on the part of Schacht do not have any legal
+significance of a so-called active repentance for previous criminal
+behavior but constitute <span class='it'>ex post</span> proof that he cannot be accused
+even before 1938 of deliberately working for war, because it would
+be logically and psychologically incompatible with Schacht’s activity
+of conspiracy against Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These Putsche thus prove the credibility of Schacht in respect
+to his explanation of the reasons and intentions which caused him
+actively to enter the Hitler Government and to finance armament
+to the extent to which he did, namely, to the amount of 12,000 millions.
+They prove <span class='it'>ex post</span> the purely defensive character of this
+financing of armament; they prove the credibility of Schacht’s contention
+of having tactically achieved, in addition, a general limitation
+of armament. If one does believe this explanation of Schacht’s,
+<span class='pageno' title='306' id='Page_306'></span>
+and I think one must believe it, then one cannot speak of Schacht’s
+co-operation in instigating a war of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This credibility is also proved by another circumstance. Schacht
+originally contradicted the testimony of Gisevius and my questions
+following the same line, that he had admired Hitler at the beginning
+and had unreservedly considered him a brilliant statesman.
+He described this in his interrogation as an erroneous assumption.
+He said that he had recognized from the beginning many of Hitler’s
+weaknesses, especially the fact of his poor education, and had only
+hoped to be in a position to control the disadvantages and dangers
+resulting from them. By this contradiction Schacht made his defense
+more difficult; but he is wise enough to have recognized this. Thus
+what he deliberately forfeited from the point of view of evidence
+which would serve his defense, he gains with regard to his credibility
+upon objective evaluation of evidence based on psychological
+experience. For a person who serves the truth by contradiction
+deserves increased credibility, when the suggested untruth or the
+half-truth is more advantageous to him technically and tactically by
+way of evidence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There should be no doubt about Schacht’s leading role in the
+activities of the various conspiracies about which Gisevius testified
+on the very basis of this credible testimony. During the cross-examination
+Mr. Justice Jackson confronted Schacht with photographs
+and films which superficially show a close connection with
+Hitler and his paladins. This can only have been done in order to
+throw doubt on the earnestness of his active opposition to Hitler.
+I must, therefore, deal briefly with this point of the photographs and
+films. Mr. Justice Jackson has coupled this accusation with another
+one by quoting speeches ostensibly expressing great devotion on the
+part of Schacht toward Adolf Hitler even during the Putsch period.
+This accusation is on the same level. I believe that this argument
+cannot stand up either before the experiences of life nor before what
+we can observe of history. History teaches us that conspirators,
+especially if they belong to the closer circle of dignitaries of the
+threatened head of state, show special devotion for purposes of
+camouflage. Nor has it ever been observed that such people impart
+their intentions to the prospective victim in a spirit of contradictory
+loyalty. One could cite many examples of this from history.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There exists an effective German drama by a certain Neumann
+which concerns itself with the murder of Czar Paul by his first
+Minister, Count Pahlen. The Czar believes to the very end in the
+ostentatious devotion of Count Pahlen, even while the latter is
+already sharpening his knife. And the historical documents in
+existence include a note by Count Pahlen to the Russian Ambassador
+in Berlin, immediately before the assassination, in which Count
+<span class='pageno' title='307' id='Page_307'></span>
+Pahlen persists in speaking about “<span class='it'>Notre auguste Empereur</span>,” and
+so forth. Significantly, this drama bears the title <span class='it'>The Patriot</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus, there is a higher patriotism than the merely formal loyalty
+of a servant of the nation. It would be closer to the psychological
+truth if this presumptive devotion, assumed for the sake of appearances,
+and the assurances of loyalty during this period were judged
+more in favor of the objective credibility of Schacht’s explanations
+than <span class='it'>vice versa</span>. As a conspirator, he had to camouflage himself
+especially well. To a certain degree this had to be done by practically
+everyone who lived under this regime in Germany. As far
+as the photographs are concerned, it is probably an inevitable consequence
+of every social and representative participation in a body
+that one becomes a victim of the camera along with the members
+of the body whether one likes it or not. A member of a Government
+cannot always avoid being photographed with these people
+on the occasion of their meetings. As a result we have pictures that
+show Schacht between Ley and Streicher and the scene in the film
+showing the reception of Hitler at the railroad station. Viewed ex
+post, these pictures give no pleasure to the observer, and certainly
+not to Schacht either. But they do not prove anything. In a natural
+evaluation belonging to a normal average experience of life, I consider
+these pictures without any value as evidence, either <span class='it'>pro</span>
+or <span class='it'>contra</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Foreign countries, too, through their prominent representatives,
+had social intercourse with Adolf Hitler’s Government, and this not
+only through their diplomatic corps. I wish to assure you that the
+Defense is in a position to produce pictures of a much more grotesque
+sort which do not seem nearly as natural as Schacht being
+photographed together with men who, after all, were his fellow
+dignitaries in the Third Reich. To produce such pictures, however,
+might not be very tactful on the part of the Defense; yet should it
+be necessary to investigate the truth in all seriousness, a defense
+counsel might have to take upon himself the odium of indiscretion.
+I do not believe that there is any need for me to do so in this case,
+because the irrelevance and insignificance of such a presentation of
+evidence through pictures taken on state occasions of the Third
+Reich seems to me to be obvious.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The only incriminating point pressed by the Prosecution which
+is left for me to argue now appears to be that Schacht, after his
+retirement as Minister of Economics and even after his retirement
+as President of the Reichsbank in January 1939, remained Minister
+without Portfolio until 1943. Schacht declared that this had been
+stipulated by Hitler as a condition for his release from the Ministry
+of Economics. Hitler’s signature, as that of the head of the
+State, was necessary for his dismissal. Had Schacht refused to
+<span class='pageno' title='308' id='Page_308'></span>
+remain as Minister without Portfolio, he would surely have been
+arrested sooner or later as a political suspect and thus been deprived
+of all possibility of action against Hitler. The witness Gisevius has
+testified as to the discussions at that time between him and Schacht
+concerning the continuation of Schacht’s function as Minister without
+Portfolio. In these deliberations the idea was quite justly considered
+important that Schacht could be of more use to the group
+of conspirators as a scout or an outpost if he remained in this
+position, to outward appearances at least, within the Reich Government.
+Even as Minister without Portfolio, Schacht remained exposed
+to great danger, as is shown by his and Gisevius’ declarations and
+as becomes obvious from Ohlendorf’s statement that Schacht already
+in 1937 was on the black list of the State Police.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>How much Hitler feared Schacht is proved by his subsequent
+remarks to Speer, which have been discussed here, particularly his
+remarks about Schacht after the attempted assassination on 20 July.
+I would also remind you once more of Hitler’s memorandum of
+1936, which he gave to Speer in 1944 and which shows that he saw
+in Schacht a saboteur of his rearmament plans. It has been declared
+and proved by Lammers that Schacht tried later on to get rid even
+of this nominal position. Lammers and Schacht have proved furthermore
+that this position of Minister without Portfolio was without
+any special importance. Hence my reference to him as an officer
+with assimilated rank, that is, an officer without command authority,
+a sham officer. Schacht could not give up the position unless
+there was a row, and the same held true of his position as Reichsbank
+President. Schacht, therefore, had to maneuver in such a
+way that he would be thrown out. He succeeded in this, as I
+explained, as Reichsbank President through the well-known memorandum
+of the Directorate of the Reichsbank and the refusal of
+credits by the Reichsbank in November 1938 contained therein. As
+far as his position of Minister without Portfolio was concerned, he
+succeeded through his defeatist letter of November 1942. In the
+meantime he made use of the time for the attempted <span class='it'>coup d’état</span>
+in autumn 1938 and for the various other attempted <span class='it'>coups d’état</span>
+leading up to that of 20 July 1944, which finally caused him to be
+put in a concentration camp.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A criminal reproach can on no account be made against him
+in his position as Minister without Portfolio. For his proved conspiratorial
+activity against Hitler during all this time eliminates
+by force of logic the supposition that he had furthered Hitler’s
+war plans and war strategy during this time. In any event, we
+can only raise—and even that only in the vacuum of abstraction—a
+political reproach against the Schacht of the years 1933-37. But
+this, too, is fully compensated by the extraordinarily courageous
+<span class='pageno' title='309' id='Page_309'></span>
+attitude of Schacht after this period. To obtain its just evaluation,
+may I remind you of the interesting statement of Gisevius to the
+effect that he, who had at first looked with a certain skepticism
+upon Schacht’s original attitude, not in a criminal but in a
+political sense, had later become completely reconciled with Schacht
+by the extraordinary courage which Schacht displayed as opponent
+and conspirator against Hitler since 1938. I am of the opinion,
+therefore, that the fact that Schacht remained as Minister without
+Portfolio does not incriminate him either directly or indirectly,
+neither according to penal law, which is out of the question, nor
+morally, if one takes into consideration his behavior as a whole,
+his motives, and the accompanying circumstances and conditions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the Prosecution now finally argues, on the basis of the text
+of the afore-mentioned memorandum by the Directorate of the
+Reichsbank, that an opposition to war is not evident from the
+memorandum, but only technical reflections on finance and currency,
+then I have only to refer in this respect to my earlier statements
+and the testimony of Vocke. The presentation of facts by
+Schacht himself would not even be necessary to refute this argumentation.
+Vocke in his capacity as closest collaborator declared
+quite unequivocally that Schacht wished to limit and sabotage
+rearmament from the moment when he recognized that it was
+becoming a potential war danger. The sworn affidavit of Hülse
+and the sworn affidavits of all the collaborators of Schacht in the
+Reich Ministry of Economics tally with the testimony of Vocke
+in this respect. I need not quote them individually. They are
+known to the Tribunal. The Tribunal does not need the commentary
+of a defense counsel on them; they speak for themselves.
+If the Prosecution now finally bases its argument on the text of
+the memorandum which, it is true, actually only deals with financial
+problems, then again I cannot suppress the remark that such an
+argumentation moves in a vacuum insofar as one does not take
+the experiences of history and the general experiences of life into
+consideration. Naturally, as I have already said, the Directorate
+of the Reichsbank could only bring up arguments from their
+department, particularly so in dealing with a Hitler. One says
+one thing while meaning another.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the Directorate of the Reichsbank, along with their President,
+Schacht, had revealed their true purpose in this memorandum,
+namely, to avert the danger of war and to combat Hitler’s will
+of aggression, then they would have deprived themselves of the
+effect of technical departmental influence. Hitler very well understood
+the purpose of this memorandum when he shouted, after
+reading it: “That is mutiny!” With this, Hitler recognized the only
+thing that can be said of Schacht as conspirator: He was never
+<span class='pageno' title='310' id='Page_310'></span>
+a mutineer and conspirator against world peace; but, insofar as
+he was a conspirator and mutineer, he was so only against Adolf
+Hitler and his regime.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Again in this case I must ask the High Tribunal to turn their
+attention to Appendix Number II, which I must insert at this
+moment, because the matter that is dealt with here did not reach
+me for translation until after I had submitted my final speech.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I said that Schacht, insofar as he was a conspirator, was so
+only against Hitler. As such, he was the subject of ironical
+belittling by Generaloberst Jodl and my colleague Nelte through
+the epithet, “frock-coat and drawing-room revolutionary.” Now
+history teaches that the quality of the tailor does not play any
+role in the case of the revolutionary. And as far as the drawing
+room is concerned, shacks have no revolutionary precedence over
+palaces. I would just recall the political drawing rooms of the
+great French Revolution or, for example, the elegant officers’ club
+of the select Preobrashensk regiment under many a Czar. Should
+the Gentlemen of the Tribunal be of the opinion that Schacht and
+his accomplices themselves should have done the shooting, then
+all I can say is that things were not as easy as all that. Schacht
+would have loved to do the shooting himself; he proclaimed that
+here emphatically. But it was not possible for him to do so without
+possessing the power to master the attendant confusion, thereby
+making the attempt a revolutionary success. Thus generals with
+troops were necessary. I do not wish to repay Generaloberst Jodl
+with the same coin and shall therefore refrain from saying “a
+necessary evil.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The further reproach of the basic lack of working-class elements
+to strengthen the Putsche is contradicted by the social composition
+of the revolutionaries of 20 July. As I stated before, all this is
+irrelevant for the decision of the Tribunal. But my client is
+morally entitled to expect his defense counsel not to let this ironical
+thrust pass, especially since it was delivered in the limelight of
+public opinion.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In summing up I may say: After the elections in July 1932
+it was certain that Hitler was able and bound to seize power.
+Previous to this Schacht had particularly warned the foreign
+countries of this development, and thus he had not contributed to
+it. After the seizure of power only two roads were open to him,
+as to every German: He either had to estrange himself or to enter
+the Movement actively. The decision at these crossroads was a
+purely political one without any criminal aspect. Just as we respect
+the reasons which caused the foreign countries to collaborate with
+Hitler much more intensively and in a more pro-German way than
+<span class='pageno' title='311' id='Page_311'></span>
+with the previous democratic Governments of Germany, we must
+recognize the good faith of all those Germans who believed themselves
+able to serve the country and humanity better by remaining
+in the Movement, that is, within the Party or the apparatus
+of officialdom, because of the greater possibilities of exerting their
+influence, than by grumbling and keeping aloof. To serve Hitler
+as minister and President of the Reichsbank was a political decision,
+about the political correctness of which one can argue <span class='it'>ex post
+facto</span> but one which certainly lacked any criminal character.
+Schacht has always remained loyal to the motivating reason for
+his decision, namely, to combat any radicalism from an influential
+position. Nowhere in the world, which knew his oppositional attitude,
+could he see any signs of warning or support. He saw only
+that the world trusted Hitler much longer than he himself did
+and permitted Adolf Hitler to gain honors and foreign political
+successes, which hampered Schacht’s work which had already for
+a long time been directed toward removing Adolf Hitler and his
+Government. He led this struggle against Adolf Hitler and his
+Government with a courage and determination which must make
+it appear a pure miracle that not until after 20 July 1944 did fate
+overtake him, when he was sent to a concentration camp and
+was in danger of losing his life either through the Peoples’ Court
+or through a spectacular act of the SS. He is sufficiently wise
+and self-critical to realize that from a purely political angle the
+picture of his character will be adjudged diversely in history, or
+at least in the immediate future, according to favor or hatred of
+the parties. He humbly resigns himself to the judgment of history,
+even if one historian or another will label his political line as
+incorrect. But with the pride of a good conscience he faces the
+judgment of this High Tribunal. He stands before his judges with
+clean hands. He also stands before this Tribunal with confidence,
+as he has already manifested in a letter which he addressed to
+this Tribunal before the beginning of the proceedings, in which
+he states that he is grateful to be able to expose before this Tribunal
+and before the whole world his actions and doings and their
+underlying reasons. He stands before this Tribunal with confidence
+because he knows that favor or hatred of the parties will have no
+effect on this Tribunal. While recognizing the relativity of all
+political actions in such difficult times, he remains sure of himself
+and full of confidence with regard to the criminal charges which
+have been raised against him. Whoever would be found guilty of
+being criminally responsible for this war and the atrocities and
+inhuman acts committed in it, Schacht, according to the evidence
+which has been given here with minute exactness, can confront
+that culprit with the words which Wilhelm Tell flings in the face
+<span class='pageno' title='312' id='Page_312'></span>
+of the emperor’s assassin, Parricida: “I raise my clean hands to
+Heaven, and curse you and your deed!”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I therefore request the findings to be established to the effect
+that Schacht is not guilty of the accusation which has been raised
+against him and that he be acquitted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Kranzbühler for the Defendant
+Dönitz.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER OTTO KRANZBÜHLER (Counsel for the
+Defendant Dönitz): Mr. President, Gentlemen of the Tribunal: “War
+is a cruel thing, and it brings in its train a multitude of injustices
+and misdeeds.”<a id='r2'/><a href='#f2' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[2]</span></sup></a> With these words of Plutarch’s, Hugo Grotius
+begins his examination of responsibility for war crimes; and they
+are as true today as they were 2,000 years ago. Acts constituting
+war crimes, or considered as such by the opponent, have at all
+times been committed by belligerents. But this fact was always
+held against the vanquished parties and never against the victors.
+The law which was applied here was necessarily always the law
+of the stronger.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>While more or less stable rules have been governing land warfare
+for centuries, in naval warfare the conceptions of the belligerents
+with regard to international law have always clashed.
+No one knows better than the British statesmen to what extent
+these conceptions are dictated by national or economic interests.
+I refer in this respect to noted witnesses such as Lord Fisher and
+Lord Edward Grey.<a id='r3'/><a href='#f3' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[3]</span></sup></a> Therefore, if ever in history a naval power
+would have had the idea of prosecuting a defeated enemy admiral,
+based on its own conception of the rules of naval warfare, the
+sentence would have been a foregone conclusion from the very
+indictment.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At this trial two admirals are under indictment for a naval
+war which has been termed criminal. Thus the Tribunal is confronted
+with a decision regarding conceptions of law which are
+necessarily as divergent as the interests of a naval power and a
+land power. It is not only the fate of the two admirals which
+depends upon this decision. It is also a question of personal honor
+<span class='pageno' title='313' id='Page_313'></span>
+to hundreds of thousands of German seamen who believed they
+were serving a good cause, and who do not deserve to be branded
+by history as pirates and murderers. It is for these men, the living
+as well as the dead, that I feel bound by a moral obligation to reject
+the accusations raised against German naval warfare.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What are these accusations? They are divided into two main
+groups: Unlawful sinking of ships and deliberate killing of shipwrecked
+personnel. I shall deal first with the accusation of the
+illegal sinking of ships.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Two reports by Mr. Roger Allen, of the British Foreign Office,
+made in the autumn of 1940 and spring of 1941, form the nucleus
+of that accusation. I do not know to whom and for what purpose
+these reports were made. According to their form and content
+they appear to serve propaganda purposes, and for that reason
+alone I consider them to have little value as evidence. Even the
+Prosecution submitted only part of the accusations made therein.
+The reports trace only one-fifth of the total number of supposedly
+unlawful attacks back to submarines, whereas four-fifths are
+ascribed to mines, airplanes, or surface craft. The Prosecution
+omits these four-fifths, and this reticence may be explained by the
+fact that the use of these combat means on the British side differed
+in no way from that on the German side.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With regard to the use of submarines, however, there does seem
+to exist a difference between the principles followed in Germany’s
+conduct of the naval war and that of our enemies. At any rate,
+the public in enemy countries and in many neutral countries
+believed so during the war, and partly still believes it today.
+Propaganda dominated the field. At the same time the vast
+majority of all critics neither knew exactly what principles applied
+to German U-boat warfare, nor on what factual and legal foundations
+they were based. It shall be my task to attempt to
+clarify this.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The reports by Mr. Roger Allen culminate in the assertion
+that the German U-boats, beginning with the summer of 1940,
+torpedoed everything within range. Undoubtedly, the methods of
+submarine warfare gradually intensified under the pressure of the
+measures directed against Germany. This war, however, never
+degenerated into an orgy of shooting governed only by the law
+of expediency. Most of what might have been expedient for a
+U-boat was left undone to the last day of the war because it could
+only be regarded as legally inadmissible, and all measures of which
+Germany in her conduct of naval warfare is being accused today
+by the Prosecution were the result of a development in which both
+sides took part through measures and countermeasures, as occurs
+in the course of every war.
+<span class='pageno' title='314' id='Page_314'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The London Protocol of 1936 formed the legal basis for German
+submarine warfare at the beginning of this war. These regulations
+were incorporated verbatim into Article 74 of the German Prize
+Ordinance, which even Mr. Roger Allen calls a reasonable and
+not inhuman instrument. This Prize Ordinance was sent in 1938
+in draft form to the two U-boat flotillas and to the U-boat training
+school and served as a basis for the training of commanders.
+Stopping and examining merchant vessels was performed as a
+tactical task. In order to facilitate for the commander in economic
+warfare the quick and correct evaluation of his legal position
+towards ships and cargoes of the enemy and of neutral countries,
+the prize disc was constructed, which through simple manipulations
+indicated the articles of the Prize Ordinance to be applied. Thus,
+insofar as preparations had been made at all for economic warfare
+by submarines they were based exclusively on the German Prize
+Ordinance, and thus on the London Protocol.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The German High Command actually did adhere to this legal
+foundation in the initial stages of the war. The combat instructions
+for U-boats of 3 September 1939 contained clear orders to the
+effect that submarine warfare was to be carried on in accordance
+with the Prize Ordinance. Accordingly, sinkings were permissible
+only after stopping and examining the ship, unless it attempted to
+escape or offered resistance. Some examples were submitted to the
+Tribunal, from the abundance of available instances, showing the
+chivalrous spirit in which the German submarine commanders
+complied with instructions given. In particular, assistance afforded
+to the crews of ships lawfully sunk, after having been stopped
+and examined, occasionally reached a point where it could scarcely
+be justified on military grounds. Lifeboats were towed over long
+distances, whereby the few available U-boats were diverted from
+their combat mission. Enemy ships which might have been sunk
+lawfully were permitted to go free in order to send the crews of
+ships previously sunk to port aboard them. It is therefore only
+correct that Mr. Roger Allen stated that the German U-boats,
+during the first weeks of the war, adhered strictly to the London
+regulations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Why was this practice not kept up? Because the conduct of
+the enemy made such a procedure militarily impossible, and at the
+same time created the legal prerequisites for its modification.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall consider the military side first. From the very first day
+of the war, U-boat reports reached the Flag Officer of U-boats and
+the Naval Operations Staff stating that hardly an enemy ship submitted
+voluntarily to being stopped and examined. The merchant
+vessels were not content with attempting to escape through flight
+or by changing their course and bearing directly down upon the
+<span class='pageno' title='315' id='Page_315'></span>
+U-boat in order to force it to dive. Every U-boat sighted was at
+once reported by radio; and subsequently, in the shortest space of
+time, attacked by enemy airplanes or naval forces. However, it
+was the arming of all enemy merchant vessels that settled the
+matter. As early as 6 September 1939 a German U-boat was shelled
+by the British steamship <span class='it'>Manaar</span>, and that was the starting signal
+for the great struggle which took place between the U-boats, on
+the one hand, and the armed merchant vessels equipped with
+guns and depth charges, on the other hand, as equal military
+opponents.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In order to show the effect of all the measures taken by the
+adversary, I have presented to the Tribunal some examples which
+I do not wish to repeat. They show unequivocally that further
+action against enemy merchant ships in accordance with the Prize
+Ordinance was no longer feasible from the military standpoint
+and meant suicide for the submarine. Nevertheless, the German
+command for weeks on end continued to act according to the
+regulations governing the Prize Ordinance. Only after it was
+established that action on the part of enemy merchant ships—especially
+armed action—no longer took the form of individual
+measures but of general instructions, was the order given on
+4 October 1939 to attack all armed enemy merchant ships without
+warning.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution will perhaps take the standpoint that, in lieu
+of this, submarine warfare against armed merchant vessels should
+have been discontinued. In the last war the most terrible weapons
+of warfare were ruthlessly employed by both sides on land and
+in the air. In view of this experience the thesis can hardly be
+upheld today that in naval warfare one of the parties waging war
+should be expected to give up using an effective weapon after the
+adversary has taken measures making the use of it impossible in
+its previous form. In any case such a renunciation could only be
+considered if the novel utilization of the weapon were undeniably
+illegal. But this is not the case for the utilization of German submarines
+against enemy merchant shipping, because the measures
+taken by the enemy changed not only the military but also the
+legal situation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>According to German legal opinion a ship which is equipped
+and utilized for battle does not come under the provisions granting
+protection against sinking without warning as laid down by the
+London Protocol for merchant ships. I wish to stress the fact that
+the right of the merchant ship to carry weapons and to fight is
+not thereby contested. The conclusion drawn from this fact is
+reflected in the well-known formula: “He who resorts to weapons
+must expect to be answered by weapons.”
+<span class='pageno' title='316' id='Page_316'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During cross-examination the Prosecution referred to this interpretation
+of the London Protocol as fraudulent. It admits only
+the closest literal interpretation and considers the sinking of a
+merchant ship as admissible only if the latter has offered active
+resistance. It is not the first time that fundamental differences of
+opinion exist between contracting parties with respect to the interpretation
+of a treaty, and the extremely divergent interpretations
+of the meaning of the Potsdam Agreement of 2 August 1945 provide
+a recent example. Diversity of conception, therefore, does
+not permit the conclusion that the one or the other party acted
+fraudulently during the signing or the subsequent interpretation
+of a treaty. I will endeavor to show how unjustified this charge
+is particularly in regard to the German interpretation of the
+London Submarine Protocol.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There are two terms on which the German interpretation hinges,
+namely, that of “merchant vessel” and “active resistance.” If I now
+consider some legal questions, this will in no way represent a comprehensive
+exposition. I can only touch on the problems and due
+to lack of time must limit myself also when dealing with research
+on the subject. I shall primarily refer to American sources, because
+the interests of naval strategy of that nation were not as firmly
+established as those of the European nations and its research
+literature can thus claim greater objectivity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The text of the London Protocol of 1936 is based, of course, on
+a declaration which was signed at the London Naval Conference of
+1930. The committee of jurists appointed at that time expressed its
+opinion concerning the greatly disputed definition of a merchant
+vessel in the report of 3 April 1930:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The committee wishes to place on record that the expression
+‘merchant vessel’ where it is employed in the declaration is
+not to be understood as including a merchant vessel which is
+at the moment participating in hostilities in such a manner as
+to cause her to lose her right to the immunities of a merchant
+vessel.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This definition clarifies at least one thing, namely, that by no
+means every vessel flying a merchant flag may lay claim to being
+treated as a merchant vessel in the sense of the London Agreement.
+Beyond this, the explanation has few positive aspects because the
+question through what kind of participation in hostilities a vessel
+loses her right to the immunity of a merchant vessel is again subject
+to the interpretation of the contracting parties. The London Conference,
+as far as I can see, did not consider this ticklish question any
+further, and one is probably entitled to assume that this remarkable
+reserve is based on experiences which the same powers had accumulated
+in Washington 8 years before.
+<span class='pageno' title='317' id='Page_317'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Washington Conference of 1922 was held under the impression
+of the first World War; and therefore it is no wonder that
+Great Britain, the naval power which during the World War had
+suffered most from German submarine warfare, now tried to outlaw
+and abolish altogether by international law submarine warfare
+against merchant shipping. The resolution, named after the American
+chief delegate, Root, which in its first part substantially corresponded
+to the London text of 1930, served that aim. But in the
+second part the Root Resolution goes further and stipulates that
+any commander who, no matter whether he acted with or without
+higher orders, violated the rules established for the sinking of
+merchant vessels should be punished as a war criminal like a pirate.
+Finally it was recognized that under the conditions stipulated in
+the resolution submarine warfare against merchant shipping was
+impossible, and such warfare was therefore renounced altogether
+by the contracting powers. The Root Resolution designates these
+principles as an established part of international law. While it was
+accepted as such by the delegates, none of the five participating
+naval powers, U.S.A., Britain, France, Japan, and Italy ratified it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In connection with the Root Resolution, however, another question
+was discussed which is of the greatest importance for the interpretation
+of the London Protocol, namely, the definition of the term
+“merchantman.” Here the two conflicting views in the entire U-boat
+question became clearly evident. On the one side there stood Britain,
+on the other France<a id='r4'/><a href='#f4' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[4]</span></sup></a>, Italy, and Japan, while the United States
+took the position of a mediator. According to the minutes of the
+Washington Conference, the Italian delegate, Senator Schanzer,
+opened the offensive of the weaker naval powers by expressly
+emphasizing that a merchantman, when regularly armed, might be
+attacked by a submarine without preliminaries. In a later session
+Schanzer repeated his statement that the Italian delegation applied
+the term of “merchantman” in the resolution only to unarmed
+merchant vessels. He declared this to be in explicit accordance
+with the existing rules of international law.<a id='r5'/><a href='#f5' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[5]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The French delegate, M. Sarraut, at that time received instructions
+from his Foreign Minister, M. Briand, to second the reservations
+of the Italian delegate.<a id='r6'/><a href='#f6' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[6]</span></sup></a> He thereupon moved to have the
+Italian reservations included in the minutes of the session.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='318' id='Page_318'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Japanese delegate, Hanihara, supported this trend with the
+statement that he thought it was clear that merchant vessels engaged
+in giving military assistance to the enemy ceased in fact to be
+merchant vessels.<a id='r7'/><a href='#f7' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[7]</span></sup></a> It can therefore be seen that in 1922, three of
+the five powers represented expressed the opinion that armed
+merchant vessels were not to be regarded as merchant vessels in
+the sense of the Agreement.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Since the whole resolution threatened to collapse because of this
+difference of opinion, a way out was found which is typical of conferences
+of this kind. Root closed the debate with the statement
+that in his opinion the resolution held good for all merchant ships
+as long as the ship remained a merchant vessel.<a id='r8'/><a href='#f8' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[8]</span></sup></a> With this compromise
+a formula was created which, while representing a momentary
+political success, would not however carry any weight in
+the case of war, for it was left to every participating power to decide
+whether or not it would grant the armed merchant vessels the protection
+of the resolution in case of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have described these events of the year 1922 a little more in
+detail because the powers which took part in them were the same
+as those which participated in the London Naval Conference of
+1930. The London Conference was the continuation of the Washington
+Conference, and the subjects that had been discussed and
+included in the minutes of the first conference were of great importance
+for the second conference. Experts too—and by no means
+only German but above all American and French experts—based
+their examinations on the close connection of both conferences, and
+it was precisely for that reason that they declared the result achieved
+in the question of submarines to be ambiguous and unsatisfactory.
+Here I merely wish to point to Wilson’s summarizing report on the
+London Naval Treaty.<a id='r9'/><a href='#f9' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[9]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This report, besides the ambiguity of the concept “merchant
+vessel,” also stresses the uncertainty connected with the words
+“active resistance”; and it is with these very words that an exception
+from the protection of the merchantman is connected, an exception
+which likewise is not contained in the actual text of the London
+Agreement but which nevertheless is generally recognized. I am
+referring to merchantmen in an enemy convoy. If the London
+Agreement were interpreted literally, it would be understood that
+even merchantmen in an enemy convoy must not be attacked without
+warning but that an attacking warship would have to put the
+escort vessels out of action first and then stop and search the
+<span class='pageno' title='319' id='Page_319'></span>
+merchantmen. However, this suggestion, which is impossible from
+a military point of view, evidently is not made even by the Prosecution.
+In the report of the British Foreign Office, which has been
+mentioned several times, it says:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Ships sailing in enemy convoys are usually deemed to be
+guilty of forcible resistance and therefore liable to be sunk
+forthwith.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Here even the Prosecution accepts an interpretation of the words
+“active resistance,” an interpretation which results in no way from
+the treaty itself but is simply a consequence of military necessity
+and thus dictated by common sense.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And this very same common sense demands also that the armed
+merchantman be held just as guilty of forcible resistance as the
+convoyed ship. Let us take an extreme instance in order to make
+the matter quite clear. An unarmed merchant ship of 20,000 tons
+and a speed of 20 knots, which is convoyed by a trawler with, let
+us say, 2 guns and a speed of 15 knots, may be sunk without warning,
+because it has placed itself under the protection of the trawler
+and thereby made itself guilty of active resistance. If, however, this
+same merchant ship does not have the protection of the trawler
+and instead the 2 guns, or even 4 or 6 of them, are placed on its
+decks, thus enabling it to use its full speed, should it in this case
+not be deemed just as guilty of offering active resistance as before?
+Such a deduction really seems to me against all common sense. In
+the opinion of the Prosecution the submarine would first have to
+give the merchant ship, which is far superior to it in fighting power,
+the order to stop and then wait until the merchant ship fires its
+first broadside at the submarine. Only then would it have the right
+to use its own weapons. Since, however, a single artillery hit is
+nearly always fatal to a submarine but as a rule does very little
+harm to a merchant ship, the result would be the almost certain
+destruction of the submarine.</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“When you see a rattlesnake rearing its head, you do not
+wait until it jumps at you but you destroy it before it gets
+the chance.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These are Roosevelt’s words, in which he justified his order to
+the United States naval forces to attack German submarines. This
+reason seemed sufficient to him to order the immediate use of arms
+even without the existence of a state of war. It is a unique instance
+in the history of warfare, however, to grant one of two armed
+opponents the right to fire the first shot and to make the other
+wait to be hit first. Such an interpretation is contradictory to all
+military reason. It is no wonder, therefore, if in view of such
+divergent opinions, the experts on international law, even after
+<span class='pageno' title='320' id='Page_320'></span>
+the London Treaty and the signing of the London Protocol of
+1936, consider the treatment of armed merchant vessels in naval
+warfare to be an unsolved question. Here too I should like to
+refer to only one source of research, which enjoys especially high
+authority. It is the draft of an agreement on the rights and duties
+of neutrals in naval warfare, an agreement which leading American
+professors of international law, such as Jessup, Borchard, and
+Charles Warren, published in the <span class='it'>American Journal of International
+Law</span> of July 1939 and which includes arguments which
+furnish an excellent idea of the latest trend of opinion. Article 54
+of this draft corresponds word for word to the text of the London
+Agreement of 1936, with one notable exception: The term “merchant
+vessel” is replaced by “unarmed vessel.” The next article then
+continues:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In their action with regard to enemy armed merchant
+vessels, belligerent warships, whether surface or submarine,
+and belligerent military aircraft are governed by the rules
+applicable to their action with regard to enemy warships.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This opinion is first of all explained by historical development.
+During the time when it was customary to arm merchant vessels,
+that is, until the end of the last century, there was no question
+of any protection for the merchant vessel against immediate attack
+by an enemy warship. With the introduction of armor plating
+the warship became so superior to the armed merchant vessel that
+any resistance on the part of the latter was rendered futile, and
+the arming of merchant ships therefore gradually ceased. Only
+this defenselessness against warships, and this alone, granted
+merchant vessels the privilege of not being attacked without warning
+by the enemy: “As merchantmen lost effective fighting power
+they acquired a legal immunity from attack without warning.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This immunity was never conceded to the merchant vessel as
+such but only to the defenseless and harmless merchant vessel. In
+regard to this the American expert on international law, Hyde,<a id='r10'/><a href='#f10' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[10]</span></sup></a>
+stated in 1922, that is, after the Washington Conference and the
+afore-mentioned Root Resolution on U-boat warfare:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Maritime states have never acquiesced in a principle that a
+merchant vessel so armed as to be capable of destroying a
+vessel of war of any kind should enjoy immunity from attack
+at sight, at least when encountering an enemy cruiser of
+inferior defensive strength.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Legal as well as practical considerations, therefore, led the
+above-mentioned American authorities, after the signing of the
+London Agreement and shortly before the outbreak of this war,
+<span class='pageno' title='321' id='Page_321'></span>
+to form the opinion that armed merchant ships do not enjoy protection
+from attacks without warning.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Here the old discrimination between defensive and offensive
+armaments is also rejected as inapplicable. It is a well-known fact
+that the American Secretary of State, Lansing, in his note to the
+Allies on 18 January 1916, took the point of view that any kind
+of armament aboard a merchant vessel will make its fighting
+power superior to that of a submarine and that such armament is
+therefore of an offensive nature.<a id='r11'/><a href='#f11' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[11]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the later course of the first World War, the United States
+changed its opinion and declared that mounting guns on the stern
+could be taken as proof of the defensive character of the armaments.
+This standpoint was adopted in some international agreements
+and drafts, as well as by British jurists in particular. It
+does not do justice to the practice of naval warfare.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>First of all, in this war the guns on many vessels were mounted
+from the very start in the bows, for instance, regularly on fishing
+trawlers. Furthermore, the antiaircraft weapons of the merchant
+vessel, which were especially dangerous for the submarine, were
+frequently placed on the bridge, and could therefore be used in
+all directions. Besides, there can be no differentiation between
+defensive and offensive armaments as to the way the weapons are
+placed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this respect orders alone and the way in which these
+weapons are meant to be employed are the decisive factors. Soon
+after the war had started the orders of the British Admiralty had
+already fallen into German hands. A decision of the Tribunal has
+made it possible for me to submit them. They are contained partly
+in the <span class='it'>Confidential Fleet Orders</span>, chiefly, however, in the <span class='it'>Defense
+of Merchant Shipping Handbook</span>. They were issued in 1938. They
+do not therefore deal with countermeasures against illicit German
+actions but, on the contrary, were already issued at a time when
+warfare in accordance with the London Agreement was the only
+form of submarine warfare taken into consideration in Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The instructions further show that all British merchant vessels
+acted, from the first day of the war, according to orders received
+from the British Admiralty. These involved the following points
+with respect to submarine warfare:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) Reporting of submarines by radio telegraphy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) The use of naval artillery.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) The use of depth charges.
+<span class='pageno' title='322' id='Page_322'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These instructions were supplemented on 1 October 1939, when
+a call was transmitted over the radio to ram all German submarines.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It might seem unnecessary after this survey to make any mention
+at all of the defensive and offensive character of such orders.
+The orders on the use of artillery by merchant vessels, however,
+do make such differentiation; that is, guns are to be used for
+defense only, as long as the enemy on his part adheres to the
+regulations of international law, and for the offensive only when
+he no longer does. The orders covering the practical execution
+of these directives reveal, however, that there is no difference at
+all between defensive and offensive use. Admiral Dönitz explained
+this in detail when he was heard in Court, and I do not want to
+repeat it. Actually, from the very beginning of the war merchant
+vessels were under orders to fire on every occasion on every submarine
+which came within range of their guns. And that is what
+the captains of British merchant vessels did. The reason for this
+offensive action can certainly not be found in the conduct of
+German submarines during the first weeks of the war, for even
+the Foreign Office report admits that this conduct was correct. On
+the other hand, British propaganda may have had great influence,
+since in connection with the unintentional sinking of the Athenia
+on 3 September 1939, it disseminated through Reuters on 9 September
+the assertion that unrestricted submarine warfare was in
+progress and upheld this assertion notwithstanding the fact that
+the conduct of German submarines during the first weeks of the
+war refuted this accusation. Together with the announcement of
+the British Admiralty’s ramming orders of 1 October 1939, the
+merchant navy was again officially informed that the German
+U-boats had ceased to respect the rules of naval warfare and that
+merchant vessels were to adjust their conduct accordingly. It seems
+to me of no importance that a corresponding written supplement
+to Admiralty orders was not issued until the spring of 1940, because
+nowadays a naval war is not directed by letters but by wireless.
+But according to the latter, the British captains, as from 9 September
+or 1 October 1939 at the latest, were directed to use their
+guns offensively against the German U-boats in accordance with
+the Admiralty’s instructions as contained in its handbook. The
+German order to attack armed enemy merchant vessels without
+warning was issued only on 4 October. Thus it was justified in
+any case, even if one did acknowledge a difference in treatment
+for vessels with defensive and offensive armament.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The guns on the merchant vessels and the orders concerning
+their use were, however, only a part of a comprehensive system
+<span class='pageno' title='323' id='Page_323'></span>
+of the use of merchant vessels for military purposes. Since the
+end of September 1939 the fastest vessels, that is, those ships that
+were the least endangered by submarines but, on the other hand,
+were especially suited for chasing U-boats, received depth charge
+chutes, that is, armaments which call for location of a submerged
+submarine and thus may be judged as typical weapons for the
+offensive.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>However, another factor of greater general importance, and also
+of greater danger to the submarines, was the order to report every
+enemy ship on sight, giving its type and location. This report was
+destined, so said the order, to facilitate taking advantage of an
+opportunity, which might never recur, to destroy the enemy by
+naval or air forces. This is an unequivocal utilization of all
+merchant vessels for military intelligence service with intent
+directly to injure the enemy. If one considers the fact that according
+to the hospital ship agreement even the immunity of hospital
+ships ceases, if they relay military information of this type, then
+one need have no doubts about the consequences of such behavior
+on the part of a commercial vessel. Any craft putting out to sea
+with the order and intention of using every opportunity that
+occurs to send military reports about the enemy to its own naval
+and air forces is taking part in hostilities during the entire course
+of its voyage and, according to the afore-mentioned report of 1930
+of the committee of jurists, has no right to be considered a
+merchant vessel. Any different conception would not do justice
+to the immediate danger which a wireless report involves for the
+vessel reported and which subjects it, often within a few minutes,
+to attack by enemy aircraft.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All of the Admiralty’s directives, taken together, show that
+British merchant vessels, from the very first day of the war, closely
+co-operated with the British Navy in combating the enemy’s naval
+forces. They were part of the military communications network
+of the British naval and air forces and their armament of guns
+and depth charges, the practical training in manipulation of the
+weapons, and the orders relative to their use, were actions taken
+by the British Navy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>We consider it out of the question that a merchant fleet in
+this manner destined and utilized for combat should count among
+the vessels entitled to the protection of the London Protocol against
+sinking without warning. On the basis of this conception and in
+connection with the arming of all enemy merchant vessels, which
+was rapidly being completed, an order was issued on 17 October
+1939 to attack all enemy merchant ships without warning.
+<span class='pageno' title='324' id='Page_324'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kranzbühler, we may as well break
+off now.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: My Lord, I am sorry to detain
+the Tribunal, but I promised to tell the Tribunal about the two
+affidavits put forward for the Defendant Seyss-Inquart. We have
+no objection to them. I promised to tell Your Lordship today. I
+am sorry to have to detain you.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 16 July 1946 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;'>NOTES</p>
+
+<hr class='footnotemark'/>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f2'><a href='#r2'>[2]</a></span>
+
+<span class='gesp'>De jure pacis ac belli</span>, Book II, Chapter XXIV, Paragraph 10.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f3'><a href='#r3'>[3]</a></span>
+
+Lord Edward Grey: “Twenty-five Years of Politics 1892-1916.” (Retranslated
+into English from the German edition published by Bruckmann, Munich 1926).
+“International Law has always been very flexible.... A belligerent possessing
+an over-powerful navy has at all times been in search of an interpretation of
+International Law which would justify a maximum of intervention in respect of
+merchandise liable to reach the enemy. This attitude was naturally adopted by
+Great Britain and the Allies owing to their supremacy at sea. The British position
+on this subject had not always been the same. When we figured among the neutrals,
+we naturally contested the right to maximum intervention claimed by the
+belligerents.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f4'><a href='#r4'>[4]</a></span>
+
+Yamato Ichihalie, <span class='gesp'>The Washington Conference and After</span>, Stanford
+University Press, Cal., 1928, Page 80, “The chief reason for the British plea was
+the apprehension of the craft in the hands of the French navy.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f5'><a href='#r5'>[5]</a></span>
+
+<span class='gesp'>Conference on the Limitation of Armaments</span>, Washington,
+November 12, 1921-February 6, 1922, Washington, Government Printing Office, 1922,
+Pages 606, 688, 692.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f6'><a href='#r6'>[6]</a></span>
+
+<span class='gesp'>French Yellow Book</span>, La Conférence de Washington, Page 93.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f7'><a href='#r7'>[7]</a></span>
+
+Protocol Pages 693, 702.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f8'><a href='#r8'>[8]</a></span>
+
+Protocol Page 704.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f9'><a href='#r9'>[9]</a></span>
+
+<span class='gesp'>American Journal of International Law</span>, 1931, Page 307.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f10'><a href='#r10'>[10]</a></span>
+
+Hyde, <span class='gesp'>International Law</span>, 1922, Vol. II, Page 469.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f11'><a href='#r11'>[11]</a></span>
+
+<span class='gesp'>U.S. Foreign Relations</span>, 1916, Supplement Page 147.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' title='325' id='Page_325'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>ONE HUNDRED<br/> AND SEVENTY-NINTH DAY</span><br/> Tuesday, 16 July 1946</h1></div>
+
+<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Mr. President, Gentlemen
+of the Tribunal: I would like to sum up my statements of yesterday
+and make the following remarks regarding the conduct of German
+U-boats against enemy merchant vessels.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I believe that the German construction of the London Agreement
+of 1936, in the light of the position taken by some of the
+powers involved, as generally known to all experts, as well as
+according to the opinion of numerous and competent jurists of all
+countries, was in no way fraudulent. If I were to express myself
+with all caution, I would say that it is, legally, at least, perfectly
+tenable, and thus not the slightest charge can be raised against the
+German Naval Command for issuing its orders on a sensible and
+perfectly fair basis. We have shown that these orders were given
+only in consequence of the conditions created by publication of the
+British measures, which, according to the German concept of law,
+justified the orders issued.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Before I leave this subject I should like to recall to the mind of
+the Tribunal the special protection which the German orders
+provided for passenger vessels. These passenger vessels were
+excluded for a long time from all measures involving sinking of
+ships, even when they sailed in an enemy convoy and therefore
+could have been sunk immediately, according to the British conception.
+These measures indicate very clearly that the accusation
+of disregard and brutality is unjustified. The passenger vessels were
+only included in the orders concerning other vessels when in the
+spring of 1940 there was no longer any harmless passenger traffic
+at all, and when these ships, because of their great speed and heavy
+armament, proved to be particularly dangerous enemies of the
+submarines. If therefore Mr. Roger Allen’s report cites as an
+especially striking example of German submarine cruelty the
+sinking of the <span class='it'>City of Benares</span> in the autumn of 1940, then this
+example is not very well chosen because the <span class='it'>City of Benares</span> was
+armed and went under convoy.
+<span class='pageno' title='326' id='Page_326'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall turn now to the treatment of neutrals in the conduct of
+German submarine warfare, and I can at once point again in this
+connection to the example which Mr. Roger Allen cites especially
+for the sinking of a neutral vessel contrary to international law.
+It concerns the torpedoing of the Danish steamer <span class='it'>Vendia</span>, which
+occurred at the end of September 1939. The Tribunal will recall
+that this ship was stopped in a regular way and was torpedoed and
+sunk only when it prepared to ram the German submarine. This
+occurrence led the German Government to protest to the Danish
+Government on account of the hostile conduct shown by a neutral
+boat.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This one example is just to show how different things look if
+not only the result in the form of the sinking of a neutral ship is
+known, but also the causes which led to this result. Until the last
+day of the war the fundamental order to the German submarines
+was not to attack merchantmen recognized as neutral. There were
+some accurately defined exceptions to this order, about which the
+neutral powers had been notified. They affected in the first place
+ships which conducted themselves in a suspicious or hostile manner,
+and secondly ships in announced operational areas.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To the first group belonged, above all, those vessels which sailed
+blacked-out in the war area. On 26 September 1939 the Commander
+of U-boats asked the High Command of the Navy for permission to
+attack without warning vessels proceeding in the Channel without
+lights. The reason was clear. At night the enemy’s troop and
+matériel shipments were taking place, by which the second wave
+of the British expeditionary army was ferried across to France.
+At that time the order was still in effect that French ships were not
+to be attacked at all. But since French ships could not be distinguished
+from English vessels at night, submarine warfare in the
+Channel would have had to be discontinued completely after dark
+in compliance with this order. The Tribunal heard from a witness
+that in this way a 20,000-ton troop transport passed unmolested in
+front of the torpedo tubes of a German submarine. Such an occurrence
+in war is grotesque and therefore of course the Naval Operations
+Staff approved the request of the Commander of U-boats.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has now made much ado about a note written
+on this occasion by an assistant at the Naval Operations Staff,
+Kapitänleutnant Fresdorf. The Chief of Section, Admiral Wagner,
+already disapproved of the opinions expressed in this note; therefore
+they did not result in corresponding orders. The order to
+attack blacked-out ships was issued by radio without any further
+addition on the part of the Naval Operations Staff and on 4 October
+it was extended to further regions along the British coast, and
+again without any addition in the sense of the above-mentioned note.
+<span class='pageno' title='327' id='Page_327'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Examining the question of blacked-out vessels from the legal
+standpoint, Vanselow, the well-known expert on the law governing
+naval warfare, makes the following remark:<a id='r12'/><a href='#f12' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[12]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In war a blacked-out vessel must in case of doubt be considered
+as an enemy warship. A neutral as well as an enemy
+merchant vessel navigating without light voluntarily renounces
+during the hours of darkness all claim to immunity
+from attack without being stopped.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I furthermore refer to Churchill’s declaration, made in the House
+of Commons on 8 May 1940, concerning the action of British submarines
+in the Jutland area. Since the beginning of April they had
+had orders to attack all German vessels without warning during the
+daytime, and all vessels, and thus all neutrals, as well, at night.
+This amounts to recognition of the legal standpoint as presented.
+It even goes beyond the German order, insofar as neutral merchant
+vessels navigating with all lights on were sunk without warning in
+these waters. In view of the clear legal aspect it would hardly have
+been necessary to give an express warning to neutral shipping
+against suspicious or hostile conduct. Nevertheless, the Naval Operations
+Staff saw to it that this was done.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 28 September 1939 the first German note was sent to the
+neutral governments with the request that they warn their
+merchant ships against any suspicious conduct, such as changes in
+course and the use of wireless upon sighting German naval forces,
+blacking out, noncompliance with the request to stop, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>.
+These warnings were subsequently repeated several times, and the
+neutral governments passed them on to their captains. All this has
+been proved by documents which have been submitted. If therefore,
+as a result of suspicious or hostile conduct, neutral ships were
+treated like enemy ships, they have only themselves to blame for it.
+The German submarines were not allowed to attack any one who
+as a neutral maintained a correct attitude during the war, and there
+are hundreds of examples to prove that such attacks never did occur.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now I wish to deal with the second danger which threatened
+neutral shipping: The zones of operations. The actual development,
+briefly summed up, was as follows:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 24 November 1939 the Reich Government sent a note to all
+seafaring neutrals in which it pointed out the use of enemy
+merchant ships for aggressive purposes, as well as the fact that
+the Government of the United States had barred to its own shipping
+a carefully defined naval zone around the central European coast,
+<span class='pageno' title='328' id='Page_328'></span>
+the so-called U.S.A. combat zone. As the note states, these two
+facts give the Reich Government cause—I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“... to warn anew and more strongly that in view of the fact
+that the actions are carried on with all the technical means of
+modern warfare, and in view of the fact that these actions
+are increasing in the waters around the British Isles and near
+the French coast, these waters can no longer be considered
+safe for neutral shipping.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The note then recommends as shipping lanes between neutral
+powers certain sea routes which are not endangered by German
+naval warfare and, furthermore, recommends legislative measures
+according to the example set by the United States. In concluding,
+the Reich Government rejects responsibility for any consequences
+which might follow if warning and recommendation should not be
+complied with. This note constituted the announcement of an
+operational area equivalent in size to the U.S.A. combat zone, with
+the specified limitation that only in those sea zones which were
+actually endangered by actions against the enemy consideration
+could no longer be given to neutral shipping.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Naval Operations Staff did indeed observe this limitation.
+The neutral powers had more than 6 weeks in which to take the
+measures recommended by the German Government for the safety
+of their own shipping and to direct their shipping along the routes
+announced. Starting in January the German command then opened
+up to the German naval forces, within the operational area announced,
+certain accurately defined zones around the British coast,
+in which an attack without warning against all ships sailing there
+was admissible. The naval chart on which these zones had been
+marked was submitted to the Tribunal. The chart shows that these
+zones, and only these, were gradually set up where, as a result of
+mutually increasing attacks and defensive actions at sea and in the
+air, engagements continually occurred, so that any ship entering this
+area was operating in the direct presence of the naval forces of
+both powers. The last of these zones was designated in May 1940.
+These zones were not, and need not have been, announced because
+they were all within the area of operations as proclaimed on 24 November
+1939. The distance of these zones from the enemy coast was
+on the average 60 sea miles. Outside their boundaries the declaration
+concerning the area of operations of 24 November was not
+observed, that is to say, neutral ships could be stopped and sunk
+only in accordance with the Prize Ordinance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This situation changed when, after the collapse of France in the
+summer of 1940, the British Isles became the center of war operations.
+On 17 August 1940 the Reich Government sent to the neutral
+governments a declaration in which the entire area of the U.S.A.
+<span class='pageno' title='329' id='Page_329'></span>
+combat zone around England without any limitation was designated
+as an operational area.</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Every ship”—so the note reads—“which sails in this area
+exposes itself to destruction not only by mines but also by
+other combat means. Therefore the German Government once
+more urgently warns against entering this endangered area.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From this time on the area was fully utilized and the immediate
+use of arms against craft encountered in it was permitted to all
+naval and air forces, except where special exceptions had been
+ordered. The entire development described was openly dealt with
+in the German press, and Grossadmiral Raeder granted interviews
+to the foreign press on this subject, which clearly showed the German
+viewpoint. If therefore in the sea zones mentioned neutral
+ships and crews sustained losses, at least they cannot complain
+about not having been warned explicitly and urgently beforehand.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This statement in itself has not much meaning in the question of
+whether areas of operation as such constitute an admissible measure.
+Here, too, the Prosecution will take the position that in the London
+Agreement of 1936 no exceptions of any kind were made for areas
+of operation and that therefore such exceptions do not exist.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is a well-known fact that operational areas were originally
+proclaimed in the first World War. The first declaration of this kind
+came from the British Government on 2 November 1914, and designated
+the entire area of the North Sea as a military area. This
+declaration was intended as a reprisal against alleged German
+violations of international law. Since this justification naturally
+was not recognized, the Imperial Government replied on 4 February
+1915 by designating the waters around England as a military area.
+On both sides certain extensions were made subsequently. I do not
+wish to go into the individual formulations of these declarations
+and into the judicial legal deductions which were made from their
+wording for or against the admissibility of these declarations.
+Whether these areas are designated as military area, barred zone,
+operational area, or danger zone, the point always remained that
+the naval forces in the area determined had permission to destroy
+any ship encountered there. After the World War the general conviction
+of naval officers and experts on international law alike was
+that the operational area would be maintained as a means of naval
+warfare. A development, typical for the rules of naval warfare, was
+confirmed here, namely, that the modern technique of war forcibly
+leads to the use of war methods which at first are introduced in the
+guise of reprisals, but which gradually come to be employed without
+such a justification and recognized as legitimate.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The technical reasons for such a development are obvious: The
+improvement of mines made it possible to render large sea areas
+<span class='pageno' title='330' id='Page_330'></span>
+dangerous. But if it was admissible to destroy by mines every ship
+sailing, despite warning, in a designated sea area, one could see no
+reason why other means of naval warfare should not be used in
+this area in the same way. Besides, the traditional institution of the
+blockade directly off enemy ports and coasts by mines, submarines,
+and aircraft was made practically impossible, so that the sea powers
+had to look for new ways to bar the approach to enemy coasts.
+Consequently it was these necessities which were the compelling
+factors in bringing about the recognition of the operational area.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is true that there was by no means a uniform interpretation
+concerning the particular prerequisites under which the declaration
+of such areas would be considered admissible, just as there was none
+with regard to the designation which the belligerent power must
+choose. The conferences of 1922 and 1930 did not change anything
+either in that respect, as can be seen, for instance, from the efforts
+made after 1930, especially by American politicians and experts in
+international law, for a solution of this question.<a id='r13'/><a href='#f13' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[13]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Unfortunately, there is no time at my disposal to discuss these
+questions in detail and therefore it must suffice for the purposes of
+the defense to state that during the conferences in Washington in
+1922 and in London in 1930 the operational area was an arrangement
+or system known to all powers concerned, which operated in
+a way determined by both sides in the first World War; that is, that
+all ships encountered in it would be subject to immediate destruction.
+If the operational area were to have been abolished in the
+afore-mentioned conferences, especially in the treaty of 1930, an
+accord should have been reached on this question, if not in the text
+of the agreement then at least in the negotiations. The minutes
+show nothing of the kind. The relationship between operational
+area and the London Agreement remained unsettled.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The French Admiral Castex<a id='r14'/><a href='#f14' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[14]</span></sup></a> has the same viewpoint; Admiral
+Bauer, Commander of Submarines in the first World War, voiced
+his disapproval in 1931 of the application of the London rules in the
+operational area, and this opinion was not unknown to the British
+Navy.<a id='r15'/><a href='#f15' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[15]</span></sup></a> In a thorough study published by Professor Ernst
+Schmitz<a id='r16'/><a href='#f16' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[16]</span></sup></a> in 1938 a merchant vessel which enters an operational
+<span class='pageno' title='331' id='Page_331'></span>
+area despite general prohibition is deemed to be guilty of “persistent
+refusal to stop.” The powers participating in the conferences in
+Washington and London carefully refrained, as also in other cases,
+from tackling controversial questions on which no accord could be
+reached. Therefore every power remained at liberty to champion
+in practice such an opinion as corresponded with its own interests.
+There was no doubt left in the minds of the participants as to this
+fact, and I have as a witness for this no less a person than the
+French Minister for Foreign Affairs at that time, M. Briand. In his
+instruction of 30 December 1921 to Sarraut, the French chief delegate
+in Washington, he announces his basic readiness to conclude
+an agreement on submarine warfare. However, he then points out
+a series of questions described as essential parts of such an agreement,
+among them the arming of merchant ships and the definition
+of combat zones. The instruction goes on:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is indispensable to examine these questions and to solve
+them by a joint agreement, for surface vessels as well as for
+submarines and aircraft, in order not to establish ineffective
+and deceptive stipulations.”<a id='r17'/><a href='#f17' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[17]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Particularly with respect to the question concerning the area
+of operations, Briand characterizes the submarine rules as being
+“ineffective and deceptive.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>After this testimony nobody would designate the German conception
+as fraudulent, according to which ships in declared areas
+of operation forfeit the protection under the London Agreement.
+Even Mr. Roger Allen’s report concedes this.<a id='r18'/><a href='#f18' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[18]</span></sup></a> Therefore the attacks
+of the Prosecution seem to be directed, as I understand from the
+cross-examination, not so much against the existence of such zones as
+against their extent, and we have repeatedly heard the figure of
+750,000 square sea miles. Incidentally, it must be noted that this
+figure includes the territorial area of Great Britain, Ireland, and
+western France; the maritime area only amounts to 600,000 square
+miles. I quite agree, however, that through operational areas of
+such a size the interests of the neutrals were badly prejudiced.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is all the more remarkable that the afore-mentioned American
+draft of the convention of 1939, which concerns the rights and
+duties of neutrals, provides for a considerable expansion of the
+operational area. Such an area, which is termed “blockade zone”
+in the draft, was to include the waters up to a distance of 50 sea
+miles from the blockaded coast.
+<span class='pageno' title='332' id='Page_332'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kranzbühler, the Tribunal would like to
+know what that American draft of 1939 is, to which you refer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: It is the draft set up by
+the American Professors Jessup Borchard and Charles Warren,
+dealing with the rights and duties of neutrals in sea warfare. It
+was published in the <span class='it'>American Journal of International Law</span> of
+July 1939.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Jessup and Warren, you say?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Jessup Borchard and
+Charles Warren.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: This would correspond
+roughly to the area of waters in which attacks without warning
+were authorized until 17 August 1940; it covers approximately
+200,000 square sea miles.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>However, it seems to me almost impossible to approach from a
+juridical angle such an eminently practical question as that of the
+extent of an operational area. As long as this question is not
+settled by an agreement the actual determination will always be a
+compromise between what is desirable from a military point of
+view and what is politically possible. It seems to me that the law
+is only violated when a belligerent misuses his power against
+neutrals. The question as to whether such misuse takes place should
+be made dependent both upon the attitude of the enemy toward
+the neutrals and upon the measures taken by the neutrals themselves.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: One minute. Dr. Kranzbühler, does not the
+right to declare a certain zone as an operational zone depend upon
+the power to enforce it?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I do not quite follow
+the point of your question.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Well, your contention is, apparently, that
+any state at war has a right to declare such an operational zone
+as it thinks right and in accordance with its interests, and what I
+was asking you was whether the right to declare an operational
+zone, if there is such a right, does not depend upon the ability or
+power of the state declaring the zone to enforce that zone, to
+prevent any ships coming into it without being either captured
+or shot.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I do not believe, Mr. President,
+that there exists agreement of expert opinion regarding that
+question. In contrast to the blockade zone in a classical sense
+where full effect is necessary, the operational zone only provides
+<span class='pageno' title='333' id='Page_333'></span>
+for practical endangering through continuous combat actions. This
+practical threat was present in the German operational zone in my
+opinion, and I refer in that connection to the proclamation of President
+Roosevelt regarding the U.S.A. combat zone, where the
+entering of that zone was prohibited, because as a result of combat
+actions shipping must of necessity be continuously endangered.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The proclamation of the President of the
+United States was directed, was it not, solely to United States
+vessels?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I am referring to it
+only to establish proof of the German interpretation that this area
+was endangered, and practical danger seems to be the only legal
+and necessary prerequisite for declaring an operational zone.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would you say that it was a valid proclamation
+if Germany had declared the whole of the Atlantic to be an
+operational zone?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Mr. President, I would
+say that at the beginning of the war that would not have been
+possible, for the German forces at that time, without doubt, did
+not constitute an effective danger to the entire Atlantic sea traffic.
+I am of the opinion, however, that with the increase in the number
+of U-boats on the one hand, and with the increase of defense by
+hostile aircraft on the other, the danger zone of course expanded,
+and therefore the development of this war quite logically led to
+the point where operational zones were gradually extended and
+enlarged.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Do you mean, then, that you are basing the
+power of the state to declare a certain zone as an operational zone
+not upon the power of the state to enforce its orders in that zone,
+but upon the possibility of danger in that zone?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Yes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: You say it depends upon the possibility of
+danger in the zone?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I would not say the
+possibility of danger, Mr. President, but the probability of danger,
+and the impossibility for the belligerent to protect neutral shipping
+against this danger.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: May I ask you what other legal basis there
+is for the theory you are putting forward, other than the adoption
+of the blockade?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: I am referring as a legal
+basis especially to the practice of the first World War, and the
+statements made by experts after the first World War, and also to
+<span class='pageno' title='334' id='Page_334'></span>
+the generally recognized rules about mined areas. The mined areas
+actually in this war proved to be operational zones where every
+means of sea warfare was used to sink without warning. I shall
+later refer to this topic once more.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: During the presentation
+of documents, the Tribunal has eliminated all those which I intended
+to utilize in order to prove that British naval warfare also
+paid no attention to the interests of neutrals when they were in
+contradiction with their own interests. If it is the Tribunal’s wish,
+I will not go into the details of the British measures, and in
+summing up I will mention them only insofar as they are indispensable
+for the legal argumentation. The following points are
+essential:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) The British regulations of 3 September 1939 concerning contraband
+goods, which practically precluded neutral mercantile traffic
+with Germany through the introduction of the so-called “hunger
+blockade.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) The decree concerning control ports for contraband goods,
+which compelled neutral ships to make great detours right through
+the war zone, and to which must be imputed without doubt a series
+of losses of neutral ships and crews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) The introduction of an export blockade against Germany on
+27 November 1939, by means of which the importation of German
+goods was cut off for neutrals.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(4) The introduction of the navicert system and the black lists,
+which put the whole of neutral trade under British control and
+which made ships refusing to accept this system liable to be seized
+and confiscated.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I do not have to examine the question here whether these
+British measures toward neutrals were admissible or not from the
+point of view of international law. In any case the neutrals themselves
+considered many of them inadmissible, and there was hardly
+a single one which did not bring forth more or less vehement
+protests, for instance from Spain, the Netherlands, Soviet Russia,
+and the United States. From the beginning, the British Government
+for its part had forestalled any legal examination of the
+measures by renouncing the optional clause of the Permanent
+International Tribunal in The Hague, through a note of 7 September
+1939. This step was expressly vindicated by the necessity for providing
+the British Navy with full freedom of action.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the British side the fact was emphasized in the first World
+War and ever since that although British measures did prejudice
+the interests and possibly also the rights of the neutrals, they did
+not imperil either the ships or the crews and were therefore to be
+<span class='pageno' title='335' id='Page_335'></span>
+considered morally superior to the inhuman German measures.
+Actually, as mentioned before, the obligation to enter control ports
+was dangerous for neutral ships and crews and for this very
+reason the neutral countries protested against it. But apart from
+this, it seems to me that the actual divergence between the British
+and German measures for blockading the adversary is not founded
+upon moral differences, but rather upon difference in sea power. In
+the waters where the British Navy did not exercise naval supremacy,
+namely, off the coasts we occupied, and in the Baltic Sea, it
+used the same methods of naval warfare as we did.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In any case the official German opinion was that the afore-mentioned
+British control measures against neutrals were inadmissible,
+and the Reich Government reproached the neutral powers
+with the fact that, although protesting, they in point of fact
+submitted to the British measures. This is clearly stated in the
+proclamation issued on the occasion of the declaration of the
+blockade on 17 August 1940. Consequently, the following facts
+confronted, the German Naval Command:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) A legal trade between the neutrals and the British Isles no
+longer existed. On the grounds of the German answers to the
+British stipulations concerning contraband goods and the British
+export blockade, any trade to and from England was contraband
+trade and therefore illegal from the point of view of international
+law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) The neutrals in practice submitted to all British measures,
+even when these measures were contrary to their own interests and
+their own conception of legality.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) Thus, the neutrals directly supported British warfare, for
+by submitting to the British control system in their own country
+they permitted the British Navy to economize considerably on
+fighting forces which, according to the hitherto existing international
+law, should have exercised trade control at sea and which
+were now available for other war tasks.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Therefore the German Government, in determining its operational
+area with a view to preventing illegal traffic from reaching
+England, saw no reason for giving preference to the neutrals over
+its own military requirements, all the less so since neutral shipping,
+which despite all warnings continued to head for England,
+demanded a great deal of money for this increased risk and therefore
+despite all risks still considered trade with England a profitable
+business.<a id='r19'/><a href='#f19' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[19]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='336' id='Page_336'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In addition to that, the most important neutrals themselves took
+measures which can be regarded as a completely novel interpretation
+of the existing laws of naval warfare. All the American countries
+jointly proclaimed the Pan-American safety zone, an area
+along the American coast within a distance of approximately 300
+sea miles. In these waters, comprising altogether several million
+square miles, they required belligerents to forego the exercise of
+these rights which, according to hitherto existing international law,
+the naval forces of the belligerents were entitled to apply to
+neutrals. On the other hand, as I have already mentioned, the
+President of the United States prohibited, on 4 November 1939,
+U.S. citizens and ships from entering the waters extending over
+approximately one million square miles along the European coast.
+Thus the development of the laws of naval warfare, under the influence
+of the neutrals, necessarily led to the recognition of large
+areas reserved either for the purpose of safety or for that of combat.
+In this connection the American President explicitly stated in his
+proclamation that the maritime zone he had closed was “endangered
+by combat action” as a result of technical developments. The proclamation
+thus only took into account the development of modern
+weapons; the long-range coastal artillery which, for example, could
+easily fire across the English Channel; the invention of locating
+devices which permitted coastal supervision of maritime traffic over
+large areas; and particularly the increased speed and range of
+aircraft.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From this development the German Naval Command drew the
+same conclusion as the above-mentioned neutrals, namely, that
+defensive and offensive action would necessarily have to cover large
+maritime areas in this war. It was therefore not through arbitrary
+action that the German operational area, which the Prosecution
+objects to, grew to such a size; it was only because the German
+Naval Command was adapting itself to a system which was
+recognized by the other powers also as justified.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In order to examine the legality of the German measures on the
+basis of enemy methods, may I ask the Tribunal to recall the naval
+chart on which the British zones of warning and danger are marked.
+These zones cover about 120,000 square sea miles. Even if these
+dimensions are smaller than those of the German operational area,
+it seems to me that the difference between 100,000 and 600,000
+square miles is not so much a question of legal judgment as one of
+coastal length and of strategic position on the sea. This observation
+is confirmed by the American practice against Japan, as described
+by Admiral Nimitz. He says:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In the interest of the conduct of operations against Japan
+the area of the Pacific Ocean is declared a zone of operations.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='337' id='Page_337'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This zone of operations covers more than 30 million square miles.
+All ships therein, with the exception of U.S. and Allied, and hospital
+ships, were sunk without warning. The order was issued on the first
+day of the war, on 7 December 1941, when the Chief of the
+Admiralty ordered unrestricted submarine warfare against Japan.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is not for me to examine whether this order, issued on the
+first day of the war, is to be looked upon and justified as a measure
+of reprisal. For me the important thing is to show what actual
+practice looked like, and that is unequivocal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution finds particularly blameworthy the orders to
+carry out attacks without warning in the operational areas, if
+possible without being noticed, so that mine hits could be claimed.
+Orders to this effect existed for the period between January and
+August 1940, that is to say, during the period when submarines
+were not permitted to act without warning throughout the operational
+area of 24 November 1939, but only in the specially defined
+areas off the British coast. In this camouflage the Prosecution sees
+proof of a bad conscience amounting to the recognition of wrongdoing.
+The real reasons for the measures ordered were both military
+and political. For the admirals concerned the military reasons, of
+course, took first place, and these alone were known to the Commander
+of U-boats. The enemy was to be left in uncertainty as to
+what weapons of naval warfare had caused his losses, and his
+defense was to be led astray in this manner. It is obvious that such
+misleading of the enemy is fully justified in time of war. The measures
+had the desired military success, and in numerous cases the
+British Navy employed flotillas of mine sweepers on the spot where
+a ship had been torpedoed, and conversely started a submarine
+chase where a loss had occurred through mine hits.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the Supreme Command, however, it was not the military but
+the political reasons that were the determining factor. These invisible
+attacks were meant to provide an opportunity of denying to
+the neutrals that the sinkings were due to submarines, and of tracing,
+them back to mines. This actually did happen in some cases. Does
+that mean that the German Government itself considered the use
+of submarine action without warning within the area of operations
+to be illegal? I do not think so.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In view of the repeated accusations which the Prosecution have
+construed here and elsewhere from the camouflaging of measures
+and the denial of facts, I feel obliged to make a few remarks on the
+point as to whether there is any obligation at all in international
+politics to tell the truth. However things may be in peacetime, in
+times of war at any rate one cannot recognize any obligation to
+tell the truth in a question which may be of advantage to the enemy.
+I need only point to Hugo Grotius who says: “It is permissible to
+<span class='pageno' title='338' id='Page_338'></span>
+conceal the truth wisely. Dissimulation is absolutely necessary and
+unavoidable.”<a id='r20'/><a href='#f20' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[20]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What would it have meant for the military situation if U-boat
+sinkings such as in the instances dealt with here had not been
+denied but admitted instead? First of all, since that would have
+come to the knowledge of the enemy too, we should have lost the
+military advantage which lay in misleading his defense. Furthermore—and
+this is no less important—we might quite possibly have
+furnished our enemy with allies who would have helped him at
+least with propaganda, if not with their weapons. In view of the
+fact that some of the neutrals concerned were so dependent on
+England, they probably would not have recognized the German
+viewpoint as to the legitimacy of the operational areas, especially
+since this viewpoint was contrary to their own interests. It would
+have led to political tensions, and possibly to armed conflicts. Our
+enemies would have derived the only immediate advantage from
+it. From the standpoint of the law this endeavor to camouflage the
+use of submarines with regard to the neutrals does not seem objectionable
+to me.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But if the Prosecution uses this with the intention of moral
+defamation, it is applying standards which heretofore have never
+been applied to the conduct of a war and to the politics of any
+other country in the world. It was precisely in naval warfare that
+the same methods of camouflage were employed by the other side,
+too. The operational areas which Great Britain declared off the
+European coasts from Norway to Biscay were, with the exception
+of the Biscay area, declared mine danger zones. But we know from
+Churchill’s statement of May 1940, as well as from testimonies of
+witnesses, that in these areas there were unlimited attacks with
+submarines, speedboats and, above all, with airplanes. Consequently
+very often neither the German command nor the neutral country
+which had been attacked knew whether a loss sustained in such an
+area really should be traced back to a mine or to another weapon of
+naval warfare. To conclude that the camouflaging of a measure
+constitutes its illegality thus seems to me entirely without basis.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Within the German operational zone all ships were on principle
+attacked without warning. However, orders had been given to
+make exceptions in the case of certain neutrals, such as, in the
+beginning, Japan, the Soviet Union, Spain, and Italy. In this
+measure the Prosecution saw the endeavor of the Naval Operations
+Staff to terrorize the smaller neutral countries whereas it dared not
+<span class='pageno' title='339' id='Page_339'></span>
+pick a quarrel with the big ones. The real reason for this differentiating
+treatment is given in Document UK-65 in the notation on
+the report which the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy made to
+the Führer on 16 October 1939.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>According to this the neutral governments mentioned are requested
+to declare that they will not carry contraband; otherwise
+they would be treated just like any other neutral country. The
+reason for the different treatment was merely that certain countries
+were willing and able to forbid their vessels from carrying contraband
+to England, whereas others could not or would not do so
+because of their political attitude or their economic dependence on
+England. Therefore it is not a question of terrorizing the smaller
+neutrals and sparing the bigger ones, but of preventing traffic in
+contraband and sparing legal commercial trade. Since no general
+legal maxim exists which compels the belligerent power to treat all
+neutral powers alike, no objection can be raised on the basis of
+international law. It would indeed be strange if here in the name
+of humanity the demand were made that German submarines
+should have sunk even those ships which they did not want to
+sink at all.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal saw from the standing war orders submitted that
+during the further course of the war even the small powers, which
+were the only neutral ones left, could by virtue of shipping agreements
+cross the operational area along certain routes without being
+molested by German submarines. In this way for instance Sweden
+and Switzerland as well as Turkey could carry on their maritime
+trade during the entire war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Outside the operational area announced the German submarines
+were never permitted to attack neutral ships. In this respect the
+Naval Command refrained from waging any submarine warfare
+against neutral merchant shipping, since enemy air surveillance
+made stopping and searching too dangerous for German submarines.
+Against the disadvantage of submarine warfare within the operational
+area, the neutrals had, outside the area, the advantage of
+remaining completely unmolested, even if they were shipping contraband
+goods, which fact in itself made them liable to be sunk after
+being stopped. Thus a neutral vessel outside the operational area
+was only in danger if it behaved in a suspicious or hostile way or
+if it was not clearly marked as neutral. The German Naval Operations
+Staff again and again called the attention of the neutral
+powers to this necessity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection I must mention the order of 18 July 1941,
+according to which United States vessels within the operational
+area were placed on an equal basis with all other neutrals,
+that is to say, could be attacked without warning. The Prosecution
+<span class='pageno' title='340' id='Page_340'></span>
+have seen in this special proof that the submarine warfare
+against neutrals was waged in a “cynical and opportunist” way.
+If this is meant to convey that it was influenced also by political
+considerations, then I am ready to admit it. But I do not consider
+this a reproach; since war itself is a political instrument, it is
+in keeping with its essence if individual parts of it are placed
+under the leadership of politics. In particular, no reproach should
+be seen in the orders of the German Command as regards the
+utilization of submarines against the United States, because they
+precisely furnish proof of the efforts to avoid any conflict with the
+United States.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As the Tribunal knows from documents and the testimonies of
+witnesses, the ships of the United States during the first years of
+the war were exempt from all measures of naval warfare, and this
+applied even when contrary to the original American legislation
+they sailed into the U.S.A. combat zone and thus into the German
+operational area in order to carry war matériel to England.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This policy was not changed until, in addition to the many unneutral
+acts of the past, the active employment of the American
+Navy had been ordered for the protection of British supply lines.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Everybody is familiar with the statements of President Roosevelt,
+which he made at that time, about the “bridge of boats over
+the Atlantic” and the support which should be given to England
+“by every means short of war.” It may be considered a matter of
+doubt whether the “realistic attitude”<a id='r21'/><a href='#f21' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[21]</span></sup></a> which the U.S. naval and
+air forces were ordered to take at that time did not already constitute
+an illegal war, as has been claimed just now on the part of
+the Americans.<a id='r22'/><a href='#f22' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[22]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At least the United States had abandoned her neutrality and
+claimed the status of a “nonbelligerent,” which also presented a new
+aspect of international law in this war. If in this connection one
+wishes to raise the charge of cynicism, it should hardly be directed
+against the orders which were issued as a justified reaction to the
+American attitude.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have endeavored to present to the Tribunal a survey of the
+essential orders issued, and to say a few things with respect to their
+legality. No doubt there were instances of attacks on ships which
+according to the orders mentioned should not have been attacked.
+There are just a few such cases, and some of them have been
+brought up at this Trial. The best known concerns the sinking of
+the British passenger vessel <span class='it'>Athenia</span> on 3 September 1939 by <span class='it'>U-30</span>
+under the command of Kapitänleutnant Lemp. The sinking of this
+<span class='pageno' title='341' id='Page_341'></span>
+ship was due to the fact that the commander mistook it for an armed
+merchant cruiser.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the Tribunal should still hesitate to believe the concurring
+statements of all the witnesses heard here on this critical instance,
+which was used especially for propaganda purposes, these doubts
+ought to be removed by the behavior of the same commander in the
+days and weeks following the sinking. Kapitänleutnant Lemp, as the
+log of <span class='it'>U-30</span> at that time shows, adhered strictly to the Prize
+Ordinance, and from this log I was able to submit several examples
+of the fair and gentlemanly conduct of German commanders even
+when by such conduct they greatly endangered their submarines.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Only on the return of <span class='it'>U-30</span> from the operations at the end of
+September 1939 were the Commander of U-boats and the Commander-in-Chief
+of the Navy fully informed of the whole affair of
+the sinking of the <span class='it'>Athenia</span>. Upon his return the commander immediately
+reported to the Commander of U-boats the mistake which he
+himself meanwhile recognized as such, and was sent to Berlin to
+report in person.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Dr. Siemers will deal with the political aspect of this matter.
+I only mention the military occurrences. Admiral Dönitz received
+the following communication from the Naval Operations Staff:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) The affair was further to be dealt with politically in Berlin.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) Court-martial proceedings were not necessary since the commander
+acted in good faith.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) The entire matter was to be kept in strict secrecy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the grounds of this order the Commander of U-boats gave
+orders that the report on the sinking of the <span class='it'>Athenia</span> be deleted from
+the log of <span class='it'>U-30</span> and that the log be complemented in such a manner
+as to make the absence of the entry inconspicuous. As the Tribunal
+has seen, this order was not adequately carried out, obviously for
+the reason that the officer in charge had no experience whatever in
+such dealings.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution pointed to this changing of the War Diary as a
+particularly criminal act of falsification. This, it seems to me, is
+based on a misunderstanding of the facts. The War Diary is nothing
+but a military report by the commander to his superiors. What
+occurrences should or should not be included in reports of this kind
+is not decided by any legal or moral principle, but is solely a matter
+of military regulations. The War Diary was meant to be secret;
+however, it was—like many secret matters—accessible to a very
+large group of people. This is already apparent from the fact that it
+had been circulated in eight copies, of which some were intended not
+only for higher staffs but for schools and for training flotillas as
+well. Therefore, whenever an occurrence was to be restricted to a
+<span class='pageno' title='342' id='Page_342'></span>
+small group of individuals, it was not to be reported in the War
+Diary. Since the sequence of the War Diary continued, the missing
+period had to be filled in with another, necessarily incorrect, entry.
+I can see nothing immoral in such a measure, much less anything
+illegal. As long as there is secrecy in time of war—and that is the
+case in all countries—it means that not all facts can be told to
+everybody, and therefore one sometimes may have to make incorrect
+statements. A certain moral offense could perhaps be seen in
+such action in the case of the <span class='it'>Athenia</span> if thereby a falsification for
+all times had been intended. This, however, was by no means the
+case. The commander’s report with regard to the sinking of the
+<span class='it'>Athenia</span> was of course submitted in the original form to the immediate
+superiors, the Commander of U-boats and the Commander-in-Chief
+of the Navy, and kept in both their offices. I should like
+further to say briefly that a general order not to enter certain
+happenings into the War Diary has never existed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The <span class='it'>Athenia</span> case brings another fact to light and that is the
+manner in which the compliance of U-boat commanders with any
+orders issued was enforced. In spite of the justified conception of
+the Naval Operations Staff that the commander acted in good faith,
+he was put under arrest by Admiral Dönitz because by exercising
+greater caution he perhaps might have recognized that this was not
+an auxiliary cruiser. Punishment was meted out in other cases, too,
+where orders had been mistakenly violated.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal is familiar with the wireless communications of
+September 1942, by which, on occasion of the sinking of the <span class='it'>Monte
+Corbea</span>, the commander had been informed that upon his return he
+would have to face court-martial proceedings for violation of orders
+regarding conduct toward neutrals. All commanders received notice
+of this measure.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Tribunal will please consider what such strict warnings
+mean to a commander at sea. If the directives of the American
+manual for courts-martial were to be considered as a basis, then
+court-martial proceedings against officers should only be initiated in
+cases where dismissal from the service seems warranted.<a id='r23'/><a href='#f23' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[23]</span></sup></a> That
+should never be the case when the violation of an order is an
+accidental one. For a commanding officer who is supposed with his
+soldiers to wage war and gain successes, it is extremely hard and,
+in fact, under certain circumstances actually a mistake to have one
+of his commanders on his return from a successful operation tried
+before a court-martial because of a single slip which occurred in
+that action.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Every military command acts in accordance with these principles.
+In this connection I will refer to the unreserved recognition which
+<span class='pageno' title='343' id='Page_343'></span>
+the commander of the British destroyer <span class='it'>Cossack</span> received for setting
+free the prisoners of the <span class='it'>Altmark</span> in spite of the incidents which
+occurred during this action, which were probably regretted by the
+British too.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I had to go into those matters in order to meet the accusation
+that all sinkings carried out against orders were afterward sanctioned
+by the High Command in that no drastic steps were taken
+against the commanders. Especially in the field of submarine
+warfare compliance with orders issued was insured by the continuous
+personal contact of the commanders with their commanding
+officer. Upon conclusion of every enemy operation an oral report
+had to be made, and all measures taken were subjected to sharp
+criticism, while instructions were given at the same time for future
+behavior.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The German submarines undertook many thousands of combat
+operations during this war. In the course of these, orders issued
+were violated only in very rare instances. If one considers how
+difficult it is for a submarine to establish its exact position and the
+boundaries of an operational area, and to distinguish an armed from
+an unarmed ship, a passenger ship from a troop transport, or a
+neutral from an enemy ship, the low number of sinkings considered
+unjustified by the Germans, too, must be taken as proof of an
+especially effective and conscientious leadership.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>After this discussion of the factual development of German
+submarine warfare, I still have to deal with the accusations built up
+by the Prosecution from certain preparatory deliberations on the
+subject of the organization of submarine warfare.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Simultaneously with the combat instructions of 3 September
+1939, whereby German submarines were ordered to adhere in their
+operations strictly to the Prize Ordinance, an order was prepared in
+the Naval Operations Staff decreeing action without warning in
+case the enemy merchantmen were armed. In addition to this,
+during the first days of the war there was an exchange of correspondence
+with the Foreign Office on the subject of declaring
+prohibited zones.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution looks upon these two documents as proof of the
+intention to conduct a war contrary to international law from the
+very start. I, on the other hand, regard these same documents as
+proof of the fact that the Naval Operations Staff was fully unprepared
+for a war with England, and that it was only when the British
+had already declared war that they began to set about thinking in
+the most elementary manner on how such a war should be conducted.
+Since neither surprise attacks on armed merchant vessels
+nor the declaration of prohibited zones violate international law,
+<span class='pageno' title='344' id='Page_344'></span>
+a belligerent might well be allowed to consider after the outbreak
+of war if and when he wants to make use of these opportunities. As
+we know from the afore-mentioned orders of the British Admiralty,
+as early as 1938 a thorough study of all the possibilities resulting
+from the war upon commercial shipping had been made and
+elaborated for practical purposes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This same standpoint holds good also for the memorandum of
+the Naval Operations Staff of 15 October 1939, which has been
+quoted several times by the Prosecution. Its very heading shows
+that it is a study: “Possibilities for the Intensification of Naval
+Warfare.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In accordance with the heading, the memorandum provides an
+examination of the military demands for effective naval warfare
+against England, and of the legal possibilities for fulfilling these
+demands. The result was the order of 17 October 1939, decreeing the
+immediate use of arms against all enemy merchant vessels, since, as
+we have already shown, they had been armed and incorporated into
+the military system. Further intensifying measures were for the time
+being recognized as not yet justified, and the suggestion was made
+to wait and see what the further conduct of the enemy would be.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One sentence in this memorandum arouses special suspicion on
+the part of the Prosecution. It says that naval warfare must, as a
+matter of principle, be kept within the framework of existing international
+law. However, measures which might result in successes
+decisive for the war would have to be taken even if new laws of
+naval warfare were created thereby.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Does this really constitute a renunciation of international law?
+Quite the contrary. A departure from existing international law is
+made dependent only on two quite limited conditions: (1) A military
+one, namely, that measures are involved which are of decisive
+importance for the outcome of the war, that is, also of importance in
+shortening the war;<a id='r24'/><a href='#f24' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[24]</span></sup></a> (2) a moral one, namely, the nature of the new
+measures makes them suitable for incorporation into the new
+international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The memorandum itself states that this would be possible only
+within the framework of the laws of military combat ethics and a
+demand is therefore made for rigid adherence without any exceptions
+to these ethics of warfare. Under these conditions there can
+hardly be any doubt as to the possibility of formulating new
+international laws.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='345' id='Page_345'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The well-known expert on international law, Baron von Freytagh-Loringhoven
+says, and I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“... always been war which has given its strongest impulses
+to international law. Sometimes they have been of a positive,
+sometimes of a negative nature. They have led to further
+development of already existing institutions and norms, to
+the creation of new forms or the reversion to old ones, and
+not infrequently also to failures.”<a id='r25'/><a href='#f25' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[25]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Especially in this Trial, which itself is supposed to serve the
+development of new international law, the possibility of such a
+development cannot be denied.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will not sit in open session after
+1 o’clock tomorrow, Wednesday; it will sit in closed session during
+the afternoon. The Tribunal will not sit in open session on Saturday;
+it will sit in closed session on Saturday morning.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Before the recess I was
+speaking about the possibilities of development of naval law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The American prosecutor, Justice Robert Jackson, in his report
+to the President of the United States with regard to this problem,
+expressed his opinions as follows, and I quote:<a id='r26'/><a href='#f26' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[26]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“International law is not capable of development by legislation,
+for there is no continuously sitting international legislature.
+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.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These words carry a full justification of the clause objected to
+by the Prosecution in the memorandum of the Naval Operations
+Staff. And the fact that the Allies also deemed war-deciding
+measures to be justified even though they were contradictory
+to hitherto valid concepts of international law is proved by the use
+of the atomic bomb against Japanese cities.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Since I am interested in justifying the actual measures taken by
+the Naval Command in Germany; I have not dealt with the point
+as to which one of the two admirals accused carried greater or lesser
+<span class='pageno' title='346' id='Page_346'></span>
+responsibility for one or another. As a formal basis in nearly all
+cases a Führer decree exists. Both admirals, however, stated here
+that they considered themselves fully responsible for all orders of
+naval war which they gave or transmitted. I should like to add to
+that only two remarks.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As far as political considerations were decisive for orders of the
+U-boat war, the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy had no influence
+on them. The Commander of U-boats had not been notified of such
+considerations any more than of the political settlement of incidents
+which arose through U-boats.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>My second remark concerns the question as to what extent a
+military commander may be held responsible for the accuracy of
+legal reasonings which he does not indulge in himself, but which
+are delivered to him by the leading experts of his country, who after
+all are not just small-town lawyers. In addition, the Commander of
+U-boats had only tactical tasks and his staff contained only a few
+officers, none of whom was qualified to examine questions of
+international law of the import mentioned here. He therefore had
+to rely on the fact that the orders issued by the Naval Operations
+Staff were examined as to their legality and were in order. That is
+probably handled in a like manner in every navy in the world.
+A professional seaman is not competent for legal questions; with
+this reason the Tribunal cut off a remark by Admiral Dönitz about
+a legal question. This condition must, however, be considered in
+applying the principle which the German Supreme Court, during
+the war crimes trials after the first World War, formulated in this
+regard, and I quote: “The culprit must be conscious of the violation
+of international law by his actions.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This appears to me to be equally just, as I should deem it to be
+incompatible with the demands of justice if soldiers were charged
+with a criminal responsibility in deciding legal questions which
+could not be settled at international conferences and are hotly disputed
+among the experts themselves.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection I should like to mention that the London Pact
+of 1930 did not from the Root Resolution of 1922 adopt the principle
+of criminal prosecution for violations of the rules of U-boat warfare.
+The five naval powers participating in this conference apparently
+came to the conclusion that the problems of naval warfare cannot
+be solved by means of penal law. And this fact applies fully
+today, too.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I am now coming to the second basic charge of the Prosecution—intentional
+killing of shipwrecked crews. It is directed only against
+Admiral Dönitz, not Admiral Raeder. The legal basis for the treatment
+of shipwrecked crews for those ships which are entitled to the
+protection of the London Agreement of 1936 is laid down in the
+<span class='pageno' title='347' id='Page_347'></span>
+agreement itself. There it says that, before the sinking, crews and
+passengers must be brought to safety. This was done by the German
+side, and the difference of opinion with the Prosecution concerns
+only the question already dealt with, namely, which ships
+were entitled to protection under the agreement and which were not.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the case of all ships not entitled to protection under the agreement,
+sinking should be considered a military combat action. The
+legal basis, therefore, with regard to the treatment of shipwrecked
+crews, in these cases is contained in the Hague Convention concerning
+the Application of the Principles of the Geneva Convention
+to Naval Warfare of 18 October 1907, although it was not ratified
+by Great Britain. According to this, both belligerents shall after
+each combat action make arrangements for the search for the shipwrecked,
+as far as military considerations allow this. Accordingly
+the German U-boats were also bound to assist the shipwrecked of
+steamers sunk without warning as long as by doing so, first, the
+boat would not be endangered and, secondly, the accomplishment
+of the military mission would not be prejudiced.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These principles are generally acknowledged. In this connection
+I am referring to the order of the British Admiralty, for example,
+and I quote: “No British ocean-going merchantman shall aid a ship
+attacked by a U-boat.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I further refer to the affidavit of Admiral Rogge, according to
+which in two cases, personally witnessed by him, nothing was done
+by a British cruiser to rescue the shipwrecked, because U-boats
+were assumed to be nearby, once correctly so and once erroneously.
+A higher degree of self-endangering would appear to apply to
+U-boats as compared with other types of vessels because of their
+exceptional vulnerability.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As to the second exception to rescue duty, namely, prejudice to
+the military mission, the U-boat is also subject to special conditions.
+It has no room to take guests aboard. Its supply of food, water,
+and fuel is limited and any considerable expenditure will prejudice
+its combat mission. Furthermore, it is typical for the U-boat that
+the combat mission may call for an unobserved attack and therefore
+exclude rescue duty. In order also to present an opinion about the
+tactics of the opposite side, I quote from the statement of Admiral
+Nimitz:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In general U.S. submarines did not rescue enemy survivors
+if it meant an unusual additional danger for the submarine
+or if the submarine was prevented from further carrying out
+its mission.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the light of these principles I will briefly deal with rescue
+measures by U-boats until the autumn of 1942. The basic order
+<span class='pageno' title='348' id='Page_348'></span>
+was issued by the Naval Operations Staff on 4 October 1939, and
+specified rescue whenever possible from the military standpoint.
+This was temporarily restricted by Standing War Order 154. This
+order, issued in December 1939, applied to the small number of
+submarines at that time operating immediately off the British coast.
+It may be seen from the order itself that every paragraph deals
+with combat in the presence of enemy escort and patrol forces. The
+last paragraph therefore also deals only with this aspect and serves
+the warranted purpose of protecting submarine commanders against
+the dangers to which, under the existing circumstances, they would
+in every case expose their boats by rescue measures. When after
+the Norwegian campaign the scene of activity of the submarines
+gradually shifted to the open Atlantic, this order became outdated,
+and it was finally canceled in the autumn of 1940. In the period that
+followed, the German submarine commanders carried out rescue
+measures whenever they could assume responsibility from the
+military standpoint. This is known to the Tribunal from numerous
+specific examples cited here, contained both in the statements of
+submarine commanders submitted here and in the war diaries. This
+situation was changed through Admiral Dönitz’s order of 17 September
+1942, in which he forbade rescue measures on principle. The
+decisive sentences are:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The rescue of members of the crew of a ship sunk is not to
+be attempted. Rescue is contradictory to the most primitive
+demands of warfare, which are the annihilation of enemy
+ships and crews.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It has been disputed by the Prosecution that this actually
+prohibits rescue. It looks upon this order as a hidden provocation
+to kill the shipwrecked, and it has gone through the press of the
+world as a command for murder. If any accusation at all has been
+refuted in this Trial, then it seems to me to be this ignominious
+interpretation of the order mentioned above.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>How was this order brought on? Beginning with June 1942, the
+losses of German submarines through the Allied air force rose by
+leaps and bounds, and jumped from a monthly average of 4 or 5
+during the first 6 months of 1942 to 10, 11, 13, finally reaching 38
+boats in May 1943. Orders and measures from the command of
+submarine warfare multiplied in order to counter those losses. They
+were of no avail and every day brought fresh reports of air attacks
+and losses of submarines.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This was the situation when on 12 September it was reported
+that the heavily armed British troop transport <span class='it'>Laconia</span> with 1,500
+Italian prisoners of war and an Allied crew of 1,000 men and
+some women and children aboard had been torpedoed. Admiral
+<span class='pageno' title='349' id='Page_349'></span>
+Dönitz withdrew several submarines from current operations for
+the purpose of rescuing the shipwrecked, no distinction being made
+between Italians and Allies. From the very start the danger of
+enemy air attacks filled him with anxiety. While the submarines
+during the following days devotedly rescued, towed boats, supplied
+food, and so forth, they received no less than three admonitions
+from the Commander to be careful, to divide the shipwrecked, and
+at all times to be ready to submerge. These warnings were of no
+avail. On 16 September one of the submarines displaying a Red
+Cross flag and towing life boats was attacked and considerably
+damaged by an Allied bomber; one lifeboat was hit and losses
+caused among the shipwrecked. Following this report the Commander
+sent three more radio messages with orders immediately to
+submerge in case of danger and under no circumstances to risk the
+boats’ own safety. Again without avail. In the evening of that day,
+17 September 1942, the second submarine reported that during
+rescue actions it had been taken unawares and bombed by an
+airplane.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Notwithstanding these experiences, and in spite of the explicit
+order from Führer headquarters not to endanger any boats under any
+consideration, Admiral Dönitz did not discontinue rescue work, but
+had it continued until the shipwrecked were taken aboard French
+warships sent to their rescue. However, this incident was a lesson.
+Due to enemy air reconnaissance activity over the entire sea area,
+it was simply no longer possible to carry out rescue measures without
+endangering the submarine. It was useless to give orders over
+and over again to commanders to undertake rescue work only if
+their own boats were not endangered thereby. Earlier experiences
+had already shown that their human desire to render aid had led
+many commanders to underestimate the dangers from the air. Yet
+it takes a submarine with decks cleared at least one minute to
+submerge on alarm, while an airplane can cover 6,000 meters in
+that time. In practice this means that a submarine engaged in
+rescue action when sighting a plane has not time enough to
+submerge.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These were the reasons which caused Admiral Dönitz directly
+after the close of the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> incident to forbid rescue measures on
+principle. This was motivated by the endeavor to preclude any
+calculation on the part of the commander as to the danger of air
+attack whenever in individual cases he should feel tempted to
+undertake rescue work.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is difficult to judge the actual effects of this order. From 1943
+on about 80 percent of the submarines were fighting against convoys,
+where even without this order rescue measures would have been
+impossible. Whether or not some commander would have, without
+<span class='pageno' title='350' id='Page_350'></span>
+this order, again risked concerning himself with the lifeboats,
+nobody can tell with certainty. As is known, an order existed since
+the middle of 1942 to bring in as prisoners, if possible, captains
+and chief engineers. Over a period of almost 3 years this order
+was carried out not even a dozen times, which proves how high the
+commanders themselves estimated the danger to their boats in
+surfacing. On the other hand, nothing was more distressing for
+members of the crews of torpedoed ships than to be taken aboard
+a U-boat, because of course they knew that their chance of being
+rescued was much better in a lifeboat than on a U-boat which,
+with a probability of at least 50 percent, would not return to its base.
+Therefore, I arrive at the conclusion, as did Admiral Godt, that the
+<span class='it'>Laconia</span> order may have cost the lives of some Allied seamen just
+as it may have saved the lives of others. Be that as it may, in the
+face of the enormous losses by the enemy air forces the order forbidding
+rescue was justified. It was completely in line with the
+basic idea of the precedence of one’s own vessel and of one’s own
+task, as prevailing in all navies; a principle which I believe I have
+proved as commonly valid in view of existing British and American
+orders and practices.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>How then can the Prosecution consider this order an “order to
+murder”? Grounds for this are said to be furnished by the discussion
+between Hitler and the Japanese Ambassador, Oshima, in
+January 1942, in which Hitler mentioned a prospective order to his
+U-boats to kill the survivors of ships sunk. This announcement,
+the Prosecution infers, Hitler doubtless followed up, and Admiral
+Dönitz carried it out by the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> order. Actually, on the occasion
+of a report on U-boat problems which both admirals had to make
+in May 1942, the Führer suggested that in future action should be
+taken against the shipwrecked, that is, to shoot them; Admiral
+Dönitz immediately rejected this sort of action as thoroughly impossible
+and Grossadmiral Raeder unreservedly agreed with him.
+Both admirals specified the improvement of torpedoes as the only
+permissible way to increase losses among the crews. In the face
+of the opposition of both admirals Adolf Hitler dropped his
+proposal, and following this report no order whatever was given
+concerning shipwrecked crews, let alone concerning the killing of
+the shipwrecked by shooting. The destruction of the crews through
+improved efficiency of the torpedoes is an idea which for the first
+time cropped up during this discussion in May 1942, and which
+recurs in later documents of the Naval Operations Staff. I must
+therefore express myself on the legality of such a tendency. According
+to classical international law the destruction of combatants
+constituted a legal aim of war actions, not however that of
+<span class='pageno' title='351' id='Page_351'></span>
+noncombatants.<a id='r27'/><a href='#f27' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[27]</span></sup></a> In view of the development of the last wars one
+may be doubtful whether this classical theory still has any validity.
+I am inclined to regard the hunger blockade as the first important
+infringement of this theory, which by cutting off all food supply
+was aimed at the civilian population, therefore the noncombatants
+of a country. The victims of this during the first World War were
+estimated at 700,000 people.<a id='r28'/><a href='#f28' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[28]</span></sup></a> Although this blockade was frequently
+acknowledged to be inadmissible according to international law,<a id='r29'/><a href='#f29' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[29]</span></sup></a>
+it was nevertheless practiced, and therefore it amounts to an infringement
+of the principle of protection for noncombatants against
+war measures.<a id='r30'/><a href='#f30' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[30]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The second great infringement was brought on by aerial warfare.
+I do not wish to discuss the unsolvable question of who started it,
+but only to state the fact that war from the air, at least during the
+two final years, was aimed against the civilian population. If in
+dozens of attacks on residential quarters of German cities thousands
+or tens of thousands of civilians were among the victims while
+soldiers numbered only a few dozen or a few hundred, then nobody
+can assert that the civilian population was not included in the
+target of the attack. The mass dropping of explosives and incendiary
+bombs on entire areas does not permit of doubt, and the use of the
+atomic bomb has produced final evidence thereof.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In view of the hundreds of thousands of women and children
+who in this manner miserably perished in their houses by being
+buried, suffocated, or burnt to death, I am surprised at the indignation
+of the Prosecution about the loss of about 30,000 men who
+lost their lives in war areas on ships which were armed and carried
+war material, and often enough bombs destined for German cities.
+Moreover, most of these men died in combat, that is, by mines,
+aircraft action, and especially in attacks on convoys, all actions
+which according to British conception, too, were lawful.
+<span class='pageno' title='352' id='Page_352'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The German Naval Operations Staff regarded these men as
+combatants. The British Admiralty takes the opposite standpoint
+in its orders to the merchant navy. In this connection Oppenheim,
+the foremost British expert on international law, before the outbreak
+of the first World War still maintained that the crew should
+be put on the same level as combatants.<a id='r31'/><a href='#f31' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[31]</span></sup></a> He points to the century-old
+practice, especially followed in Britain, of taking the crew of
+merchant ships prisoner of war. He find’s this principle confirmed
+in the 11th Hague Convention of 1907, and looks upon the crew of
+the merchant navy as potential members of the navy. The legal
+position in their defense against a warship is described by him
+as “entirely analogous to the position of the population of an unoccupied
+territory which takes up arms in order to combat invading
+troops.” It is well known that such a force is considered a combat
+unit. According to Paragraph 2 of the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare, they are considered combatants irrespective of whether
+or not the individual actually makes use of weapons. Accordingly,
+Oppenheim also refused to make any distinction among the crew,
+between men who are enrolled in the enemy navy and men who
+are not.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If this interpretation was already valid before the first World
+War, it certainly was unassailable in the year 1942, at a time when
+there were no more unarmed enemy ships and when the neutrals
+who happened to enter the zone of operations were exclusively
+moving in enemy convoys, which made them, just like enemy ships,
+integral parts of the enemy forces. All of them had lost their
+peaceful character and were considered as being guilty of active
+resistance. Active resistance against acts of war is not permitted to
+any noncombatant in land warfare and results in his being punished
+as a <span class='it'>franc-tireur</span>. And in naval warfare should a ship’s crew be
+entitled to the combatant’s privileges, without suffering any of his
+disadvantages? Should a crew be permitted to participate in every
+conceivable act of war, even including the use of guns and depth
+charges, and yet remain noncombatant? Such an interpretation
+renders illusory the entire concept of a noncombatant. Nor does it
+make any difference whether or not only part of the crew has
+anything to do with the firing of the guns. The ship as an entity
+represents a fighting unit, and on board a merchant ship more
+people actually had something to do with the handling of weapons
+than on board a submarine. These men were trained under military
+supervision, they fired the guns along with gunners of the navy,
+and the use of their weapons was regulated according to the
+<span class='pageno' title='353' id='Page_353'></span>
+Admiralty’s orders.<a id='r32'/><a href='#f32' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[32]</span></sup></a> The crews of ships were accordingly combatants
+and thus it was legitimate for the adversary to try to
+destroy them by the use of arms.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This explains at the same time the sentence about the destruction
+of ships and crews, which is considered by the Prosecution as
+a specific indication that the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> order bore the character of a
+murder order. There has been enough discussion concerning the
+meaning of this sentence as an argument for forbidding rescue work.
+It may, taken out of its context, give cause for misunderstanding.
+But whoever goes to the trouble of reading the entire order cannot
+misunderstand it. To me the decisive crime appears to be that, in
+accordance With its origin, it was never meant to be a murder order
+and was not interpreted as such by the commanders. This is proved
+by the declarations and statements of dozens of submarine commanders.
+From its context it could not have been interpreted as a
+murder order. In fact in the next paragraphs it was explicitly
+ruled that so far as possible certain members of the crew should
+be brought back as prisoners. Surely one must credit a military
+command with enough intelligence, when giving such a murder
+order at all, to refrain from additional orders to conserve a number
+of witnesses of its crime.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Contrary to the Prosecution, the British Admiralty clearly did
+not believe in such a murder order. Otherwise it would not have
+given orders to its captains and chief engineers to escape capture
+by German submarines by camouflaging themselves as plain sailors
+while in the lifeboats. According to the interpretation by the
+Prosecution, such an order would indeed have meant that the
+captain would have been killed by the submarine along with all
+the other members of the crew.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Furthermore, the Prosecution have quoted the order to attack
+so-called “rescue ships” as evidence of the intention to kill shipwrecked
+people. However, only the individual who is either in the
+water or in a lifeboat is shipwrecked. A shipwrecked combatant
+who is again on board a ship is nothing but a combatant, and
+accordingly the legitimate aim of an attack. I have already pointed
+out, during the hearing of evidence, the shooting down of German
+sea rescue planes with intent to kill the rescued airmen, in order
+to show that the enemy acted according to the same conception.
+<span class='pageno' title='354' id='Page_354'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall discuss as briefly as possible the depositions of witnesses
+on which the Prosecution tries to base its interpretation of the
+Laconia order. In my opinion, the deposition of Oberleutnant zur
+See Heisig, as made here before the Tribunal, is irrelevant. His
+earlier affidavit is wrong, and we know why from the witness
+Wagner. Here, before the Tribunal, Heisig has explicitly denied that
+in Grossadmiral Dönitz’s address to the cadets of the submarine
+school in September 1942 there was any reference to the effect that
+shipwrecked people should be fired upon. Rather did he personally
+draw this conclusion from the passage that total war must be waged
+against ship and crew, with added reference to air bombing. His
+interpretation may be explained by the fresh impression of the
+bombing of Lübeck, which he had just experienced. The other
+listeners did not share this interpretation; in fact, it did not even
+occur to them. This is evident from the deposition of three persons
+who heard the address. The further assertion of Heisig, that an
+officer unknown to him had instructed him on an unknown occasion
+that the men should be ordered below deck when exterminating
+shipwrecked people, I consider as an improvisation of his imagination,
+which appears to be easily excited. If this had really been
+the case, then so astonishing an occurrence, which would have been
+in contradiction to all training principles of the Navy, must have
+made such an impression on a young officer that he would have
+retained some recollection of the full circumstances of such an
+instruction.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The testimony of Korvettenkapitän Möhle must be taken much
+more seriously, because he had—there is no doubt about it—at least
+hinted to a few submarine commanders that the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> order
+demanded, or at least approved of, the killing of shipwrecked. Möhle
+did not receive this interpretation either from Admiral Dönitz
+himself, nor from the Chief of Staff nor his chief assistant, Fregattenkapitän
+Hessler; that is to say, from none of the officers who
+alone would have been qualified to transmit such an interpretation
+to the chief of a flotilla.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>How Möhle actually arrived at this interpretation has in my
+opinion not been explained by the Trial. He maintains that it was
+due to the fact that Korvettenkapitän Kuppisch from the staff of
+the Commander of U-boats had told him the story of <span class='it'>U-386</span>, a boat
+whose commander had been reprimanded for not having shot Allied
+airmen drifting in a rubber dinghy. This explanation of Möhle’s
+cannot be correct. It is proven beyond any doubt by the War Diary
+and by witnesses that the commander of <span class='it'>U-386</span> had been reprimanded
+because he did not take on board the airmen concerned
+and bring them back. The whole affair concerning <span class='it'>U-386</span>, furthermore,
+took place a year after the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> incident in September
+<span class='pageno' title='355' id='Page_355'></span>
+1943 and Korvettenkapitän Kuppisch, who was supposed to have
+told it, had already been killed in action as a U-boat commander
+in August 1943. It is not my task to try to explain how Möhle
+actually acquired his knowledge about the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> order. One
+thing at any rate has been proven, namely, that Admiral Dönitz
+and his staff had not caused this briefing to be given, nor did they
+know anything about it. Considering the frequent personal contacts
+between the U-boat commanders and the staff of the Commander
+of U-boats this can only be explained by the fact that the few
+commanders whom Möhle thus briefed did not take his words
+seriously.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Is Admiral Dönitz thus responsible for the interpretation of the
+<span class='it'>Laconia</span> order as given by Möhle? Criminal responsibility in the first
+place presupposes guilt, that is to say, possibility of foreseeing the
+result. Considering the close contact with his flotilla chiefs and
+commanders, for whom alone the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> order was intended,
+Admiral Dönitz could not foresee that a flotilla chief might give
+such an interpretation to that order without taking any steps to
+be enlightened by the Commander of U-boats. Such conduct is
+beyond anything that could reasonably be expected.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Therefore all guilt is excluded. Criminal responsibility requires
+another criterion, namely, that results shall be proven. This also
+is entirely lacking. The Prosecution have not even made a serious
+attempt to prove that any one of the commanders briefed by Möhle
+in that sense ever actually fired on shipwrecked crews. As far as
+we are informed, such a thing occurred only once in this war on the
+German side in the case of Kapitänleutnant Eck. It is significant
+that this case was presented not by the Prosecution, but by the
+Defense. For the conduct of Eck has nothing whatsoever to do with
+the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> order as the Prosecution desires to construe it. He was
+not concerned with the destruction of human lives but with the
+removal of wreckage and floats from which the Allied airplanes
+could deduce the presence of a German U-boat in the area. For this
+conduct he and two of his officers were sentenced to death, and
+thereby punished with a severity which less agitated times will no
+longer comprehend.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The two cases presented by the Prosecution, where shipwrecked
+crews allegedly were shot at, are so obviously unsuited to prove this
+accusation that I need not deal with them any further. The testimony
+about the sinking of the <span class='it'>Noreen Mary</span> bears the stamp of
+phantasy in various points, and in the case of the attack on the
+<span class='it'>Antonica</span> the intention to destroy shipwrecked people is out of the
+question because everything was over in 20 minutes and the night
+was dark.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I was in the fortunate position to be able to present to the Tribunal
+a compilation of the Naval Operations Staff concerning a dozen
+<span class='pageno' title='356' id='Page_356'></span>
+cases in which Allied forces had allegedly shot at German shipwrecked
+crews. It seems to me that every one of these instances
+is better than that of the Prosecution, and some appear rather
+convincing. I therefore attach all the more value to the sober
+attitude assumed by the Naval Operations Staff when transmitting
+their opinion on these cases to the Führer’s headquarters.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>They point out that: (1) Part of the incidents occurred during
+combat operations; (2) shipwrecked men swimming in the water
+might easily be led to believe that a miss on other targets was aimed
+at them; (3) so far no written or verbal order for the use of arms
+against shipwrecked crews had been traced. I can only request that
+these principles be equally applied to the incidents presented by
+the Prosecution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the same written opinion to the Führer’s headquarters the
+Naval Operations Staff reject reprisals by destroying enemy shipwrecked;
+that was on 14 September 1942, 3 days before the
+<span class='it'>Laconia</span> order. Since the latter, as a radio order, came to the knowledge
+of the Naval Operations Staff, it would doubtlessly have been
+canceled in accordance with the opposite viewpoint just expressed
+to the Führer’s headquarters if it had been understood to be an
+order for the shooting of shipwrecked crews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And now I am coming to the positive counterevidence against
+the opinion of the Prosecution. It consists in the first place of the
+number of rescued Allied sailors. This amounted, according to a
+survey by the British Minister of Transport in 1943, to 87 percent
+of the crews. Such a result is simply not compatible with an order
+for destruction. Furthermore, it has been established that Grossadmiral
+Dönitz in 1943, that is, after the <span class='it'>Laconia</span> order, rejected all
+consideration of action against shipwrecked crews.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In a written opinion given to the Foreign Office on 4 April 1943,
+a directive to the U-boats to take action against lifeboats or shipwrecked
+crews was considered impossible by the Naval Operations
+Staff, since that would go against the grain of every sailor. In June
+1943 Grossadmiral Dönitz, on receiving reports from Korvettenkapitän
+Witt about British aviators having fired on shipwrecked
+crews of German submarines, most decidedly rejected the idea of
+attacking a foe rendered defenseless in combat, stating that this was
+incompatible with our principles of warfare.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Summing up, I am convinced that the assertion of the Prosecution
+that German submarines had received an order to murder
+shipwrecked men has been strikingly disproved. Grossadmiral
+Dönitz stated here that he would never have allowed the spirit of
+his submarine men to be endangered by mean acts. With losses
+ranging from 70 to 80 percent, he could only replenish his troops
+with volunteers if he kept the fight clean, in spite of its being tough.
+<span class='pageno' title='357' id='Page_357'></span>
+And if the Tribunal will recall the declaration of the 67 commanders
+in British captivity, it will have to admit that he created
+an attitude and morale which survived defeat.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have endeavored to present to the Tribunal the most important
+facts supplemented by a number of legal considerations regarding
+naval warfare in order to clarify the most important problems to
+be discussed here from the point of view of the Defense. We are
+concerned with the examination of the behavior of admirals in
+naval warfare, and the question of what is permissible according
+to international law is intimately connected with what is necessary
+according to the military standpoint. Therefore, in examining this
+particular point of the Indictment, I deeply regret that the Charter
+of this Tribunal deprives the accused officers of a privilege
+guaranteed to them as prisoners of war by the Geneva Convention,
+namely, the passing of judgment by a military tribunal applying
+the laws and regulations binding on its own officers. According to
+Article 3 of the Charter, I am not allowed to question the competency
+of this Tribunal. I can therefore only request the Tribunal
+to make up for the unfairness that I see in the afore-mentioned
+article of the Charter by applying the same standards, where the
+military appreciation and moral justification of the actions of these
+German admirals is concerned, as the Tribunal would apply to
+admirals of their own countries. A soldier, out of practical knowledge
+of the procedure in warfare as applied not only by his own
+country but also by the adversary, is keenly sensitive to the dividing
+line between combat and war crimes. He knows that the interpretation
+of international law concerning what is allowed or
+forbidden in naval warfare is in the last resort governed by the
+interests of his country. An insular power like Great Britain,
+having long and vulnerable sea lanes, has always looked upon these
+questions from a different angle than the continental powers. The
+attitude of the United States from the renunciation of submarine
+warfare by the Root Resolution of 1922 to unrestricted submarine
+warfare against Japan in 1941, reveals how a change in strategic
+position can entail a change in legal evaluation. No one can tell
+to what extent a changed strategic position at sea will cause a
+modification of legal conception. No one can know to what degree
+the development of air forces and the efficacy of bombs will
+increasingly force navies under water and render obsolete all
+previous conceptions of submarine warfare.<a id='r33'/><a href='#f33' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[33]</span></sup></a> For a naval officer
+these are obvious reflections, and they should prevent a man of
+law from settling controversial questions of law and policy
+pertaining to naval war at the expense of those whose professional
+duty it is to direct navies.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='358' id='Page_358'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the first World War German submarine warfare was accompanied
+by a storm of indignation. It seems significant to me
+today that the British historian, Bell, in a paper intended only for
+official use of the Foreign Office, judges the right to such indignation
+as follows:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is an old rule of military honor never to belittle the deeds
+of an enemy who has put up a stiff and brave fight. If this
+rule had been followed in England, the public would better
+appreciate the place which the war between submarines and
+commerce will occupy in the history of strategy and of war.
+It is unfortunate that the cries of terror as well as the unseemly
+insults of journalists were repeated by responsible
+people, with the result that the slogans ‘piracy’ and ‘murder’
+entered the vocabulary and have engendered the corresponding
+feelings in the hearts of the people.”<a id='r34'/><a href='#f34' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[34]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I must now treat the other points of the Indictment against
+Grossadmiral Dönitz which are not concerned with naval war. To
+begin with, there is the charge of preparation of aggressive wars.
+It is known how much contradiction this very accusation has
+aroused on the part of professional officers of probably all Allied
+countries. In answer to such attacks in public, Justice Jackson
+formulated for the press (<span class='it'>The Stars and Stripes</span>, European Edition,
+5 December 1945) the ideas of the Prosecution regarding this
+subject as follows:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I have made it clear that we do not prosecute these militarists
+because they served their country, but because they
+dominated it and led it into war. Not because they conducted
+the war, but because they have been driving to war.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If this standard is used, then for the defense of Admiral Dönitz
+against the charge of preparing aggressive wars I need only point
+to the result of the evidence. At the beginning of the war he was a
+relatively young commander; his only task was the training and
+commanding of submarine crews; he did not belong to the General
+Staff in the meaning of the Indictment and did not participate in
+any of the addresses which were presented here as proof of war
+intentions. The charge that he had advocated the occupation of
+submarine bases in Norway is likewise disproved. The same applies
+to the allegation that in 1943 he had proposed an attack upon
+Spain in order to capture Gibraltar. The conquest of Gibraltar
+<span class='pageno' title='359' id='Page_359'></span>
+against the will of Spain was absolutely impossible and out of the
+question during the entire war, and especially so in 1943.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For Germany the war had already reached a stage of defense,
+even of dangerous setbacks, on all fronts at the time when Admiral
+Dönitz was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Navy on 1 February
+1943. This fact may be significant for his participation in the
+so-called conspiracy. The Prosecution is not very clear about the
+precise moment at which they want to fix the beginning of such
+participation. In the individual Indictment intimate connection with
+Hitler since 1932 is mentioned. This, however, is obviously an error.
+Admiral Dönitz did not become acquainted with Hitler until the
+autumn of 1934, on the occasion of the submission of a military
+report, and in the following years talked to him briefly and always
+only about military problems, altogether eight times, and never
+alone. Since, aside from this fact, the defendant never belonged to
+any organization which is accused of conspiracy by the Prosecution,
+I see no connection of any kind with this conspiracy prior to
+1 February 1943.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All the more important is the question of the retroactive effects
+of joining the conspiracy, as has been illustrated by the British
+Prosecutor by the example of the perpetrators of railway sabotage.
+This idea of guilt, retroactive on past events, is very difficult for
+the German jurist to understand. The continental concept of law is
+reflected by the formulation of Hugo Grotius: “To participate in a
+crime a person must not only have knowledge of it but also the
+ability to prevent it.”<a id='r35'/><a href='#f35' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[35]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>While the entire legal concept of the conspiracy in itself represents
+a special creation of Anglo-Saxon justice in our eyes, this
+applies even more to the retroaction of the so-called conspiracy.
+A judgment laying claim to international validity, one which should
+be understood by the peoples of Europe and especially by the Germans,
+must be based upon generally recognized principles of law.
+This, however, is not the case regarding a retroactive guilt. Though
+such a legal construction may seem fitting in dealing with certain
+typical crimes, it seems to me entirely inapplicable in judging events
+such as are being discussed here.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Admiral Dönitz became the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy in
+the course of a normal military career entirely free of politics. The
+appointment was based upon the proposal of his predecessor, Grossadmiral
+Raeder, for whom his proven abilities in the guidance of
+U-boat warfare alone were the determining factor. Specific acceptance
+of the appointment was no more required than in the case of
+an appointment to any other military position. Admiral Dönitz
+<span class='pageno' title='360' id='Page_360'></span>
+entertained the sole thought, as any officer might well have done in
+a similar position, whether he would be equal to the task and
+whether he could accomplish it in the best interest of the Navy and
+of his people. All other considerations which the Prosecution
+apparently expected of him during this period, namely, as to the
+legitimacy of the Party Program and of the policy of the Party
+from 1922 on, as well as German internal and foreign policy since
+1933, can be but fictitious; they have nothing to do with the facts.
+Fictions of such nature are not limited by time nor by reality. Is
+the responsibility for past measures on taking over a high position
+to extend only to acts of the present cabinet, or is it to extend to
+acts of former cabinets, and over what period? Is it to comprise
+only one’s own internal and foreign policy or is it to include one’s
+allies? Such considerations cannot be refuted logically; however,
+they lead to unacceptable results and show the impracticability of
+the idea of retroaction regarding the so-called conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To measure by exact standards the participation in such a conspiracy
+is difficult enough, if events not of a criminal but of a
+military and political nature are involved. Of what meaning are
+such concepts as “voluntary accession” and “knowledge of the
+criminal plan” when in times of greatest danger an officer assumes
+the task to prevent the collapse of his nation’s maritime warfare?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even the Prosecution seems to realize this. For, corresponding to
+their general idea, they attempt to link Admiral Dönitz with the
+conspiracy in a political way. This is accomplished by the assertion
+that he became a member of the Reich Cabinet by virtue of his
+appointment to the High Command of the Navy. This allegation is
+based upon the decree whereby the Commanders-in-Chief of the
+Army and of the Navy were invested with the rank of Reich Minister
+and upon the order of Hitler were to participate in Cabinet meetings.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is evident that one is not actually a Reich minister merely by
+being invested with the rank of Reich minister. Also one is not a
+member of the Cabinet if one is only permitted to participate in it
+upon special orders. This obviously indicates that he was only to
+be consulted on technical matters, but never had authority to gain
+information about other departments, much less to give advice. One
+cannot, however, speak of a political task and a political responsibility
+without the existence of such an authority. For an activity
+as a minister all legal basis is lacking. According to the Reich Defense
+Law there existed for the entire Armed Forces but one minister,
+the Reich War Minister. This post remained unoccupied after the
+resignation of Field Marshal Von Blomberg. The business of the
+ministry was conducted by the Chief of the High Command of the
+Armed Forces. A new ministry was not created either for the Army
+or for the Navy. The Commanders-in-Chief of the Army and of the
+<span class='pageno' title='361' id='Page_361'></span>
+Navy therefore would have had to be ministers without portfolio.
+Since, however, they each headed a department, namely, the Army
+and the Navy, such an appointment would have constituted a contradiction
+to all legal customs of the State. The countersigning of
+all laws in which the minister participates according to his jurisdiction
+must be considered the basic criterion of all ministerial
+activity. There exists not a single law which was countersigned by
+the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. I have demonstrated this to
+the Tribunal by the example of the Prize Ordinance. That is to say
+that, even applying the legal standards of a democratic system, the
+Commander-in-Chief of the Navy cannot be designated as a member
+of the Reich Cabinet, because he lacked all authority of participation
+in legislative acts and every collective responsibility for policies
+assumed. His task was, and remained, a military one even though
+for reasons of etiquette he was put on an equal basis in rank with
+other Reich ministers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution themselves realized that a Reich Government in
+the constitutional sense no longer existed during the war, and consequently
+stated that the actual governing was carried out by those
+who participated in the situation conferences at the Führer’s headquarters.
+As all witnesses examined here stated, we are concerned
+here with events of a purely military nature, where incoming reports
+were presented, military measures discussed, and military orders
+issued. Questions of foreign policy were only very rarely touched
+upon if they had any connection with military problems; they were,
+however, never discussed and no decision was rendered on them in
+these Führer conferences on the situation. Internal policy and the
+security system were never on the agenda. Insofar as nonmilitary
+persons participated, they were attendants or listeners who gathered
+information for their respective departments.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Reichsführer SS or his deputy were present for the command
+of the Waffen-SS, and during the last year of war also for the
+Reserve Army. Admiral Dönitz always participated in these Führer
+conferences when he was at the Führer’s headquarters. Notes taken
+down by whoever accompanied him on all these meetings and discussions
+of the Commander-in-Chief are all in the possession of the
+Prosecution. As the Prosecution has not presented a single one of
+these notes from which it would appear that the Commander-in-Chief
+of the Navy participated in reporting on or in discussing and
+deciding affairs of a political nature, one can assume that such
+notes do not exist.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus the testimony of witnesses has been confirmed according to
+which the Führer conferences had nothing whatever to do with
+governing in a political sense, but were exclusively an instrument of
+the military leadership. Therefore, an over-all responsibility of
+<span class='pageno' title='362' id='Page_362'></span>
+Grossadmiral Dönitz for all events that occurred since 1943, which
+in the course of this Trial have been designated as criminal, certainly
+does not exist. Consequently, I shall deal only with those
+individual allegations by which the Prosecution tries directly to
+connect Admiral Dönitz with the conspiracy. I believe I am all the
+more justified to proceed in that manner, as a short time ago the
+Tribunal refused the cross-examination of witnesses in the Katyn
+case with the argument that no one was accusing Admiral Dönitz in
+connection with this case. I conclude, therefore, that at any rate in
+the eyes of the Tribunal he is only accused of such cases wherein he
+allegedly directly participated.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To begin with, this does not apply to the Führer’s order for the
+extermination of sabotage Commandos, dated 18 October 1942. The
+Prosecution has tried to establish that this order had been presented
+to Admiral Dönitz in detail, together with all possible objections,
+shortly after his assumption of the position of Commander-in-Chief
+of the Navy. It has failed to establish this assertion. In fact Dönitz,
+as he himself admits, did read or have presented to him the order
+in question in the autumn of 1942 in his capacity of Commander of
+U-boats, and in the same form in which the front-line commanders
+received it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I do not wish to speak here of the circumstances which led to
+objections against this order on the part of the High Command of
+the Armed Forces. Indeed, all these circumstances could not be
+discernible to one who received this order at the front. For such
+a man it was a matter of reprisal against saboteurs who seemed to
+be soldiers, but did not fight according to the regulations which are
+binding upon soldiers. Whether such reprisals were admissible at all
+according to the Geneva Convention, and to what extent, could not
+be judged by, nor did that come within the competence of, the
+recipient of the order. Every superior officer, at any rate, probably
+recognized that the order not to grant any pardon, and to hand over
+such persons in certain cases to the SD, was in itself an infringement
+of the rules of war. However, since the essence of any reprisal
+is to avenge a wrong on the part of the enemy with a wrong on
+one’s own part, this does not prove anything concerning the legitimacy
+or illegitimacy of the reprisal order. If no one but the
+leadership of the State is competent to order reprisals, then
+hundreds or thousands of German officers cannot be required today
+to have considered themselves also competent, and to have been
+presumptuous enough to verify orders whose actual and legal basis
+was entirely unknown to them. In this case the principle prevails,
+at least for the front-line commanders, that the subordinate may,
+when in doubt, rely on the order as given.<a id='r36'/><a href='#f36' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[36]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='363' id='Page_363'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, the Prosecution seems to be of the opinion that Admiral
+Dönitz a few months later, when he had become Commander-in-Chief
+of the Navy, had the opportunity and also the obligation to
+inform himself as to the basis of the Commando Order. This conception
+fails to appreciate the duties of a Commander-in-Chief of
+the Navy. He has to wage naval war. The whole German naval war,
+especially submarine warfare, in the spring of 1943, owing to huge
+losses inflicted by the enemy air force, was on the verge of collapse.
+These were the worries with which the new Commander-in-Chief
+had to cope, in addition to an abundance of new problems concerning
+the Navy which were coming up. How can one require such
+a man as in the quietest of times to cope with an order of remote
+date, which had nothing whatever to do with naval warfare? On the
+contrary, a special paragraph explicitly excluded prisoners taken
+during naval operations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A word or two on the channels of command. The naval units
+were under the control of the Naval Operations Staff only in those
+matters which belonged to the duties of the Navy, that is to say,
+naval warfare and coastal defense by artillery. Concerning so-called
+territorial questions they were not subordinate to the Naval Operations
+Staff but to the Armed Forces commander of the theater of
+war in which their basis was established. Orders concerning such
+measures of war on land were given without collaboration on the
+part of the Naval Operations Staff and their execution was not
+reported to them. Just as hardly anyone can think seriously of
+holding a general responsible for German submarine warfare, just
+as little, in my opinion, does it seem justified to hold an admiral
+responsible for orders given in land warfare.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Mr. President, I have come to the end of a section.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Certainly. We will break off.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal recessed until 1400 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<h2><span class='pageno' title='364' id='Page_364'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>FLOTTENRICHTER KRANZBÜHLER: Before the noon recess I
+was discussing the fact that units of the Navy were not subordinate
+to the Naval Operations Staff in matters affecting warfare on land.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This channel of orders for territorial questions also explains the
+complete ignorance of Admiral Dönitz and of his colleagues in the
+Naval Operations Staff about the delivery to the SD of the crew
+of the Norwegian motor torpedo boat <span class='it'>MTB 345</span> after its capture by
+units under Admiral Von Schrader. As the testimony of witnesses
+and the records of the Oslo War Crimes Court show, the Naval
+Operations Staff only received an operational report about the
+capture of the boat and the number of prisoners. All other details,
+the discovery on board of material for sabotage, of civilian suits and
+sabotage orders, and the treatment of the crew as saboteurs according
+to the Commando Order were regarded as territorial matters,
+and as such dealt with by Admiral Von Schrader and the Armed
+Forces commander in Norway. The decision regarding the fate of
+the crew came from the Führer’s headquarters in reply to an inquiry
+from Gauleiter Terboven. Not only is there no proof that the Naval
+Operations Staff took part in those territorial questions, but this
+must in fact be considered refuted on the basis of the evidence submitted
+and the chain of command as explained.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I regard as the second attempt of the Prosecution to establish a
+participation in the alleged conspiracy to commit war crimes the
+submission of Admiral Wagner’s minutes on the question of withdrawal
+from the Geneva Convention in the spring of 1945. The
+details are contained in Wagner’s testimony, according to which the
+Führer pointed out in a conference on 17 February that the enemy
+propaganda about the good treatment of prisoners of war was
+clearly having an influence on the units fighting on the Western
+Front, and that many cases of desertion to the enemy were being
+reported. He ordered that the question of a withdrawal from the
+Geneva Convention be investigated. In this way he wanted to
+convince his own soldiers that they could no longer rely upon
+receiving good treatment as prisoners of war, and thus create a
+countereffect against enemy propaganda. Two days later Hitler
+returned to this idea, although he then put forward another reason
+as the main one. He termed enemy warfare in the East and the
+bomb attacks on the German civilian population an outright
+renunciation of international law by the enemy, and he, for his part,
+also desired to free himself from all obligations by withdrawing
+from the Geneva Convention. Once more he asked for the opinion
+of the Armed Forces in this matter and addressed himself directly
+<span class='pageno' title='365' id='Page_365'></span>
+to Grossadmiral Dönitz, who did not answer. The attitude of the
+military leaders on this matter was unanimously negative.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the next day, just before the daily conference on the situation,
+a 10-minute conversation took place between Grossadmiral Dönitz,
+Generaloberst Jodl, and Ambassador Hewel; in the course of this
+conversation Dönitz expressed his negative attitude. According to
+the notes of Admiral Wagner he said that “it would be better to
+take the measures considered necessary without previous announcement
+and, at any rate, to save face before the world.” The Prosecution
+sees in this a readiness and a design to expose hundreds of
+thousands of Allied prisoners of war to arbitrary murder.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Admiral Dönitz himself has no recollection of this sentence. That
+is not surprising, as this is not a record, but a summary of a lengthy
+conversation in four sentences, the summary being worded on the
+day after the conversation by Admiral Wagner. This summary
+admits that the Grossadmiral disapproved of any “wild measures”
+which would put us in the wrong from the beginning, and considered
+justifiable only measures actually warranted by the conduct
+of the enemy in each case. Since Wagner himself, as the author of
+the transcript, should know best what he meant thereby, I personally
+cannot add anything to this statement. The interpretation
+of the Prosecution is equally little supported by other circumstances.
+There was no question at all of keeping any measures secret; they
+had to be made known, regardless of whether they were meant to
+deter our own deserters or as reprisals. But Wagner’s note does not
+mention any kind of concrete measures to be taken, and all witnesses
+present at this situation conference in Hitler’s headquarters
+state that not a word was spoken on that subject. The idea of killing
+prisoners of war could not, therefore, have been present in the
+minds of any of the participants in this discussion which Wagner
+noted down.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now it has come to light here, through the statements of the
+Defendants Ribbentrop and Fritzsche, that apart from the action for
+which he was preparing the ground during the discussion with the
+generals, Hitler had evidently at the same time planned a second
+action, in which only Goebbels and Himmler were to participate,
+and which by chance also came to Ribbentrop’s knowledge. In this
+action the shooting of thousands of prisoners of war seems to have
+been contemplated as a reprisal against the air attack on Dresden.
+Hitler, very wisely, did not give the slightest indication of such a
+plan to the generals. This plan was not followed up and no reprisals
+were taken.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And now I return to the facts. It is a fact that Admiral Dönitz
+disapproved of the withdrawal from the Geneva Convention, and
+that Hitler, in view of the attitude of all military leaders who
+<span class='pageno' title='366' id='Page_366'></span>
+clearly opposed it did not follow up the idea any further. It is also
+a fact that no measures in violation of international law were taken
+by the Germans as a result of this remark which the Prosecution
+has criticized, and finally it is a fact that enemy sailors who were
+captured were sent to a prisoner-of-war camp of the Navy where
+they were treated in an exemplary way up to the last day of the war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Whoever, in his own sphere, behaved as Admiral Dönitz did with
+regard to the prisoners of war of the Navy, cannot reasonably be
+charged with having thrown overboard all standards of law and
+ethics applying to prisoners of war. A British commander has
+certified that when the prisoner-of-war camp of the Navy was taken
+over by British troops, all prisoners without exception said that they
+had been treated with fairness and consideration. The Tribunal will,
+no doubt, appreciate such unanimous expression of views, especially
+after what has come to light elsewhere in these proceedings with
+regard to the breakdown not only by Germans in the proper treatment
+of prisoners of war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall now deal with the conspiracy to commit Crimes against
+Humanity, and I should like first of all to point out that Admiral
+Dönitz is not accused, under Count Four of the Indictment, of
+direct commission of Crimes against Humanity. Not even participation
+in the conspiracy to commit Crimes Against Humanity was
+contended in the detailed charges. That, I would say, is an admission
+that there was in fact no relation, between his activity and the
+Crimes against Humanity of which the Prosecution has brought
+evidence. Nevertheless the Prosecution presented some documents
+which are apparently meant to prove his participation in the
+responsibility for certain Crimes against Humanity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In judging these documents the most important question always
+is: What did Admiral Dönitz know of those alleged crimes? On this
+subject I should like to make one point clear. During the entire war
+he resided and lived at his staff headquarters, first on the North
+Sea coast, after 1940 in France, in 1943 for a short time in Berlin,
+and then in the Camp Koralle near Berlin. When he was at the
+Führer’s headquarters, he stayed with the naval staff there. Even
+outside his duty, his time was thus spent almost exclusively with
+naval officers. This may have been a weakness, but it is a fact
+which gives an additional explanation of his lack of knowledge of
+many events.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact that the defendant forwarded a proposal by the Ministry
+for Armaments to employ 12,000 men from concentration camps as
+workers in the shipyards proves, according to the Prosecution, that
+Admiral Dönitz knew and approved of the arrest of countless innocent
+people and their ill-treatment and extermination in concentration
+camps.
+<span class='pageno' title='367' id='Page_367'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>He actually knew, of course, that concentration camps existed
+and he also knew that, apart from the professional criminals, people
+arrested for political reasons were kept there. As has already been
+explained here, the protective custody of political adversaries for
+reasons of safety is a measure adopted by all states, at any rate in
+an emergency, and knowledge of such a measure can therefore
+incriminate no one. However, an unusually high number of political
+prisoners—out of proportion to the number of the population—may
+stamp a regime as a regime of terror, but taking into account a
+population of 80 million in the fifth year of a grim war, even twice
+or three times the number of 12,000 men, which is the number
+mentioned by Admiral Dönitz, would not indicate a regime of terror,
+and the Prosecution will hardly claim that.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Admiral Dönitz stated here that the Commander-in-Chief of the
+Navy, as well as his collaborators and the overwhelming part of the
+German people, did not know of the abuses and killings that
+occurred in the concentration camps. All that the Prosecution has
+put forward against this are assumptions, but no proofs.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On this point, therefore, I will only refer to the statement of the
+then Minister for Armaments, Speer, according to which the inmates
+of concentration camps were much better off in industrial work than
+in camp, and that they tried with all means to obtain employment
+in such work. The proposal forwarded therefore did not imply
+anything inhuman, but rather the opposite.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same request also contains a suggestion to take energetic
+measures against sabotage in Norwegian and Danish shipyards,
+where seven out of eight vessels under construction had been
+destroyed. If need be, the personnel should be entirely or in part
+employed as “KZ workers” because, so it says, sabotage of such
+dimensions can only occur if all the workers silently condone it. This
+therefore amounts to a proposition for security measures to consist
+in keeping the workers who actively or passively participated in
+sabotage in a camp close to the shipyard, so that their connections
+with sabotage agents would be cut off. I do not believe that juridical
+objections can be raised against such measures of security. According
+to the practice of all occupation troops even measures of
+collective punishment would be justified in such cases.<a id='r37'/><a href='#f37' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[37]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Actually the measures proposed were never carried out and the
+Prosecution presumably presents them only to accuse Admiral
+Dönitz quite generally of a brutal attitude toward the inhabitants
+of occupied territories. For this same purpose it even refers to a
+statement of the Führer at a conference on the military situation
+in the summer of 1944, according to which terror in Denmark must
+<span class='pageno' title='368' id='Page_368'></span>
+be fought with counterterror. Admiral Dönitz’s only connection
+with this statement was that he heard it and that his companion,
+Admiral Wagner, wrote it down. The Navy had no part in this statement,
+nor did it take any measures as a result of it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In contrast to this line of evidence of the Prosecution, I should
+like to emphasize the attitude which Admiral Dönitz actually showed
+toward the population of the occupied territories. There is before
+the Tribunal a survey of the administration of justice by the naval
+courts in protecting the inhabitants of the occupied territories
+against excesses by members of the Navy. The survey is based on
+an examination of about 2,000 files on delicts and some of the judgments
+given are quoted with the facts and the reasons of the verdicts.
+Judging from that survey, one can fairly say that the naval
+courts protected the inhabitants in the West and in the East with
+justice and severity, including their lives as well as their property
+and the honor of their women. This administration of justice was
+constantly supervised by the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy as
+the Chief Court Administrator. Under terms of legal procedure it
+was his duty to confirm death penalties imposed on German soldiers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The time at my disposal does not permit a more detailed discussion
+of some of these judgments. A phrase expressed in one of
+them may be taken to apply to all: All soldiers must know that in
+occupied territory as well the life and property of others will be
+fully safeguarded. This was the general attitude in the Navy, and
+the severity of the penalties inflicted proves how seriously it was
+taken.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I need only say a few words about the order issued in the spring
+of 1945, in which a German prisoner of war, a noncommissioned
+officer, was cited as an example, because he had unobtrusively and
+systematically done away with some Communists who were attracting
+attention to themselves in their prison camp. As Admiral Wagner
+recalled, it was actually an informer who was liquidated. But
+the facts were camouflaged as described in order to avoid giving
+enemy intelligence a clue to the camp and the person of the noncommissioned
+officer. There cannot be any doubt that this order in
+its true background could be justified in view of the enormous number
+of political murders which have been committed with the
+connivance or assistance of governments engaged in the war, the
+perpetrators being today extolled as heroes. I cannot, however,
+consider as serious the argument that the unfortunately camouflaged
+wording could be proof of a general plan to liquidate Communists.
+A court judgment for the protection of Communists will reveal the
+true circumstances. A sergeant had stolen hospital blankets which
+were intended for Soviet prisoners of war and had extracted a dead
+prisoner’s gold teeth. This sergeant was sentenced to death by a
+<span class='pageno' title='369' id='Page_369'></span>
+naval court and executed after the sentence had been confirmed by
+the Commander-in-Chief.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally, the Prosecution also established a connection with the
+Jewish question through a remark in which Grossadmiral Dönitz
+speaks of the “creeping poison of Jewry.” On this point I should
+like to add some comments. Dönitz knew as little of the plan for the
+destruction of the Jews as he did of its execution. He did know of
+the resettlement in the Government General of Jews living in Germany.
+I do not think that a resettlement of this sort can be condemned
+at a time when expulsions of Germans on a much larger
+scale are taking place before the eyes of a silent world. Here, too,
+I refer to a sentence of long penitentiary terms against two German
+sailors who, together with some Frenchmen, had robbed French
+Jews. From the findings of the court I again quote a sentence which
+characterizes the general attitude: “That the crimes were committed
+against Jews does not excuse the defendants in any way.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Similarly, it seems to me that the efforts of the Prosecution to
+include Admiral Dönitz in its construction of the conspiracy by
+terming him a fanatical Nazi have failed. He was neither a member
+of the Party nor was he ever politically prominent before his
+appointment as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. The assertion of
+the Prosecution that he became Commander-in-Chief of the Navy
+because of his political attitude lacks all foundation. As a professional
+officer, to whom every political activity was forbidden by the
+Reich Defense Law, he had no reason for dealing with National
+Socialism in any way. However, he, too, like millions of other Germans,
+recognized the unique success of Hitler’s leadership in social
+and economic fields and, of course, also the liberation from the
+obligations of Versailles which Hitler had brought about and which
+particularly concerned Admiral Dönitz as a soldier. Therefore, at
+the time of his appointment as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, he
+was politically in no way active, although loyal to the National
+Socialist State.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This appointment introduced two new elements into his relations
+with National Socialism. There was first of all his personal contact
+with Adolf Hitler. Like almost everyone else who had personal
+dealings with this man, he too was most deeply impressed by him.
+The respect for the head of the State and loyalty to the Supreme
+Commander inherent in the professional officer were complemented
+by admiration for the statesman and strategist. It is difficult fully
+to appreciate such an attitude in view of the information which has
+come to light in the course of this Trial. I feel neither called upon
+nor able to judge a personality like Adolf Hitler. But one thing
+seems to me certain, namely, that with a consummate art of camouflage
+he skillfully concealed the repulsive traits of his character from
+<span class='pageno' title='370' id='Page_370'></span>
+those of his collaborators to whom he did not dare reveal this part of
+his nature. The Hitler with whom the new Commander-in-Chief of
+the Navy became acquainted at that time, and whom he admired,
+was therefore an entirely different man from the one which the
+world—rightly or wrongly—pictures today.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The second new element in the relations between Grossadmiral
+Dönitz and National Socialism was that in the performance of his
+military duties he necessarily came into contact with the political
+authorities of the Reich. Whether he needed more men, more ships,
+or more arms, in the end he always had to discuss these matters
+with the political authorities, and in order to be successful in his
+demands, he had to make sure that any political mistrust was
+eliminated from the very start. This he deliberately did, and he
+demanded the same of his subordinates. To him the Party was not
+an ideological factor, but rather the actual exponent of political
+power. He was linked with it in the common aim to win the war,
+and for the achievement of this aim he considered it his ally. But
+to obtain the advantages which one expects of an ally, one must be
+willing to make certain sacrifices, especially sacrifices in overlooking
+faults and in ignoring conflicting issues.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>However, his connection with the Führer and his contact with
+the Party, which were concomitants of his position and of his duties
+as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, never led him to participate
+in anything for which he could not assume responsibility before his
+conscience. Some points of the Prosecution even go to prove this.
+The Führer demanded action against shipwrecked crews; Admiral
+Dönitz rejected it. The Führer asked for withdrawal from the
+Geneva Convention; Admiral Dönitz rejected it. He stubbornly and
+successfully resisted the Party’s influence upon the Armed Forces.
+Thanks to his resistance the National Socialist Führungsoffiziere did
+not become political commissars, but were, as genuine officers,
+merely advisers to their commander, who retained the sole responsibility
+for the leadership of his unit. The transfer of proceedings
+against soldiers on political grounds from the military courts to the
+People’s Courts, which had been advocated by the Party, was prevented
+by Grossadmiral Dönitz until the winter of 1944-45, and a
+Führer order to this effect issued at that time was never carried
+out in the Navy. Thus he never identified himself with the Party
+and can therefore surely not be held responsible for its ideological
+endeavors or its excesses, just as in foreign politics a government
+would not be ready to assume responsibility for such things if they
+had been done by an ally.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I do not by any means want to give the impression that Admiral
+Dönitz was not a National Socialist. On the contrary, I just want to
+use him as an example to disprove the theory that every National
+<span class='pageno' title='371' id='Page_371'></span>
+Socialist as such must be a criminal. This Tribunal is the sole
+instance in which authoritative personalities of the great Allied
+Powers are dealing directly and in detail with the last 12 years
+of the German past. It is, therefore, the only hope of very many
+Germans for the removal of a fatal error which is causing the
+weaker elements of our nation to become hypocrites and is thus
+proving a decisive obstacle on the road to political recovery.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And now I should like to deal with the charge that in February
+1945 Admiral Dönitz protracted the inevitable surrender out of
+political fanaticism, and I wish to do so for a particular reason.
+This charge, which seems hardly to have anything to do with the
+Indictment before an International Tribunal, weighs particularly
+heavily in the eyes of the German people, for this nation truly knows
+what destruction and losses it endured in those last months from
+February until May 1945. I have submitted declarations of Darlan,
+Chamberlain, and Churchill from the year 1940 in which those
+statesmen, in a critical hour for their countries, called for desperate
+resistance, for the defense of every village and of every house.
+Nobody will conclude from this that these men were fanatical
+National Socialists. The question of unconditional surrender is
+indeed of such colossal import to a nation, that in fact it is not
+possible until after the event to judge whether a statesman who
+had to face this question did or did not do the right thing. Admiral
+Dönitz, however, was not a statesman in February 1945, but the
+Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. Should he have asked his subordinates
+to lay down their arms at a time when the political
+authority of the State still considered military resistance as opportune
+and necessary? Nobody will seriously demand that.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Much more difficult seems to me the question of whether, in
+view of the high esteem Hitler had for him, he should not have
+considered it his duty to point out clearly to Hitler the hopelessness
+of prolonged resistance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Personally, I would have affirmed this to be his duty toward
+his nation, if Admiral Dönitz himself at that time had considered
+that surrender was justified. He did not consider it justified, and
+he gave his reasons: Surrender implied a halt of the armies and of
+the population; the German Army on the Eastern Front—still
+numbering more than 2 million men in February 1945—and the
+entire civilian population of the German eastern provinces would
+thereby have fallen into the hands of the Soviet armies, and in a
+bitterly cold winter month, too. Admiral Dönitz, therefore, was of
+the opinion, shared by Generaloberst Jodl, that the losses in men
+suffered in that way would be far greater than the losses which
+would necessarily be caused if the capitulation were postponed
+until the warmer season. Only in future years, when more exact
+<span class='pageno' title='372' id='Page_372'></span>
+data regarding casualties of the Army and of the civilian population
+both before and after the surrender in the East and in the
+West are available, will it be possible to view this opinion objectively.
+But it may already be said today that such considerations
+arose entirely from a full sense of responsibility for the life of
+German men and women.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same sense of responsibility caused him, when he became
+head of the State on 1 May 1945, to cease hostilities against the
+West, but to protract the surrender in the East for a few days, days
+in which hundreds of thousands were able to escape to the West.
+From the moment when—to his own complete surprise—he was
+given a political task, he calmly and intelligently averted a threatening
+chaos, prevented desperate mass action without a leader, and
+assumed responsibility before the German people for the gravest
+action which any statesman can take at all.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus, to revert to the beginning of the Indictment, he did
+nothing to start this war, but he took the decisive steps to end it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Since that moment the German nation has learned of many
+things which it did not expect, and more than once it has been
+referred to the unconditional surrender which the last head of the
+State carried through. It is for this Tribunal to decide whether in
+the future this nation will be reminded of the binding value of
+the signature of a man who is being outlawed as a criminal before
+the whole world by his partners in the agreement.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At the beginning of my speech I mentioned the doubts which
+any trial of war criminals is bound to call forth in the mind and
+heart of any lawyer. They must weigh upon all who bear any
+responsibility in such a trial. I could not more fittingly describe the
+task of all the responsible persons than in the words of a British
+attorney speaking of the trials before the German Supreme Court
+in the year 1921. I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The war criminals’ trials were demanded by an angry public
+rather than by statesmen or the fighting services. Had public
+opinion in 1919 had its way, the trials might have presented
+a grim spectacle, of which future generations would have been
+ashamed. But thanks to the statesmen and the lawyers, a
+public yearning for revenge was converted into a real demonstration
+of the majesty of right and the power of law.”<a id='r38'/><a href='#f38' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[38]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May the verdict of this Tribunal stand in a similar way before
+the judgment of history.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Siemers for the Defendant Raeder.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. WALTER SIEMERS (Counsel for Defendant Raeder): Gentlemen
+of the Tribunal, in my final speech for the Defendant
+<span class='pageno' title='373' id='Page_373'></span>
+Grossadmiral Dr. Raeder, I should like to keep to the order I chose
+for my document books and for the whole presentation of my
+evidence. I think a survey of the whole case will thus be made easier.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Raeder, who has just turned 70 years of age, has been exclusively
+a soldier, body and soul, ever since the age of 18, that is to
+say, for nigh on half a century covering an eventful period.
+Although he was never concerned with anything but his duties as a
+soldier, the Prosecution has accused him, in this great Trial against
+National Socialism, not only as a soldier, namely, as Commander-in-Chief
+of the German Navy, but, a singular and decisive point, as
+a politician, as a political conspirator, and as a member of the
+Government, three things which in truth he never was.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I am, therefore, faced with the singular task of defending Raeder
+as a politician, although it was precisely, as I shall demonstrate, his
+life principle as an officer to keep aloof from politics, and to command
+an officers’ corps and a Navy likewise committed to remain
+entirely free from politics.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the Prosecution levels such manifold and grave accusations
+against Raeder, this is primarily because it has conceived a notion
+entirely foreign to the German Armed Forces, namely the notion
+of an admiral being responsible for foreign policy and for the
+outbreak of a war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall disprove this conception and show that it was unjustified
+and unfounded even in Hitler’s National Socialist State. True, Hitler
+again and again placed politics in the forefront of the nation and
+endeavored to give the nation a one-track political education.
+Foreign countries knew this, and they may well therefore be all
+the more surprised by the fact that Hitler refrained from such
+political shaping in one single instance. Every administration, every
+organization, and every police institution was directed by Hitler on
+political principles, with the single exception of the Armed Forces.
+The Armed Forces, and the Navy in particular, remained for a long
+time and far into the war absolutely unpolitical. And not only did
+Hitler give Raeder an assurance to this effect, but he had also given
+the same assurance to Hindenburg as Reich President. This explains
+the fact, which has also been made clear in this Trial, that up to
+1944 no officer could be a member of the Party, and if he was, then
+his membership was suspended.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>After these preliminary reflections it will be understood why
+Raeder, as his interrogation showed, was disconcerted and amazed
+at these accusations which amount to a political charge. A man
+who is nothing but a soldier cannot understand why he should
+suddenly and without any relation to his military duties be made
+responsible for things which at no time came within the compass
+of his activity.
+<span class='pageno' title='374' id='Page_374'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall naturally also discuss the military accusations, with the
+exception of submarine warfare, which, for the sake of uniformity,
+has already been dealt with by Dr. Kranzbühler on behalf of
+Raeder, too.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It will be seen from other military accusations, as for instance
+in the cases of Norway and Greece, that again and again there
+arises this discrepancy between the political and the military
+aspects: Raeder acted as Commander-in-Chief on the basis of
+military considerations, whereas the Prosecution now calls him to
+account on the basis of political considerations, by evaluating the
+military actions as political ones.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The first instance of this discrepancy already lies in the accusations
+raised against Raeder with regard to the period before 1933,
+that is, before National Socialism. In connection with these accusations
+it must not be overlooked that Hitler, the head of the alleged
+conspiracy for the waging of wars of aggression, did not rule Germany
+at that time, and yet already at that time there is supposed
+to have existed a common conspiracy between Hitler and a part
+of the defendants.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This is all the more surprising because Raeder, as a naval officer
+and after 1928 as Chief of the Naval High Command, at that time
+had nothing, absolutely nothing at all, to do with National Socialism,
+and did not even know Hitler and his co-workers in the Party. The
+accusations concerning the violations of the Versailles Treaty are
+included by the Prosecution in the conspiracy, although the violations
+did not take place under Hitler’s leadership, but under the
+leadership or with the approval of the democratic governments in
+Germany at the time. This shows that the Prosecution does not
+only want to attack National Socialism through this Trial, as has
+been emphasized again and again during the war and after the
+collapse, but that the Indictment extends its scope to large circles
+in Germany which had nothing to do with National Socialism, some
+of whom were even direct enemies of National Socialism.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) For this very reason it seemed to me extremely important to
+clear up the question of the violation of the Treaty of Versailles
+in the course of the presentation of evidence in the Raeder case.
+I have endeavored to do so with the approval of the Tribunal, and
+I am firmly convinced that I have succeeded. I need not discuss
+each of the violations, which have been treated in detail and which
+the Prosecution has produced in Document C-32. It should be sufficient
+if I refer to the extensive evidence as well as to the following
+facts:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Every single point was either a mere trifle or else a military
+measure—such as for example the antiaircraft batteries—based
+exclusively on the notion of defense. Raeder has plainly admitted
+<span class='pageno' title='375' id='Page_375'></span>
+that treaty infractions did occur, but the trivial nature of the
+infractions showed that these measures could not possibly have been
+connected with an intention to wage wars of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, I need only point out that from the legal point of
+view a treaty violation cannot <span class='it'>ipso jure</span> be a crime. Certainly the
+violation of a treaty between nations is no more permissible than
+the violation of a contract between private firms in commercial law.
+Such a violation is, however, not a punishable action, much less a
+crime. Even on the basis of the argument of the Prosecution, such
+action would be punishable only if the violation had been undertaken
+with criminal intent, that is, if it had been aimed at a war
+of aggression in contradiction to the Kellogg Pact. However, not
+even the Prosecution will be able to maintain this, and it has
+already indirectly intimated as much by refraining from taking up
+these points during the cross-examination of witnesses.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) The position is somewhat different with regard to a charge
+which the Prosecution discussed in detail only during cross-examination,
+namely, the charge concerning the participation of the German
+Navy in U-boat constructions in Holland; in this connection the
+Prosecution has relied upon Document C-156, the book by Kapitän
+zur See Schüssler entitled, <span class='it'>Der Kampf der Marine gegen Versailles</span>,
+as well as on statements contained in the notes of the naval historian,
+Admiral Assmann, found in Document D-854.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These documents prove that the German Navy had a share in
+a U-boat designing office in Holland, the firm N. V. Ingenieurskantoor
+voor Scheepsbouw. This participation occurred during the
+period before the Navy was under Raeder’s command. The Tribunal
+will recall that Raeder did not become Chief of the Naval Command
+until 1 October 1928, whereas participation in the designing office
+in Holland dates back to 1923 and the following years.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May I emphasize, however, that in not a single instance was a
+U-boat built for the German Navy, and that consequently no
+U-boats were obtained or put into commission by the German Navy.
+In this connection I refer to the Versailles Treaty, Exhibit Number
+Raeder-1; Article 188 <span class='it'>et sequentes</span> of the Treaty of Versailles contain
+the terms with regard to the Navy. According to Article 188,
+Germany was bound to deliver her U-boats to the Allied nations or
+to dismantle them. This obligation Germany fulfilled completely.
+Moreover, Article 191 stipulates the following; I quote: “The construction
+and purchase of all submarine vessels, even for commercial
+purposes, is forbidden in Germany.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It appears from this clear treaty clause that participation in
+the Dutch firm was not a violation of the Treaty of Versailles.
+<span class='pageno' title='376' id='Page_376'></span>
+According to Article 191, Germany was only forbidden to construct
+or purchase U-boats, moreover, strictly speaking, only in Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As a matter of fact, no U-boat was built in Germany in violation
+of the Treaty, and no U-boat was built for Germany abroad
+either. Participation in a foreign designing office was not forbidden,
+nor was this the purpose of the Treaty of Versailles. The point was
+merely that Germany should not create a U-boat force for herself.
+The Navy, however, was permitted to participate in a designing
+office so as to keep abreast of modern submarine construction, to
+gather information for the future, and to lay the foundation for an
+eventual construction of submarines, when permitted, by training
+technical experts (See Exhibit Number Raeder-2, Lohmann Affidavit).
+The afore-mentioned documents, submitted by the Prosecution,
+prove that the submarines designed by the Dutch firm and
+built abroad were put into service abroad, namely by Turkey and
+Finland.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Even if one were to take the view that designing work also was
+prohibited, then what was said under Figure (1) also applies. The
+designing was limited to only a few submarines, so that this small
+number in itself proves that there cannot have been any intention
+of waging wars of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) In case the High Tribunal should be unable to follow this
+train of thought as a sole argument, I may point out in addition
+that the lack of an aggressive intention is also evident from the
+fact that the trivial violations of the treaty were in a certain way
+compensated. I refer to the second affidavit of Admiral Lohmann,
+Exhibit Number Raeder-8, which shows that according to the Treaty
+of Versailles Germany was allowed to build 8 armored ships,
+whereas in fact she only built 3; it shows also that instead of 8
+cruisers only 6 were built up to 1935, and that instead of 32 destroyers
+or torpedo boats, only 12 destroyers and no torpedo boats
+were built. In fact, with regard to the really important weapons,
+and especially those which may be considered as offensive weapons,
+the Navy kept far below the maximum permitted by the Treaty
+of Versailles, and this indeed to such an extent that by comparison
+the trivial violations in naval matters hardly count.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(4) According to the Weimar Constitution of 11 August 1919,
+Articles 47 and 50 (Exhibit Number Raeder-3), the President of the
+Reich had supreme command of all the Armed Forces. In order to
+be valid, the decrees of the Reich President required the countersignature
+of the Reich Chancellor or the Reich ministers concerned,
+in this case, the Minister of Defense. I quote: “Responsibility is
+assumed through the countersignature.” Thus, from the point of
+view of constitutional law it is absolutely clear that the responsibility
+rests with the Minister of Defense or the Reich Government
+<span class='pageno' title='377' id='Page_377'></span>
+and the President of the Reich. It is, of course, true that before
+1928, that is, before Raeder became the responsible Chief of the
+Naval Command, the Navy took a number of measures without the
+knowledge of the Reich Cabinet. But the evidence which I presented,
+especially the statement of the former Reich Minister Severing,
+shows that, contrary to the statements of the Prosecution, no secret
+measures were taken after Raeder became Chief of the Naval High
+Command. Severing has confirmed that the Müller-Stresemann-Severing
+Cabinet, in a Cabinet meeting of 18 October 1928, obtained
+a clear picture of the secret measures of the Armed Forces by
+interrogating Raeder as Chief of the Naval High Command and
+Heye as Chief of the Army Command.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Both Raeder and Heye, after they had given an explanation,
+were obliged and directed by the Cabinet, in conformity with the
+afore-mentioned paragraphs of the Reich Constitution, to take no
+future measures without the knowledge of the Minister of Defense
+or the Cabinet. At the same time the Cabinet established that the
+secret measures taken before Raeder’s time were only trifling
+matters, and expressly assumed responsibility for them. If the
+Cabinet, in conformity with the Constitution, assumed the responsibility,
+this amounted to a legally and constitutionally effective
+procedure which exonerated Raeder as Chief of the Naval High
+Command and relieved him of responsibility. It appears, therefore,
+to be inadmissible that the defendant, who no longer bears the
+responsibility, should be made responsible for actions for which
+the Cabinet assumed responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The attitude of the Cabinet in the Cabinet meeting of 18 October
+1928 further shows that none of these actions can have had as
+their basis any criminal intent to wage a war of aggression, for
+even the Prosecution will not desire to assert that men like Stresemann,
+Müller, and Severing intended to wage wars of aggression,
+but instead will have to believe Severing when he says that Stresemann,
+Müller, and he himself assumed responsibility for these violations
+only because they were based purely on conceptions of
+defense. One will also have to believe Severing’s words that such
+conceptions of defense were justified, since in the twenties the
+danger that Germany might be attacked, for instance by Poland,
+was quite real, and she would then not have been in a position to
+defend herself with the small Armed Forces allowed her by the
+Versailles Treaty. This danger was particularly evident in connection
+with Polish border incidents in East Prussia and Silesia and
+during the occupation of Vilna, and it even increased when all
+attempts of Stresemann and Müller failed to achieve adherence to
+the promise to disarm which the other powers had given in the
+Versailles Treaty.
+<span class='pageno' title='378' id='Page_378'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>How difficult Germany’s position was and how justified measures
+of defense were, Justice Jackson himself admitted in his opening
+speech, when he said, I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is quite possible that Germany in the twenties and thirties
+was confronted with desperately difficult tasks, tasks
+which would have justified the boldest measures, but not war.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall not even go as far as Mr. Justice Jackson, but I believe
+that these measures taken by the Navy are certainly covered by
+his own concept of “boldest measures.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The British prosecutor, Mr. Elwyn Jones, attempted during the
+cross-examination of Severing to prove that Raeder did not observe
+the obligations imposed on him in the Cabinet meeting of 18 October
+1928, because Severing, according to his testimony, was not
+informed of the construction abroad of the small submarines for
+Turkey and Finland. In this connection, two things must be considered:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>a. During his testimony Severing did not remember the details,
+but only the fundamental and decisive questions; with regard to
+the details, he naturally relied on the competent minister, in this
+case, the Reich Defense Minister.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>b. According to Severing’s testimony it was an exception that
+the Chief of the Naval High Command appeared before the entire
+Cabinet on 18 October 1928. Raeder as Chief of the Naval High
+Command was not obliged to inform all the members of the
+Cabinet, but was, in accordance with the Constitution, merely
+obliged to inform the Reich Defense Minister, and that Raeder did.
+What the Reich Defense Minister then for his part submitted to the
+other members of the Cabinet and to the Reichstag was not only
+beyond Raeder’s knowledge, it was also outside Raeder’s responsibility,
+and solely within that of the Reich Defense Minister and
+the Cabinet.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In conclusion may I point out the following: If, despite all this,
+the Prosecution wishes to look upon these violations of the Treaty
+of Versailles on the part of the Navy as evidence of an intention
+to wage a war of aggression, then the Social Democrat or Democrat
+governments of that time bear the responsibility. Thereby the
+Indictment on this point collapses, for to take the governments of
+that time to task for the intention of waging wars of aggression
+would lead the Prosecution on this point to an <span class='it'>ad absurdum</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(5) The treaty violations during the period from 1933 until the
+Anglo-German Naval Agreement of 1935 show the same factual and
+juridical picture. During these 2 years no important expansion of
+naval armament took place either. The only disputable accusation
+made by the Prosecution in this respect is contained in Document
+D-855, which was submitted during cross-examination. This is the
+<span class='pageno' title='379' id='Page_379'></span>
+report of Flottenintendant Thiele. According to this it was decided
+in March 1935, that is, a few months before the naval agreement,
+to prepare plans for the <span class='it'>Scharnhorst</span> and the <span class='it'>Gneisenau</span> with a
+displacement of 27,000 tons, although the maximum of 10,000 tons
+fixed by the Treaty of Versailles was still formally in force at that
+time for another 3 months, in contrast to a maximum displacement
+of 35,000 tons provided for in the Naval Agreement of 1935.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Here it should be taken into consideration that in March 1935
+Germany could already count on the speedy conclusion of an Anglo-German
+agreement, whereas the period between the planning and
+the completion of a battleship is a much longer one, which cannot
+be counted in months, but only in years. As a matter of fact, the
+<span class='it'>Scharnhorst</span> and <span class='it'>Gneisenau</span> were only commissioned in 1938 and
+1939, 3 and 4 years respectively after the naval pact (see Exhibit
+Number Raeder-2, Lohmann Affidavit).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The other matters submitted by the Prosecution are again trifles;
+for instance, the selection (not the construction, as the Prosecution
+says) of four or five merchantmen (see C-166), or the construction
+of 5 E-boats of 40 tons each (see C-151), which for technical reasons
+were built in place of 12 torpedo boats of 200 tons each. The
+Prosecution cannot in all seriousness turn these facts into grave
+accusations, especially as the afore-mentioned deviations from the
+Versailles Treaty were known to foreign technical specialists or—as
+the witness Schulte-Mönting correctly put it—were an “open secret.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(6) And now I come to the decisive juridical aspect of all developments
+up to the summer of 1935. In the field of international law
+the same principle applies as in the field of internal commercial
+law: Breaches of agreement are considered adjusted and settled with
+the signing of a new agreement. In the present case the Anglo-German
+Naval Treaty of 18 June 1935—Exhibit Number Raeder-11—represents
+the new agreement. This naval agreement deviates
+completely from the Versailles Treaty both with regard to high-tonnage
+vessels and with regard to U-boats. It is only on the basis
+of what is permitted Germany by this new agreement that the
+insignificance of earlier violations of the Versailles Treaty, not at
+the time covered by existing agreements, becomes apparent.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>10,000-ton cruisers were replaced by 35,000-ton battleships, and
+the ban on the construction of U-boats was replaced by the acknowledgement
+of equal rights with regard to U-boat tonnage. Germany’s
+demands were not unreasonable; on the contrary, in the
+document mentioned, His Majesty’s Government in the United
+Kingdom explicitly confirmed the German proposal to be “... an
+exceedingly important contribution to future limitation of naval
+armaments.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This agreement between Britain and Germany concluded the
+debate on the Versailles Treaty both factually and juridically, as far
+<span class='pageno' title='380' id='Page_380'></span>
+as the Navy is concerned. This naval agreement was generally welcomed
+in Britain and Germany at that time, and it was supplemented
+by a new agreement on 17 June 1937 (see Exhibit Number
+Raeder-14). As proof of the fact that the Navy violated the naval
+agreement, too, with aggressive intentions, the Prosecution has
+raised two charges:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) In the Agreement of 1937 both contracting governments were
+bound to a mutual exchange of information, which was to take place
+annually, within the first 4 months of every calendar year, and
+was to contain details of the building program. According to Document
+C-23, the Navy violated this obligation insofar as it gave
+lower figures for the displacement and the draught of the battleships
+<span class='it'>Bismarck</span> and <span class='it'>Tirpitz</span> which were being built at the beginning of
+1938, namely, as 35,000 tons instead of 41,700 tons. That this violation
+of the treaty did occur is openly admitted by Raeder, but again
+it is not such a serious violation as the Prosecution contends, that
+is, it is not a violation which shows proof of criminal intent. That
+is clear from the detailed evidence I have presented and from the
+testimonies of witnesses which I need not repeat here; it will be
+sufficient if I refer to the absolutely convincing expert testimony
+of the ship-building director, Dr. Süchting, which I have submitted
+as Exhibit Number Raeder-15. According to this, the increase in
+tonnage demanded by the Navy during the construction served a
+purely defensive idea, namely, that of increasing the armor plating
+of the battleships and of arranging the bulkheads in such a way
+that the battleships would be virtually unsinkable. This defensive
+idea, Dr. Süchting emphasizes, actually proved to be correct during
+the attack on and sinking of the battleship <span class='it'>Bismarck</span>. If it was only
+a question of a defensive idea, no aggressive intentions can be construed
+from this treaty violation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With regard to the juridical aspect, it must be added that in the
+Naval Agreement of 1937, Articles 24, 25, and 26 conceded to the
+contracting governments the right to deviate, under certain circumstances,
+from the contracted agreements and especially from the
+tonnage limitation of battleships, if any other sea powers should
+build or acquire larger battleships. This case, stated in Article 25,
+had actually arisen, and so the violation of the agreement consisted
+in the fact that the Navy, although now entitled to build larger
+battleships, neglected to inform Britain of her desire to make use
+of that right. It was, therefore, only a violation of the obligation
+to exchange information. How meaningless this measure was is
+proved by the alteration of the Anglo-German Naval Agreement
+by virtue of the London Protocol of 30 June 1938, which I have
+submitted as Exhibit Number Raeder-16.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Already on 31 March 1938, that is, only 6 weeks after the date
+of Document C-23, Britain on her part had stated, according to the
+<span class='pageno' title='381' id='Page_381'></span>
+London Protocol of 30 June 1938, that she must make use of the
+afore-mentioned right granted by Article 25, and therefore proposed
+that the battleship tonnage be increased from 35,000 to 45,000. This
+agreement was then signed by both countries on 30 June 1938, and
+thus the violation of the treaty evident from Document C-23, became
+illusory.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) The British prosecutor raised a second charge by submitting
+Document D-854 during cross-examination. It consists of notes
+made by Admiral Assmann for his historical writings; on Sheet 15
+of these notes he writes that Germany abided by the terms of the
+Anglo-German Naval Agreement least of all in the sphere of U-boat
+building and that 55 U-boats were allowed by the treaty up to 1938,
+but 118 were actually completed or begun. These statements by
+Assmann are actually incorrect, and in reality Germany strictly
+followed all the stipulations of the Anglo-German Naval Agreement
+with regard to U-boat building. Despite the assurance of equality
+of rights Germany by the Naval Agreement of 1935 voluntarily
+limited herself to 45 percent; but the right to increase this percentage
+at any time by friendly agreement with Britain was
+reserved for her. The presentation of evidence has shown (see the
+testimony of Raeder and Schulte-Mönting) that in December 1938
+corresponding negotiations took place between the British Admiral
+Lord Cunningham and Grossadmiral Raeder, during which His
+Majesty’s Government approved the increase to 100 percent. It was
+not clear at the time when this evidence was presented, whether
+this approval had also been given in writing, as was to be assumed.
+Meanwhile I have been able to establish that such a document must
+have existed; I was able to gather this from the afore-mentioned
+Assmann Document D-854 in which on Page 169, in connection with
+Page 161, the letter in question dated 18 January 1939 is mentioned.
+In conclusion it remains to be said that the figure of
+55 U-boats mentioned by Assmann corresponds to 45 percent, whereas
+the figure of 118 U-boats corresponds to 100 percent; accordingly
+Assmann, and therefore the Prosecution as well, are wrong. Actually
+there was no violation at all of the naval agreement with regard
+to U-boats.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: I now come to the allegation of the Prosecution
+that Grossadmiral Raeder took part in a conspiracy to wage wars
+of aggression, and in particular supported Hitler and National
+Socialism despite his alleged knowledge that Hitler from the beginning
+had the intention of waging wars of aggression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) How did Raeder establish contact with Hitler, and was he
+able, or even bound, at that time to realize an intention on the
+part of Hitler to wage wars of aggression?
+<span class='pageno' title='382' id='Page_382'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As I have said, it is a fact that Raeder before 1933 had nothing
+to do with National Socialism and knew neither Hitler nor his Party
+collaborators; he met Hitler on 2 February 1933, when he and the
+other commanders were introduced to Hitler by Baron von Hammerstein.
+As Chief of the Naval High Command Raeder had only one
+superior, Reich President Von Hindenburg, who, according to the
+Constitution and the Defense Law,<a id='r39'/><a href='#f39' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[39]</span></sup></a> was the Supreme Commander
+of the whole Armed Forces. Hindenburg, as Reich President, had
+appointed Hitler Reich Chancellor, and thus a connection was of
+necessity created between Hitler and the Armed Forces. There was
+thus no question of any decision on the part of Raeder. As Hindenburg’s
+subordinate, he had as a soldier to submit to the political
+decision which Hindenburg had taken as President of the Reich.
+The constitutional basis with regard to the Armed Forces was in
+no way altered by the fact that Hitler came to power. As Chief of
+the Naval High Command Raeder took as little part in this political
+decision as he had done on previous occasions when Müller, who
+was a Social Democrat, or Brüning, who belonged to the Center
+Party, became Reich Chancellors.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nor was there any cause for Raeder to resign his post on account
+of this internal political decision, for Hitler had explained to him and
+the other high officers at the first conference on 2 February 1933,
+and particularly also on the occasion of the first naval report in the
+same month, that nothing in the Armed Forces would be changed
+and that the Armed Forces must remain aloof from politics, as laid
+down in the Constitution and the Defense Law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The testimony of Raeder and Schulte-Mönting proves that during
+the naval report Hitler explained his fundamental ideas in regard
+to a peaceful policy, in which connection, in spite of the amicable
+revision of the Versailles Treaty to which he aspired, it was essential
+to come to an understanding with England by means of a treaty
+providing for the development of the Navy within the general
+limitations of naval armament. During this conversation Hitler
+clearly indicated that he did not want a naval armament race and
+that the development of the Navy should take place only in friendly
+agreement with England. This principle was absolutely in line with
+the viewpoint of Raeder and the Navy, and it was therefore quite
+out of the question for Raeder to tell his superior, Hindenburg, that
+on account of Hitler he could no longer head the Navy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now the Prosecution maintains that the leading personalities in
+Germany at that time already knew Hitler’s true intentions from his
+book <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>, and has cited as proof several quotations, partly
+torn from their context, from Hitler’s propaganda book of 1924. This
+argument of the Prosecution does not seem to hold good, because
+<span class='pageno' title='383' id='Page_383'></span>
+Hitler wrote this book as a private individual belonging to an opposition
+party. In this Trial it has several times been pointed out that
+the statements of foreign private individuals are irrelevant even
+when these foreigners are well known, and subsequently—as in
+Hitler’s case—received a position in the government. Raeder could
+assume, as could anyone else, that as Reich Chancellor Hitler would
+not uphold all the Party doctrines which years before he had
+defended as a member of the opposition, particularly since the
+statements of Hitler on military matters contradicted these former
+Party ideas. Moreover, the Navy relations with England were
+always of foremost importance and in this connection Hitler himself
+had said in his book <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>, Page 154: “But for such a policy
+there was only one possible partner in Europe: England.” (Document
+Book 2, Document Number Raeder-20, Page 119.)</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In rebuttal of the quotations submitted by the Prosecution it
+must also be said that they are all taken from the 1933 edition and
+that, in spite of great pains, the General Secretary’s office has been
+unable to procure an earlier edition, particularly the first edition of
+1925 and 1927. It is a known fact that in later years Hitler himself
+made changes on many points in numerous places in his book, consequently
+the quotations from the 1933 edition cannot be taken as a
+basis on their face value.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Ought Raeder in the following years to have realized that Hitler
+desired to abandon the fundamental idea of an understanding with
+England, and is it possible to agree with the argument of the Prosecution
+that Raeder should have refused further collaboration at some
+time before 1939? I believe that this question must be answered
+in the negative for reasons which appear quite naturally from
+various facts which the Prosecution or the Defense submitted in
+evidence:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hindenburg died on 2 August 1934, and the Prosecution reproaches
+Raeder because he thereupon took an oath in which he
+named the Führer in the place of the fatherland. (Record of
+15 January 1946, Volume V, Page 262.) This point was sufficiently
+clarified in the presentation of evidence. Therefore I need only refer
+to the error which the Prosecution made in its assertion; the Prosecution
+itself produced Document D-481 which shows the oath of
+allegiance taken by the soldiers of the Armed Forces on Hitler’s
+orders. The document is a law signed by Hitler, Frick, and Blomberg
+and it shows that it was not Raeder who replaced the word
+“Vaterland” by “Hitler,” but that Hitler himself demanded that all
+soldiers should take the oath to him as Commander-in-Chief of the
+Armed Forces. Before Hitler demanded this oath, which he had
+cleverly devised and which proved so fateful in the future, Raeder
+had neither been informed nor had his advice been asked on the
+<span class='pageno' title='384' id='Page_384'></span>
+wording. He was simply summoned to the Reich Chancellery without
+knowing the reason. The question as to what kind of oath is to be
+taken by a soldier is again a political one, a question of legislation,
+upon which Raeder as a soldier and Commander-in-Chief of the
+Navy had no influence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution charges Raeder with having been informed of
+many political decisions and with having, as Commander-in-Chief
+of the Navy, made strategic plans and preparations on the occasions
+of such political measures. The Prosecution referred to the withdrawal
+from the League of Nations on 14 October 1933, the occupation
+of the Rhineland on 7 March 1936, the Austrian Anschluss in
+March 1938, the incorporation of the Sudetenland in the autumn of
+1938, and the establishment of the Protectorate of Bohemia and
+Moravia in March 1939.<a id='r40'/><a href='#f40' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[40]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The documents in question are in the main those marked in the
+footnote, and I can refer to them jointly in this connection. There
+is one fact common to all of these decisions, namely, that Raeder did
+not politically take part in any of them. Raeder was never consulted
+beforehand and as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy he had no
+authority to participate in such decisions. Raeder did nothing more
+than take note of these documents and reports, and then issue the
+orders necessary for precautionary military measures in case the
+country became involved in war. It seems quite incomprehensible
+that the commander-in-chief of a branch of the Armed Forces
+should be reproached for having made strategic preparations in the
+event of political complications. I imagine that it is customary all
+over the world that an admiral never takes part in political decisions,
+while at the same time he is obliged to make certain precautionary
+preparations depending upon such political decisions of the
+government. This is another example of the discrepancy I have
+already mentioned affecting the position of a military commander,
+which, although the Prosecution considers it to be a political one, is
+in reality purely military. There is hardly any doubt that the
+military commands of foreign countries involved in these political
+decisions or interested in them were also at the same time taking
+precautionary military measures.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A military commander could not judge whether these political
+decisions of Hitler were crimes or even violations of international law,
+all the less since he was never summoned to the consultations.
+Neither the withdrawal from the League of Nations, as a result of
+the failure of all endeavors to induce the other countries to disarm
+in the spirit of the Versailles Treaty, nor the occupation of the
+<span class='pageno' title='385' id='Page_385'></span>
+Sudetenland or the establishment of the Protectorate of Bohemia
+and Moravia, can be regarded as criminal activities, in the sense
+of the Indictment, of a disinterested commander-in-chief. They were
+certainly deviations from the Versailles Treaty, but even the British
+Prosecutor, Sir Hartley Shawcross, declared on 4 December 1945 in
+this courtroom that “many objections against Versailles were possibly
+justified.”<a id='r41'/><a href='#f41' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[41]</span></sup></a> And even Justice Jackson, as quoted above, said
+that the boldest measures would have been justified for the purpose
+of revising this treaty, but not a war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All these measures taken by Germany were in fact carried out
+without a war, and therefore come under the heading of measures
+which Justice Jackson considers justified, all the more so since they
+were all silently condoned by foreign countries, or even agreed
+upon by treaty, as for instance in the case of the incorporation of
+the Sudetenland by the Munich Agreement of September 1938, or,
+as in the case of Austria, by agreement with that country.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the cases of Austria and of the establishment of the Protectorate
+of Bohemia and Moravia, the Prosecution quite justifiably,
+looking at these cases objectively and retrospectively, points out that
+Hitler employed extremely dubious and possibly criminal means to
+achieve his aims; however, this can have no significance as far as
+the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy is concerned, since it has been
+firmly established that he was not informed of these activities, much
+less of the means employed therein. It has been established in
+particular that Raeder was neither informed of the details of the
+Austrian Anschluss nor of the kind of conference which ultimately
+led to an agreement with President Hacha. He was not told of the
+discussions with Hacha, nor of the threat of a bombardment of
+Prague, which was made in the course of these discussions; I refer
+in this connection to the testimony of the witnesses Raeder and
+Schulte-Mönting. In the eyes of Raeder, therefore, these constituted
+measures permissible under international law, or else agreements
+which gave him no cause to interfere or to question Hitler, quite
+apart from the fact that as a military commander he had no right
+whatsoever to do so.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, had military complications arisen, land operations
+only would have been involved, as is quite obvious from the location
+of the countries concerned. It would have amounted to an impossible
+situation if the disinterested Commander-in-Chief of the Navy had
+seen fit to concern himself with these things although hardly any
+naval preparations were required. In the case of Czechoslovakia, for
+example, Document 388-PS lays down, as far as the Navy was concerned,
+only that it was to participate in possible Army operations
+by commitment of the Danube flotilla which for this purpose was
+<span class='pageno' title='386' id='Page_386'></span>
+placed under the orders of the High Command of the Army; this
+flotilla consisted of very small ships, a few gunboats, if I remember
+correctly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection I also quote Sir Hartley Shawcross when on
+4 December 1945 he spoke of the German-Polish Non-Aggression
+Pact of 1934: “By entering into it”—Hitler—“persuaded many people
+that his intentions were genuinely pacific ...”<a id='r42'/><a href='#f42' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[42]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Accordingly, Raeder too had reason to be convinced. It is true
+that Raeder belonged to the Secret Cabinet Council created in
+February 1938. But it is also true, and has been proved in the
+meantime, that the Secret Cabinet Council was just a farce. It is
+therefore unnecessary to deal with this point which the Prosecution
+originally considered so important.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The claim of the Prosecution that Raeder was a member of the
+Government and a Reich minister has been refuted in the same way.
+This assertion of the Prosecution has from the outset been somewhat
+incomprehensible. Document 2098-PS, presented by the
+Prosecution, only states with absolute clarity that Von Brauchitsch,
+the Commander-in-Chief of the Army, and Raeder, the Commander-in-Chief
+of the Navy, held—I quote—“a rank equivalent to that of
+a Reich minister.” This proves that he was not a minister, although
+for reasons of etiquette he held a rank equal to that of a Reich
+minister, and it follows that this decree of Hitler did not assign a
+political task to Raeder, as the Prosecution would like to have it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, this decree does not even give him the right to participate
+in Cabinet sessions at his own will, but only, as Hitler says
+in the above-mentioned document, “upon my order.” This simply
+means that Raeder might have been called upon by Hitler to participate
+in a Cabinet session when technical naval problems were being
+discussed. In reality this hypothetical and politically insignificant
+case never arose.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nor can membership in the Reich Defense Council—Document
+2194-PS<a id='r43'/><a href='#f43' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[43]</span></sup></a>—be considered incriminating. In the first place the council
+was concerned, as the text says, only with “preparatory measures
+for the defense of the Reich,” that is, neither with political activities
+nor with activities connected in any political sense with aggressive
+war. Furthermore, according to Document 2018-PS, a later Führer
+decree of 13 August 1939, and contrary to the claim of the Prosecution,
+Raeder never belonged to the Ministerial Council for the
+Defense of the Reich set up at that time, for the simple reason that
+he was not a minister. Actually other countries, too, possess
+institutions like a defense council or defense committee. I call
+<span class='pageno' title='387' id='Page_387'></span>
+attention to the fact that already long before the first World War
+the British Government had a defense committee which was of much
+greater importance<a id='r44'/><a href='#f44' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[44]</span></sup></a> than the equivalent institution in Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As the final matter in this connection, I wish to point out that
+the claim of the Prosecution that Raeder was a Party member has
+also proved untenable. It is true that Raeder received the gold
+insignia of honor from Hitler; but this was only a decoration; it
+could not mean anything else, because a soldier could not be a
+member of the Party. That is clear beyond all doubt from Paragraph
+36 of the Reich Defense Law, which forbids soldiers to engage
+in politics and to be members of a political organization.<a id='r45'/><a href='#f45' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[45]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I also refer to the evidence, which proved amply that Raeder
+never had connections with the Party, that indeed he more than
+once had arguments with Party circles and that he was unpopular
+with typical National Socialists because of his political and particularly
+his religious attitude. Goebbels, for instance, positively
+detested him, and this was not surprising, because on the one hand
+he always prevented the Party from gaining any sort of influence
+on the officers’ corps of the Navy, while on the other, in contrast
+to the Party, he supported the Church to the greatest extent, and
+saw to it that the morale of the Navy was founded on a Christian
+basis. I refer in this connection to the typical National Socialist
+phrase of Bormann:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“National Socialist and Christian concepts are incompatible.”<a id='r46'/><a href='#f46' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[46]</span></sup></a>
+In the same document Bormann, as he so often did, expressed views
+devoid of all civilized standards and attacked Christianity so
+strongly, and so violently advocated the elimination of all Christian
+ideas, that this attitude by the Party is sufficient proof that Raeder,
+as a devout Christian, could never have entertained relations with
+the Party.<a id='r47'/><a href='#f47' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[47]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have already stated that in 1933 Hitler said that it would
+be one of the fundamentals of his policy to make Germany sound
+and strong by peaceful means, and that for such peaceful development
+it was absolutely necessary to acknowledge British hegemony
+and come to an agreement with Britain about the size of the German
+fleet—if possible, even to come to an alliance. These ideas
+coincided with Raeder’s fundamental attitude, which he explained
+in detail during his examination here. As far as my defense is
+concerned, it may remain an open question whether and when
+<span class='pageno' title='388' id='Page_388'></span>
+Hitler abandoned that basic thought. In any case, Hitler always
+emphasized this basic thought to Raeder and actually supported
+it with deeds; this ever-recurring thought can be traced through all
+the years up to the outbreak of war, and it was in the pursuit of
+this basic principle that the Anglo-German Naval Agreement was
+concluded in 1935 and the second Anglo-German Naval Agreement
+in 1937, that an agreement on submarines was reached with Lord
+Cunningham in 1938, and that the London protocol on the subject
+of battleships was signed on 30 June 1938. Thus, throughout the
+years of the reconstruction of the German Navy the same idea was
+always predominant, namely, of achieving agreement with Britain,
+of acknowledging Britain’s supremacy and of avoiding any difference
+which might lead to a break with Britain.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Looking back now in cognizance of all the documents and all
+the facts proved during this Trial, Hitler may be assumed at some
+time, probably in 1938, to have become unfaithful to his own
+principles and thereby guilty of bringing about the tragic fate of
+Germany. However, in judging the accusations made against Raeder,
+the decisive issue is not what must subsequently, in the light of
+all known facts, be acknowledged as objectively true; the real issue
+is only whether Raeder realized, or was even able to realize, Hitler’s
+deviation from his own ideas, and the answer to that is “no.” Raeder
+could not have guessed, much less have known, that Hitler at some
+time became untrue to his own political ideas which he had
+repeatedly stressed and demonstrated, and thus guilty of kindling
+the frightful conflagration of World War II.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Raeder could not have suspected or known that during the period
+immediately preceding the war Hitler spoke to him, too, in words
+which were at variance with his thoughts and also different from
+his actions. As far as the Navy in particular was concerned, the
+relatively slow rebuilding of the German fleet showed that Hitler
+proposed to remain faithful to the ideas which I described. There
+was no indication at all of a change of mind on Hitler’s part in this
+field, for a change of mind would surely have resulted in a naval
+rebuilding program bigger than the one which Hitler actually carried
+out. At the very least he would then have made full use of
+possibilities offered by the Anglo-German Naval Agreement. According
+to the Naval Agreement, the German fleet was allowed a total
+tonnage of 420,595 tons,<a id='r48'/><a href='#f48' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[48]</span></sup></a> yet actually this maximum was never
+utilized. Even with regard to battleships, Germany remained short
+of the Naval Agreement, with the result that the battleships
+<span class='it'>Bismarck</span> and <span class='it'>Tirpitz</span> were not available in the first year of the
+war, and thus could not take part in the occupation of Norway;
+<span class='pageno' title='389' id='Page_389'></span>
+the <span class='it'>Bismarck</span> was completed only in August 1940, and the <span class='it'>Tirpitz</span>
+in 1941.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>According to the Naval Agreement, Germany was allowed the
+same tonnage in submarines as England. In reality, however, U-boat
+construction was so slow that at the beginning of the war in 1939,
+as the evidence has proved, Germany had only the small number
+of 26 U-boats available for Atlantic service. And further, according
+to Document L-79, known as the “Little Schmundt,” it was laid
+down as late as the end of May 1939 that—I quote—“no change
+will be made in the ship-building program.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All this must have firmly convinced the Commander-in-Chief of
+the Navy from his personal point of view and his sphere of work
+that Hitler wanted to stand by his much-stressed basic principle of
+avoiding war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Raeder’s firm conviction in this respect—this seems to be an
+important consideration—was to a large extent confirmed by the
+attitude of foreign countries. Winston Churchill, in his book <span class='it'>Great
+Contemporaries</span>, wrote in 1935:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“It is not possible to form a just judgment of a public figure
+who has attained the enormous dimensions of Adolf Hitler,
+until his lifework as a whole is before us ... We cannot tell
+whether Hitler will be the man who will once again let loose
+upon the world another war in which civilization will irretrievably
+succumb, or whether he will go down in history as
+the man who has restored honor and peace of mind to the
+great Germanic nation, and brought it back serene, helpful,
+and strong to the forefront of the European family circle.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One year later, at the Olympic Games in Berlin in 1936, the
+representatives of the foreign countries appeared in a body and
+greeted Hitler in a manner which, in its approval bordering on
+enthusiasm, appeared incomprehensible to many skeptically inclined
+Germans. Subsequently, the foremost politicians and members of
+various governments visited Hitler and reached complete understanding
+with him, and finally, in the autumn of 1938, agreement
+was again reached under Chamberlain and Lord Halifax; an agreement
+which strengthened Hitler immeasurably, and by which he
+sought to prove to the Germans how expedient all his actions had
+been, since they were thus approved by foreign countries. The
+joint declaration, which Chamberlain and Hitler issued in Munich
+on 30 September 1938, can never be overestimated in its importance.
+I would, therefore, like to quote the first two decisive sentences
+from it:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“We have had a further discussion today, and are agreed
+that the question of Anglo-German relations is of primary
+importance for both countries and for Europe.
+<span class='pageno' title='390' id='Page_390'></span></p>
+
+<p>“We regard the agreement signed last night and the Anglo-German
+Naval Treaty as symbolic of the desire of our two
+nations never again to wage war against each other.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I think that these references are sufficient. Now, can one
+demand of a German admiral, who has never been a politician, but
+always only a soldier, that in judging Hitler he should have looked
+farther ahead than the great British statesmen, Chamberlain and
+Churchill? Surely the very question indicates that the answer
+is “no.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution can seriously confront these numerous aspects
+only with a few documents which might indicate Raeder’s knowledge
+of Hitler’s aggressive plans. The Prosecution has indeed presented
+innumerable documents of which Raeder or the Naval Operations
+Staff or the High Command of the Navy were stated to have
+received copies, but in a considerable number of instances the Prosecution
+could not say anything beyond the fact that Raeder received
+a copy of the documents; for the most part no real connection
+existed, nor was it alleged by the Prosecution. Naturally, it is not
+surprising that for the sake of uniformity military documents went
+to all branches of the Armed Forces, even if in certain cases one
+branch of the Armed Forces was not at all, or only vaguely, concerned
+with them. Of all these documents which have been submitted
+in the case of Raeder, only the four documents which, because
+of their importance, the Prosecution described as key documents,
+could be really incriminating. These are Hitler’s four speeches
+to the Commanders-in-Chief of 5 November 1937, 23 May 1939,
+22 August 1939, and 23 November 1939.<a id='r49'/><a href='#f49' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[49]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution claims that these speeches prove participation
+in the conspiracy, and that it is clearly evident from them that
+Hitler wanted to wage wars of aggression. I would therefore like
+to deal with these documents individually and in detail, and in
+doing so, show why they cannot modify the general picture I have
+presented.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Undoubtedly these key documents are of the utmost importance
+for the subsequent historical findings on what trains of thought
+motivated Hitler; they are important because they are expressions
+of Hitler’s opinion and because, in spite of the tremendous amount
+of captured documentary material, there are hardly any written
+notes of Hitler. One is tempted, of course, to accept the conclusion
+that the contents of these documents must be true because they are
+statements made before a small circle, where Hitler would naturally
+express himself more openly than in his public speeches. Even
+though I by no means fail to recognize their value, I nevertheless
+<span class='pageno' title='391' id='Page_391'></span>
+believe that the Prosecution overestimates the importance of these
+four documents by far. Certainly, they are to some extent key
+documents, since they provide the key to an understanding of Hitler’s
+mind and methods, but they are not a key to the real intentions
+of Hitler, and more particularly they do not provide a scale
+for any conclusions which those who listened to the speeches must,
+in the opinion of the Prosecution, needs draw from them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Therefore, in order fully to explain the value of the documents,
+I would like first of all to mention several general points which
+apply generally to each of these four documents and limit their
+evidential value, which the Prosecution has overestimated. None
+of these speeches was taken down in shorthand, so that the actual
+text of the speeches is not available. Accordingly, in the record of
+the address of 5 November 1937, Hossbach correctly chose the
+indirect form of speech, and Generaladmiral Böhm in his record
+of the speech of 22 August 1939<a id='r50'/><a href='#f50' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[50]</span></sup></a> did the same. Surprisingly and
+not quite correctly, Schmundt chose the direct form of speech in
+his record of 23 May 1939, although it was not a verbatim record;
+however, he was at least careful to state at the beginning that
+Hitler’s words were being reproduced “in essence.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The feeblest documents, that is to say, the two versions of the
+speech of 22 August 1939 which the Prosecution has submitted, are
+written in the direct form of speech, and the authors of these documents,
+whose names are unknown, have not even deemed it necessary
+to add some sort of note as Schmundt did. However this may
+be, in considering the documents it must be kept in mind that they
+were not reproduced word by word and that therefore the reliability
+of the reproduction depends on the manner of work and attitude
+of the author of the document, especially on whether and to what
+extent he made notes during the speech, and when he prepared his
+record. In this connection it is important to note that, as Document
+386-PS shows, Adjutant Hossbach wrote the record a full 5 days
+later, namely on 10 November, though the speech itself had already
+been made on 5 November. In the case of Schmundt, the date of
+the record is missing altogether, and in the two Prosecution documents
+on the speech of 22 August 1939 there is also no date. The
+last two documents also lack any signature, so that in this case it
+is not even possible to say who bears the responsibility for the
+record. The same applies to the document on the speech of 23 November
+1939. All these formal deficiencies allow considerable doubt
+concerning evidential value and reliability of the documents to be
+entertained.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is different in the case of the Böhm document, who in his
+affidavit certifies that he wrote down Hitler’s speech as it was being
+<span class='pageno' title='392' id='Page_392'></span>
+made, that he noted down the exact text of particularly important
+passages, and that he edited the final draft, submitted here, on the
+same evening. Since in all these documents the true text is not
+available, it is obvious how important it is if one can at least establish
+that the record was made simultaneously with the speech, or
+at least on the same day and not, as in the case of Hossbach, 5 days
+later. Even with the best of memories the best adjutant, who has
+to handle many new matters every day, cannot possibly after 5 days
+give an absolutely reliable reproduction of a speech.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The second point is just as important, namely, that unlike other
+military documents these are not official documents with a distribution
+list, that is, they are not documents which were subsequently
+sent to those concerned. That the documents were not sent to
+Raeder was established in the evidence by him and by the witness
+Schulte-Mönting, apart from the fact that it is already apparent
+from the lack of a distribution list on the document. This point, in
+particular, seems to me of great importance. Listening to a speech
+once—and it will be recalled that Hitler spoke extremely quickly—does
+not induce the listener to draw conclusions in a way which the
+reading of the record might, since the record allows for a check and
+recheck of the contents of the speech. We who have come to know
+these speeches in the proceedings in their written form and have
+again and again checked their wording, naturally invest certain
+words and phrases with more importance than we would have done
+if we had heard them as part of a quickly delivered address. In
+addition, all of us are readily inclined to lend more importance to
+the various phrases, because from our present standpoint and in
+view of our more extensive knowledge we can now survey everything
+much more easily; for we have not only one speech on which
+to base our opinions, but all of them and in addition all the many
+other documents showing the historical development. In discussing
+these documents it must always be borne in mind that listeners are
+inclined to react to the spoken word quite differently, and that often,
+even after only a few hours, the reports of various listeners differ
+from one another.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution considers these speeches of Hitler to be the
+basis of the conspiracy, and says that on these occasions Hitler consulted
+with the commanders, reached a certain decision, and concluded
+a certain plan of conspiracy with them. The Prosecution is
+bound to maintain this, because one can only speak of a conspiracy
+when something is being planned in common. In reality, the assertion
+of the Prosecution that an influential group of Nazis assembled
+to examine the situation and make decisions is incorrect; the occasion
+took the form of an address by Hitler alone, and no discussion and
+no consultation took place. Nor was any decision reached, either;
+<span class='pageno' title='393' id='Page_393'></span>
+Hitler just spoke quite generally about—I quote—“possibilities of
+development.”<a id='r51'/><a href='#f51' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[51]</span></sup></a> If one can speak of decisions at all, it was a decision
+solely on the part of Hitler. All this contradicts the existence of a
+real conspiracy. Altogether I have the impression that, in its conception
+of a conspiracy to wage wars of aggression, the Prosecution
+has conceived an entirely false picture of the real distribution of
+power within the National Socialist State. In my opinion the Prosecution
+fails to recognize the characteristics of a dictatorship, and
+indeed it may be very difficult to understand the immeasurable
+dictatorial power of Hitler if one has not personally lived through
+all of those 12 years in Germany, in particular the growth of Hitler’s
+power from its first beginnings until it finally developed into a
+dictatorship wielding the most cruel and horrible terror. A dictator
+like Hitler, who moreover quite obviously exercised immense
+powers of suggestion and fascination, is not a president of a parliamentary
+government. I have the impression that in judging the
+situation as a whole the Prosecution has never completely relinquished
+the idea of a parliamentary government nor taken the
+uncompromising ways of a dictator into account.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The idea of a conspiracy between him and the members of the
+Cabinet or between him and the commanders was quite contrary
+to Hitler’s own nature, as the testimony of several witnesses
+showed in the course of the Trial. This was proved with
+particular emphasis by the testimony of the Swedish industrialist,
+Dahlerus, who by reason of his excellent and extensive
+connections both with Britain and Germany was in the course
+of time able to obtain an objective picture of both countries,
+and who during his negotiations with Chamberlain and Halifax
+on the one hand, and Hitler and Göring on the other, was
+best able to recognize the difference between the parliamentary
+British Government and the German dictatorship of Hitler. The
+account of Dahlerus proves convincingly that the difference was
+irreconcilable. After he had spoken with Chamberlain and Halifax,
+a discussion with the Cabinet naturally took place before a final
+decision was taken. On the other hand, when in the night of 26 to
+27 August 1939<a id='r52'/><a href='#f52' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[52]</span></sup></a> Dahlerus had a discussion of decisive importance
+with Hitler, at which only Göring was present, Hitler at once made
+six propositions, without saying a word to any of the Cabinet members
+or any of the military commanders, without even consulting
+Göring who sat by silently; proposals, moreover, which did not
+exactly tally with what he himself had told Sir Nevile Henderson
+a short time before. A stronger argument against a conspiracy with
+commanders or members of the Cabinet can hardly exist, unless
+<span class='pageno' title='394' id='Page_394'></span>
+it be the equally important fact which the witness Dahlerus added,
+namely, that during the entire 2½ hours Göring did not dare say
+a single word, and that it was humiliating to see the degree of
+servility which Hitler demanded even of Göring, his closest associate.<a id='r53'/><a href='#f53' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[53]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All these Hitler speeches are full of contradictions. Such contradictions
+naturally impair clarity of thought, and they rob individual
+ideas of their importance. When reading the documents in their
+entirety, the number of contradictions becomes evident, as the
+witness Admiral Schulte-Mönting correctly pointed out during his
+examination and cross-examination. It is just because of such contradictions
+and often illogical thinking that the evidential value of
+the documents is diminished. Naturally it is difficult for a military
+adjutant like Hossbach or Schmundt to record unclear and contradictory
+trains of thought; and it is also easy to understand that a
+military adjutant will be inclined to introduce as clear a line of
+thought as possible, and will in consequence be misled into applying
+to certain ideas which have become clear to him more stress than
+they were actually given in the speech itself. To this can be added
+a remark of Raeder, who not only points to the contradictions, but
+especially to Hitler’s overactive imagination, and very appropriately
+calls him a “master of bluff.”<a id='r54'/><a href='#f54' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[54]</span></sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, in every speech of that type Hitler followed a very
+definite tendency. He had a definite purpose in view, namely, to bring
+about the desired impression on all or some of his hearers, either by
+intentional exaggeration or by making things appear deliberately
+harmless. While he spoke, Hitler followed the intuition of the moment;
+as Schulte-Mönting termed it, he wandered from his notes. He
+thought aloud and wished to carry his hearers away, but he did
+not want to be taken at his word.<a id='r55'/><a href='#f55' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[55]</span></sup></a> Everyone will agree with me
+that such practices and such purposefully designed speeches give no
+clear indication at all of Hitler’s true views at the time. In addition,
+there is this to be said about all these documents in general:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Following his address of 23 May 1939—known as the “Little
+Schmundt”—Raeder had an interview with Hitler alone in which he
+called Hitler’s attention to contradictions in his address and also to
+the contradiction arising out of Hitler’s assurance to Raeder personally
+that he, Hitler, would under all circumstances settle the
+case of Poland equally peacefully. Hitler thereupon put Raeder’s
+mind completely at rest and told him that he had a firm hold on
+matters, politically. This was stated by the witness Schulte-Mönting<a id='r56'/><a href='#f56' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[56]</span></sup></a>
+who added that Hitler allayed Raeder’s misgivings about
+<span class='pageno' title='395' id='Page_395'></span>
+the contradiction between the speech of 23 May 1939 and his other
+statements by telling him that for him, Hitler, there were three
+grades of keeping matters secret: Firstly, by private conversation
+with one partner; secondly, the thoughts he kept to himself; and
+thirdly, some ideas which he himself did not fully think out.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I believe this way of thinking as explained by Hitler himself
+illustrates most strikingly how little reliance could ultimately be
+placed on statements which he made before a small or a large group
+of people. It seems to me quite plausible, therefore, that Raeder
+based his deliberations neither on Hitler’s general speeches nor on
+the address before the commanders which was discussed here, but
+went solely by what Hitler told him in private discussion. In this
+respect, the statements of Sehulte-Mönting, Böhm, and Albrecht<a id='r57'/><a href='#f57' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[57]</span></sup></a>
+all prove that as late as 1939 Hitler was still, in private conversation,
+repeatedly giving Raeder the explicit assurance that there would
+be no war; and he did this whenever for some reason or other
+Raeder was particularly anxious and drew Hitler’s attention to the
+dangers ahead.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In conclusion, therefore, I believe it may be said that the so-called
+key documents are extremely interesting in assessing Hitler
+from a psychological point of view, but that their evidential value
+as regards Hitler’s real intentions is very limited and slight. One
+cannot reproach Raeder for not letting himself be guided by the
+tendentious and deliberate speeches which Hitler made before his
+commanders on the spur of the moment, and preferring to rely on
+assurances which Hitler himself gave him and on the fact that
+until the summer of 1939, until the very outbreak of the war, these
+assurances were in perfect accord with the facts and with Hitler’s
+actions, that is, with the four naval agreements and the Munich Pact.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is understandable that Raeder did not permit this basic attitude
+to be shaken by these speeches to the commanders-in-chief,
+though they were undoubtedly of a questionable nature, but that
+he held steadfastly to his belief that Hitler would not deceive him.
+The fact that we now subsequently realize that Hitler did after all
+deceive Raeder in his private conversations with him, and also by his
+special second and third grade of secrecy, does not indicate any guilt
+on Raeder’s part, but solely on Hitler’s. The vast amount of material
+in this connection does not indicate that in 1938 and 1939 Raeder
+planned a war of aggression in violation of international law, but
+reveals only that Hitler planned a war of aggression in violation
+of international law.
+<span class='pageno' title='396' id='Page_396'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This completes my general treatment of the key documents and
+I now ask the Tribunal’s permission to add a few points on each
+individual document, since the Prosecution again and again stressed
+these documents as the basis for the charge of conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hossbach Document, discussion of 5 November 1937 in the Reich
+Chancellery:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The crucial passages of this document are obvious, and the Prosecution
+has cited them often enough. But in dealing with this
+document it should be taken into consideration that both Göring
+and Raeder stated here that Hitler announced in advance his intention
+of following a certain trend or purpose in his speech. Hitler
+was dissatisfied with the measures taken by Field Marshal Von
+Blomberg, and especially by Generaloberst Von Fritsch, the Commander-in-Chief
+of the Army, and felt that progress in the rearmament
+of the Army was too slow. Hitler therefore intentionally
+exaggerated, and since this was known only to Göring and Raeder,
+it is natural that the impression which the speech made on Neurath,
+who had no idea of this intention, was entirely different and considerably
+alarming.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is interesting to note that apparently Hitler did not fully get
+what he wanted, because the last two paragraphs of the document
+indicate that to some extent Blomberg and Fritsch saw through
+Hitler’s scheme, and that his exaggerations did not deceive them.
+Though Hitler did not permit discussion on such occasions, Blomberg
+and Fritsch intervened in this instance and pointed to the
+need for preventing Britain and France from becoming Germany’s
+adversaries. Blomberg explained the reasons for his protest, and in
+the penultimate paragraph of the document Fritsch showed unmistakably
+that he was skeptical of Hitler’s words by remarking
+that under such circumstances he would not be able to take his
+planned vacation abroad scheduled to begin on 10 November. It is
+also significant that Hitler thereupon came round and, in contrast
+to his earlier statements, said that he was convinced of Britain’s
+nonparticipation, and that consequently he did not believe in military
+action against Germany on the part of France either.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That Hitler’s ideas in this document are quite impossible is also
+evident from the fact that he based his statements on a truly
+fantastic notion, namely, an Italian-French-British war or, equally
+fantastic, a civil war in France. In contradictory terms Hitler spoke
+in his speech on the one hand of an application of force, on the
+other of an attack by Poland against East Prussia, which could
+only refer to a defensive aspect—and in regard to Czechoslovakia
+he said that in all probability Britain and France had already
+privately written that country off. This reference is an indication
+that Hitler was prepared to negotiate, which was borne out by
+<span class='pageno' title='397' id='Page_397'></span>
+actual developments. He said that Austria and Czechoslovakia would
+be brought to their knees, but nevertheless in the following year,
+in March and September 1938, he carried on negotiations and settled
+both questions without war. This fact in particular seems significant,
+because it proved to Raeder in the course of later events that he
+was right in not ascribing undue importance to Hitler’s strong
+words of 5 November 1937, for in spite of these words Hitler in
+reality did carry on negotiations at a later date.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During his interrogation Raeder also rightly pointed out that
+the second extensive naval pact had been concluded with England
+only a few months earlier and that as a result he could not seriously
+expect Hitler to abandon a line of policy which he himself had
+initiated.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And finally, there is this point: The whole document deals with
+political questions on the one hand, and with possible land operations
+on the other. Raeder had nothing to do with political questions
+because he is no politician, while Neurath as Foreign Minister naturally
+had reason to give Hitler’s political attitude more consideration. It is
+also significant that Neurath testified here that as a result of this
+speech he too asked Hitler about his personal attitude, and that he
+refused to remain Foreign Minister because Hitler told him that
+those were his true intentions. To me it seems typical of Hitler to
+tell one person, Neurath, that perhaps he would go to war, and to
+tell another, Raeder, that he would under no circumstances wage
+war. This divergence in explaining his position was obviously caused
+by the fact that at that time he no longer relished Neurath as
+Foreign Minister, because he realized that with regard to the foreign
+policy which he proposed to follow, Neurath would not be as submissive
+as the successor whom he had in view, Ribbentrop. On the
+other hand at that time he still wanted at all events to retain
+Raeder as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. This is another
+instance of how Hitler’s actions were determined by a certain ultimate
+purpose, and how he always and without the slightest inhibition
+followed the principle that the end justifies the means.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hitler’s speech of 23 May 1939, the so-called “Little Schmundt,”
+USA-27: Here again Hitler expressed himself in a highly questionable
+fashion; he speaks of a program of attack, of the preparation of
+a systematic attack, and of the decision to attack Poland. I fail in no
+way to recognize that there is good reason for the Prosecution to
+consider this document as particularly good evidence. I believe,
+however, that taking into account the numerous aspects which I
+pointed out, the value of this document as evidence in the case of
+Raeder is very much smaller than the Prosecution maintains, and
+very much smaller than a first glance at the wording of the
+Schmundt version might warrant. Schmundt obviously made an
+<span class='pageno' title='398' id='Page_398'></span>
+endeavor to formulate Hitler’s contradictory, fantastic, and incongruous
+statements in a clear way in accordance with his own precise
+military manner of thinking. This gives the document a clarity
+which does not correspond to Hitler’s speech. We do not know when
+Schmundt prepared the document, and he neglected to show the
+record he had made to the other participants.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During his examination and cross-examination the witness
+Admiral Schulte-Mönting pointed to the contradictions in this
+particular document, which I need not repeat here. Paramount importance
+must however be given to the contradiction between these
+words and the words which Hitler at the same time again and again
+used in conversation with Raeder, and which always followed the
+same line, namely, that he did not intend to wage war and that he
+would not make excessive demands.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Raeder was shocked by this speech, and was only calmed by
+the private conversation which he had with Hitler directly after
+the speech, when Hitler assured him that he would under all circumstances
+settle the case of Poland in a peaceful manner, too. Raeder
+believed him, and he had every right to assume that Hitler was
+telling him the truth in answer to his very precise question. I draw
+attention to the very exact statements made on this document during
+the examination of Raeder and the examination of the witness
+Schulte-Mönting.<a id='r58'/><a href='#f58' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[58]</span></sup></a> I especially refer to the statement of Schulte-Mönting
+that Hitler used the comparison that nobody would go to
+court if he had received 99 pfennig when claiming one mark, and
+added that in the same way he had obtained what he had demanded
+politically, and that consequently there could be no question of war
+on account of this last political question, that of the Polish Corridor.
+That Raeder himself was absolutely opposed to a war of aggression,
+and that in this respect he relied on Hitler’s assurances, is proved
+by the statements of all witnesses, not least by the deposition by
+Dönitz that on the occasion of the U-boat maneuvers in the Baltic
+Sea in July 1939 Raeder, expressed his firm conviction that there
+would be no war. Raeder, furthermore, knew that the Navy was
+absolutely unfit for a war at sea against Britain; he had explained
+that to Hitler again and again. But he was confident that in the
+Polish question Hitler, as he had said, would again negotiate; the
+testimony of the witness Dahlerus shows that negotiations did in
+fact take place, and they were even successful at the beginning. The
+reason why nevertheless the attempt finally failed and the second
+World War began, was explained in detail by the witness Dahlerus
+who illustrated the terrible tragedy of this event.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It seems to me important that up to August 1939 not only the
+witness Dahlerus, but also Chamberlain still believed in Hitler’s
+<span class='pageno' title='399' id='Page_399'></span>
+good will. It must be said again therefore that one cannot expect
+Raeder as a soldier to have been more farseeing and to have
+recognized Hitler’s dangerous ideas, if men like Chamberlain,
+Halifax, and Dahlerus did not even at that time see through Hitler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have myself referred to the seriousness and the incriminating
+character of this document, but I ask the Tribunal to take into
+consideration that the incriminating material in this document, just
+as in the document of 5 November 1937, is of a political nature. As
+defense counsel for the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, I have
+to judge the facts not from a political but from a military point of
+view. From a military point of view, however, it is absolutely
+impossible to follow the arguments of the Prosecution, because
+military leaders are not authorized to take part in decisions about
+war and peace, but merely obliged to carry out such military preparations
+as the political leaders consider necessary. In no country
+of the world does an admiral have to give his opinion on whether
+some future war, for which he has to make plans, will be a war
+of aggression or a defensive war. In no country of the world does
+the decision of the question whether war will be waged rest with
+the military, but on the contrary it is always left to the political
+leaders, or to the legislative bodies.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Accordingly, Article 45 of the German Constitution stipulates
+that the Reich President shall represent the Reich in international
+relations and continues: “The declaration of war and the conclusion
+of peace are decreed by a law of the State.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Therefore, the question whether a war was to be waged against
+Poland rested with the Reichstag, not with the military leaders.
+Professor Jahrreiss has already explained that in view of the constitutional
+development of the National Socialist State this decision
+rested in the last analysis exclusively with Hitler. For the case of
+Raeder it is of no consequence whether Hitler could be regarded
+as constitutionally authorized to start a war on his own decision,
+as he actually did in the autumn of 1939. The decisive factor is
+only that at all events the military leaders were not authorized,
+either in practice or constitutionally, to participate in this decision.
+The Prosecution cannot possibly maintain that every act of military
+planning on the part of Germany was a crime; for the military
+leaders, who merely receive the order to work out a certain plan,
+are neither authorized nor obliged to determine whether the execution
+of their plans will later on lead to an aggressive or a defensive
+war. It is well known that the Allied military leaders rightly
+hold the same view. No admiral or general of the Allied armed
+forces would understand a charge being brought against him on
+the basis of the military plans which were made on the Allied side,
+too, a long time before the war. I do not have to elaborate this
+<span class='pageno' title='400' id='Page_400'></span>
+point; I believe it will suffice if I refer to Document Number Ribbentrop-221.
+This is a secret document, which, according to the
+title, deals with the “Second Phase of the Anglo-French General
+Staff Conferences.” This document shows that exact plans, regarding
+the Allied forces, were worked out for a war embracing many
+countries; plans which, according to this document, include a war
+in Europe and a war in the Far East. The document expressly says
+that the French and British commanders-in-chief in the Far East—I
+quote—“worked out a joint plan of operations,” and it expressly
+speaks about the importance of possessing Belgian and Dutch territories
+as a starting point for the offensive against Germany. The
+decisive point about this parallel military case seems to me to be
+the fact that this document bears a date from the same month as
+Hitler’s much-discussed speech to his commanders-in-chief, namely,
+May 1939. The document bears the caption: “London, 5 May 1939.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to the address of Hitler to the commanders-ih-chief
+on 22 August 1939 at the Obersalzberg.<a id='r59'/><a href='#f59' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[59]</span></sup></a> Regarding the evidential
+value of Documents 1014-PS and 798-PS submitted by the Prosecution,
+I should like first of all for the sake of brevity to refer to
+the statements which I made to this Tribunal in connection with
+the formal application to withdraw Document 1014-PS. Although
+the Tribunal denied this application, I still maintain that the
+evidential value attached to these documents, and particularly to
+Document 1014-PS, is infinitesimal. The American Prosecution, in
+presenting these documents pointed out at the time<a id='r60'/><a href='#f60' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[60]</span></sup></a> that the Tribunal
+should take into consideration any more accurate version of
+this speech which the Defense might be able to submit. I therefore
+submitted Exhibit Number Raeder-27,<a id='r61'/><a href='#f61' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[61]</span></sup></a> the version of the witness
+Generaladmiral Böhm, and I believe that when I submitted it, I
+showed convincingly that it is in fact a more accurate version than
+those provided by the Prosecution documents. Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe
+then put in two documents where Böhm’s version is very
+scrupulously compared with the versions 1014-PS and 798-PS; in
+this way he considerably facilitated the comparison of these documents
+for all of us. So as on my part to assist the Tribunal and
+the Prosecution in making this comparison, I requested Generaladmiral
+Böhm in the meantime to compare these versions himself
+and in doing so to use the compilation of the British Prosecution
+which I mentioned just now. The result is contained in Böhm’s
+affidavit.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When surveying all this material, it becomes clear that Document
+1014-PS is extremely incomplete and inaccurate, all the more
+<span class='pageno' title='401' id='Page_401'></span>
+so as, apart from its formal deficiencies, it covers only one and a
+half pages, and for this reason alone cannot be an adequate reproduction
+of a 2½ hour speech.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Document 798-PS is no doubt more satisfactory, but it also contains
+numerous errors, as Böhm’s affidavit shows. Not every
+sentence may be of importance, but the point is that some of the
+most important passages from which a charge against the commanders-in-chief
+might at best be deduced were actually, according to
+Böhm’s sworn statement, never spoken at all. According to Böhm’s
+affidavit, it is not true that Hitler said that he had decided as early
+as the spring of 1939 to attack the West first and the East later. Nor
+did he use the words: “I only fear lest at the last moment some
+swine will come to me with an offer of mediation; our political
+aims reach further.” And, most important of all, the following
+words were never used either: “Annihilation of Poland ranks foremost;
+the aim is to liquidate the living forces, not to reach a certain
+line;” Hitler only spoke of the breaking-up of the military
+forces.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These differences in individual words and phrases are very
+important, because they concern the sharp phrases to which the
+Prosecution has frequently drawn attention, and from which the
+intention of a war violating international law, and even the intention
+to murder civilians, can be derived. If these phrases had been
+spoken, one could justly accuse the commanders-in-chief who were
+present of having waged the war and carried out Hitler’s orders in
+spite of the criminal end in view. However, if these sentences were
+not used but, as Böhm testified under oath, other sentences referring
+merely to military aims, then the Prosecution cannot reproach any
+of the commanders-in-chief present for having remained at their
+posts. No one can in earnest demand of an admiral that he should
+resign his post a few days before the outbreak of a war, and thus
+shake the military power of his own country. I am quite aware of
+the fact that the most serious reproaches can be made against
+Hitler’s attitude following the time of the Munich Agreement until
+the outbreak of the war in Poland, although, and this is decisive for
+the Raeder case, not against the military command, but exclusively
+against the political leader. We know that Hitler himself realized
+this and for that reason evaded all responsibility by his suicide
+without, either during or at the end of the war, showing the slightest
+regard for the life and the welfare of the German people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I come now to Hitler’s speech to the commanders-in-chief on
+23 November 1939.<a id='r62'/><a href='#f62' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[62]</span></sup></a> I shall deal with it quite briefly, and if you will
+permit me, Mr. President, I should like to do this now before the
+Tribunal adjourns, because the subject which follows is rather
+longer.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='402' id='Page_402'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Yes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: I think I can be relatively brief with regard to
+this last key document, which again fails to give the date on which
+the record was made and lacks a signature; we do not therefore
+know the author of this document. It is not an official transcript;
+and it again pursues a special objective. Early in November 1939 a
+serious difference had arisen between Hitler and the generals
+because Hitler wanted to start the offensive in the West immediately,
+whereas the generals were of a different opinion, and apparently
+hoped that the outbreak of a real World War might still be avoided.
+Hitler’s dissatisfaction and annoyance with his generals are clearly
+evident. In consequence, by repeating, as usual, his past deeds, he
+strives to show what he has accomplished, and also to show that he
+has always been right. It is an absolutely typical Hitler speech
+reminiscent of his public speeches, in which he also loved to boast
+and to glorify himself as a genius. Hitler, after all, belonged to
+those people who always believe themselves to be right, and avail
+themselves of every opportunity to prove it. He also took the
+opportunity of using threats in order to nip in the bud the resistance
+in high military circles which had become known to him, thus
+strengthening his dictatorship. It is absolutely typical when he says
+in this document, literally: “I shall not shrink from anything and I
+shall destroy anyone who is against me.” This was recognized by
+foreign military leaders, too. I draw attention for example to
+General Marshall’s official report,<a id='r63'/><a href='#f63' style='text-decoration:none'><sup><span style='font-size:0.9em'>[63]</span></sup></a> which speaks about the “lack of
+far-reaching military planning” and about the fact that the German
+High Command did not have an all-embracing strategic plan, and
+points out in this connection that “Hitler’s prestige reached the
+stage at which one no longer dared to oppose his views.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Finally it remains to be mentioned that this last key document
+dates from a time when the war was already in progress, and that
+the military leaders cannot be blamed if in all their plannings
+during a war they strove to attain victory. The Allies too were
+planning at the same time. I refer to Documents Number Ribbentrop-222
+and Exhibit Number Raeder-34; the former dates from
+1 September 1939 and is a secret letter from General Gamelin to
+Daladier containing the basic idea that it was necessary to invade
+Belgium in order to wage the war outside the French frontier. The
+other document also deals with military plans; it is a secret letter
+from General Gamelin to General Lelong, Military Attaché to the
+French Embassy in London, dated 13 November 1939, and also concerns
+the operation which the Allies had planned in Holland and
+Belgium.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 17 July 1946 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;'>NOTES</p>
+
+<hr class='footnotemark'/>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f12'><a href='#r12'>[12]</a></span>
+
+Vanselow, <span class='gesp'>Völkerrecht</span>, Berlin, 1931, Figure 226 i.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f13'><a href='#r13'>[13]</a></span>
+
+In 1935, the American Senator Ney demanded the prohibition of operational
+areas. In 1937 Charles Warren made a request for discussion of the subject in the
+Society for International Law. And also the afore-mentioned draft of a convention
+by American jurists of 1939 deals with this question.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f14'><a href='#r14'>[14]</a></span>
+
+Théories stratégiques IV, Page 323: “Même en zone de guerre n’aura-t-on
+pas contre sol le damné article 22 du traité de Londres?”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f15'><a href='#r15'>[15]</a></span>
+
+Bauer, Das U-Boot, 1931, Report on it by Captain G. P. Thomson, R.N. in
+<span class='gesp'>The Journal of the Royal News Instruction 1931</span>, Page 511.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f16'><a href='#r16'>[16]</a></span>
+
+Sperrgebiete im Seekrieg, Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches Recht
+und Völkerrecht, Volume VIII, 1938, Page 671.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f17'><a href='#r17'>[17]</a></span>
+
+French Yellow Book, La Conférence de Washington, Page 88.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f18'><a href='#r18'>[18]</a></span>
+
+Report of 8 October 1940, Page 3: “One thing is certain, namely, apart from
+vessels in declared war zones, destruction of a merchant vessel is envisaged if
+even only after capture.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f19'><a href='#r19'>[19]</a></span>
+
+Commander Russel Grenfell, R.N., <span class='gesp'>The Art of the Admiral</span>, London,
+1937, Page 80. “The neutral merchants, however, are not likely to relinquish a
+highly lucrative trade without a struggle and thus there arises the acrimonious
+wrangle between belligerents and neutrals which is a regular feature of maritime
+warfare, the rules for which are dignified by the name of international law.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f20'><a href='#r20'>[20]</a></span>
+
+<span class='gesp'>De jure pacis ac belli</span>, Book III, Chapter I, Paragraph 6, citation
+Augustin: “One may conceal the truth wisely,” and Cicero: “Dissimulation is
+absolutely necessary and unavoidable, especially for those to whom the care of
+the state is entrusted.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f21'><a href='#r21'>[21]</a></span>
+
+Admiral King, <span class='gesp'>Report of the American High Command</span>.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f22'><a href='#r22'>[22]</a></span>
+
+John Chamberlain, “The man who pushed Pearl Harbor,” <span class='gesp'>Life</span>, of 1 April 1946.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f23'><a href='#r23'>[23]</a></span>
+
+Manual for Courts Martial U.S. Army, 1928, Page 10.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f24'><a href='#r24'>[24]</a></span>
+
+In this connection I mention the extensive literature dealing with the right
+of self-preservation in cases of urgent necessity. The surprise attack on the Danish
+fleet, 1807, as well as the hunger blockade against Germany are based on that.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f25'><a href='#r25'>[25]</a></span>
+
+Freiherr von Freytagh-Loringhoven, <span class='gesp'>Völkerrechtliche Neubildungen
+im Kriege</span>, Hamburg 1941, Page 5.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f26'><a href='#r26'>[26]</a></span>
+
+Quoted from “<span class='gesp'>Neue Auslese</span>,” 1946, Number 1, Page 16.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f27'><a href='#r27'>[27]</a></span>
+
+Not always acknowledged by English authors. Compare for instance A. C.
+Bell, <span class='gesp'>A History of the Blockade of Germany</span>, et cetera, London,
+1937, Page 213: “The assertion that civilians and the Armed Forces have been
+treated only since 1914 as a uniform belligerent body is one of the most ridiculous
+ever made.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f28'><a href='#r28'>[28]</a></span>
+
+Grenfell, <span class='gesp'>The Art of the Admiral</span>, London, 1937, Page 45: “By the
+early part of 1918, the civil population of Germany was in a state of semistarvation,
+and it has been calculated that, as a result of the blockade, over 700,000 Germans
+died of malnutrition.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f29'><a href='#r29'>[29]</a></span>
+
+See also protest of the Soviet Government to the British Ambassador of
+25 October 1939, printed as Number 44 in “<span class='gesp'>Urkunden zum Seekriegsrecht</span>,”
+Volume I, edited by the High Command of the Navy.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f30'><a href='#r30'>[30]</a></span>
+
+See for instance <span class='gesp'>Wheaton’s International Law</span>, 5th Edition,
+Page 727, Liddell Hart, “The Revolution in Naval Warfare,” <span class='gesp'>Observer</span> of
+14 April 1946.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f31'><a href='#r31'>[31]</a></span>
+
+Oppenheim, Die Stellung des Kauffahrteischiffes im Seekrieg, <span class='gesp'>Zeitschrift
+für Völkerrecht</span>, 1914, Page 165.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f32'><a href='#r32'>[32]</a></span>
+
+Concerning the execution of these orders in the first World War, Vidaud,
+in “<span class='gesp'>Les navires de commerce armés pour leur défense</span>,”
+Paris, 1936, Pages 63-64 says as follows: “Les équipages eux-mêmes sont militarisés
+et soumis à la discipline militaire, ainsi que le capitaine Alfred Sheldon, appartenant
+à la réserve de la Marine Royale, a été condamné, le 8 Septembre 1915 par
+le conseil de guerre de Devonport, pour n’avoir pas attaqué un sousmarin
+allemand.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f33'><a href='#r33'>[33]</a></span>
+
+Compare for instance “Submarines in the Atomic Era” in the <span class='gesp'>New York
+Herald Tribune</span>, European Edition, of 27 April 1946, Page 2.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f34'><a href='#r34'>[34]</a></span>
+
+A. C. Bell, Historical Section, Committee of Imperial Defense, <span class='gesp'>A History
+of the Blockade of Germany and of the Countries Associated
+with Her in the Great War 1914-1918</span>—The introduction
+contains the remark: “This history is confidential and for official use only.”
+(Quoted from the German edition by Böhmert, <span class='gesp'>Die englische Hunger-blockade
+im Weltkrieg</span>, Essen, 1943).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f35'><a href='#r35'>[35]</a></span>
+
+Hugo Grotius, <span class='gesp'>De jure pacis ac belli</span>, Book II, Chapter XXI.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f36'><a href='#r36'>[36]</a></span>
+
+Hugo Grotius, <span class='gesp'>De jure pacis ac belli</span>, Book II, Chapter XXVI.
+Paragraph 4, “He can believe that in a matter of doubt he must obey his superior.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f37'><a href='#r37'>[37]</a></span>
+
+See <span class='gesp'>Wheaton’s International Law</span>, 5th Edition, Pages 543-5.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f38'><a href='#r38'>[38]</a></span>
+
+Claud Mullins, <span class='gesp'>The Leipzig Trials</span>, London, 1921.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f39'><a href='#r39'>[39]</a></span>
+
+See Document Book 1, Documents Numbers Raeder-3 and 4, Page 9 et sequentes.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f40'><a href='#r40'>[40]</a></span>
+
+Especially the following documents are concerned:</p>
+
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>C-140, USA-51 of 25 October 1933; C-159, USA-54 of 2 March 1936; C-194, USA-55
+of 6 March 1936; C-175, USA-69 of 24 June 1937; 388-PS, USA-26 of 20 May 1938;
+C-136, USA-104 of 21 October 1938.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f41'><a href='#r41'>[41]</a></span>
+
+Record of 4 December 1945, Volume III, Page 95.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f42'><a href='#r42'>[42]</a></span>
+
+Record of 4 December 1945, Volume III, Page 110.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f43'><a href='#r43'>[43]</a></span>
+
+Reich Defense Law of 4 September 1938.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f44'><a href='#r44'>[44]</a></span>
+
+For instance under Balfour and Churchill.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f45'><a href='#r45'>[45]</a></span>
+
+Document Book 1, Document Number Raeder-4, Page 12.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f46'><a href='#r46'>[46]</a></span>
+
+Document Book 6, Document Number Raeder-121, Page 524.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f47'><a href='#r47'>[47]</a></span>
+
+Refer also to Ronneberger Affidavit, Document Book 6, Document Number
+Raeder-126, Page 543 et sequentes which point to the same subjects, especially
+to the strong Christian belief of Raeder and to the pronounced opposition to
+Christianity and Church by Bormann.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f48'><a href='#r48'>[48]</a></span>
+
+Second Lohmann Affidavit, Document Number Raeder-8, Document Book 1,
+Page 41.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f49'><a href='#r49'>[49]</a></span>
+
+Refer to Documents 386-PS, USA-25; L-79, USA-27; 798-PS, USA-29; 1014-PS,
+USA-30; 769-PS, USA-23.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f50'><a href='#r50'>[50]</a></span>
+
+Document Book 2, Document Number Raeder-27, Page 144 et sequentes.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f51'><a href='#r51'>[51]</a></span>
+
+See Hossbach Document.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f52'><a href='#r52'>[52]</a></span>
+
+Record of 19 March 1946, Volume IX, Page 463.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f53'><a href='#r53'>[53]</a></span>
+
+Record of 19 March 1946, Volume IX, page 481.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f54'><a href='#r54'>[54]</a></span>
+
+Record of 16 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 35.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f55'><a href='#r55'>[55]</a></span>
+
+Record of 22 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 314.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f56'><a href='#r56'>[56]</a></span>
+
+Record of 22 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 306.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f57'><a href='#r57'>[57]</a></span>
+
+Record of 22 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 306.</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>Affidavit Generaladmiral Böhm, Document Number Raeder-129.</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>Affidavit Generaladmiral Albrecht, Document Number Raeder-128.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f58'><a href='#r58'>[58]</a></span>
+
+Record of 22 May 1946, Volume XIV, Page 306.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f59'><a href='#r59'>[59]</a></span>
+
+See Documents Numbers 798-PS, USA-29; 1014-PS, USA-30, Document Book 2.
+Page 144, Document Number Raeder-77.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f60'><a href='#r60'>[60]</a></span>
+
+Record of 26 November 1945, Volume II, Page 292.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f61'><a href='#r61'>[61]</a></span>
+
+Raeder Document Book 2, Page 144.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f62'><a href='#r62'>[62]</a></span>
+
+See Document 789-PS, USA-93.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='footnote'>
+<p class='footnote'>
+<span class='footnote-id' id='f63'><a href='#r63'>[63]</a></span>
+
+Document Book 2, Pages 116-117, Document Number Raeder-19.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' title='403' id='Page_403'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>ONE HUNDRED<br/> AND EIGHTIETH DAY</span><br/> Wednesday, 17 July 1946</h1></div>
+
+<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: Yesterday I dealt with the events before the outbreak
+of war. Now I shall turn to the events which occurred during
+the war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I think I have shown that the Navy had an extremely insignificant
+part in all events prior to the war, and that the transactions
+in which the Navy was authoritatively involved were carried out on
+a peace basis, namely, on the basis of the naval agreements with
+England. When the war nevertheless ultimately broke out, involving
+England, too, on 3 September 1939, a regrettable incident occurred
+on the very first day, through the sinking of the <span class='it'>Athenia</span>, from
+which the Prosecution endeavors by the use of exaggerated terms
+to construe a grave moral charge against Raeder, not so much
+indeed on the basis of its actual military aspect, that is, the sinking,
+which my colleague Dr. Kranzbühler has already discussed, as on
+account of an article published in the <span class='it'>Völkischer Beobachter</span> of
+23 October 1939 entitled “Churchill Sinks the <span class='it'>Athenia</span>.” Were the
+facts as brought forward by the Prosecution correct, the moral
+accusations against Raeder and the Navy would be justified, even
+though, of course, an untruthful newspaper article is no crime.
+Consequently the accusation brought by the Prosecution is made
+for the sole purpose of vilifying Raeder’s personality in contrast
+to the lifelong esteem which Raeder has enjoyed in the whole
+world, in fact especially abroad.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I think the evidence has sufficiently revealed that the statement
+of facts presented by the Prosecution is not correct. It is quite
+plausible that at first sight the Prosecution should have believed
+that the odious article in the <span class='it'>Völkischer Beobachter</span> could not have
+appeared without the knowledge of the naval command. The Prosecution
+believed this because, in view of their conspiracy theory,
+they are inclined to assume in every case that there was constant
+discussion and close co-operation among the various departments.
+The course of the Trial has shown that this assumption is far from
+correct. The contrast between the various departments, and
+especially between the Navy and the Propaganda Ministry, or
+Raeder and Goebbels, was far greater than the contrast between
+<span class='pageno' title='404' id='Page_404'></span>
+departments in a democratic state. In addition, the testimonies of
+the witnesses Raeder, Schulte-Mönting, Weizsäcker, and Fritzsche,
+together with the documents, establish the following facts absolutely
+clearly:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) In early September 1939 Raeder himself firmly believed that
+the sinking was not to be imputed to a German U-boat, because
+it was revealed by the reports that the nearest German U-boat was
+at least 75 nautical miles away from the spot of the sinking.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) Accordingly Raeder, as stated in Document D-912, published
+a <span class='it'>bona fide</span> denial and gave statements to this effect to the American
+Naval Attaché and to the German State Secretary, Baron Weizsäcker.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(3) Raeder did not realize the mistake until after the return of
+<span class='it'>U-30</span> on 27 September 1939.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(4) Hitler insisted, as evidenced by witnesses Raeder and Schulte-Mönting,
+that no rectification of the facts should be made to any
+other German or foreign department, that is to say, that the sinking
+should not be acknowledged as caused by a German U-boat. He
+apparently let himself be guided by political considerations and
+wished to avoid complications with the U.S.A. over an incident
+which could not be remedied, however regrettable it was. Hitler’s
+order was so strict that the few officers who were informed were
+put under oath to keep it secret.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(5) Fritzsche disclosed, that after the first investigation by the
+Navy in early September 1939, he made no further investigation
+and that the <span class='it'>Völkischer Beobachter</span> article appeared as the result of
+an agreement between Hitler and Goebbels, without previous notice
+to Raeder. On this point the testimonies of Raeder and Schulte-Mönting
+coincide. It is consequently clear that Raeder—contrary
+to the claim of the Prosecution—was not the author of the article
+and, moreover, knew nothing about the article before its appearance.
+I regret the fact that in spite of this clarification the Prosecution are
+apparently intent upon persisting in their claim by the submission,
+on 3 July 1946, of a new document, D-912. This newly-submitted
+document only contains radio broadcasts by the propaganda
+Ministry, which are of the same nature as the <span class='it'>Völkischer Beobachter</span>
+article. These radio broadcasts were a propaganda instrument of
+Goebbels and cannot, any more than the article, be brought up as
+a charge against Raeder, who in fact was at the time informed only
+of the article, not of the radio broadcasts. Even the fact that
+Raeder, after being informed of the article, did not attempt to
+obtain a rectification, cannot be made a moral charge against him,
+since he was bound by Hitler’s order and had no idea at the time
+that Hitler himself had had a hand in the article, which Weizsäcker
+aptly described as perverse fantasy.
+<span class='pageno' title='405' id='Page_405'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection I would remind the Tribunal that it is a well-known
+fact that precisely at the beginning of the war inaccurate
+reports also appeared in the English press about alleged German
+atrocities, which, even after their clarification, were not rectified,
+as for instance, the false report about the murder of 10,000 Czechs
+in Prague by German elements in September 1939, although the
+matter had been cleared up by a commission of neutral journalists.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution professes to possess overwhelming material
+against all the defendants. If this presumption were correct with
+reference to Raeder, the Prosecution would scarcely have felt the
+need of bringing forward this <span class='it'>Athenia</span> case, of all things, in such
+ponderous and injurious terms for the sole purpose of discrediting
+the former Commander-in-Chief of the Navy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Concerning Greece, the Prosecution accuses Raeder of violation
+of neutrality and breach of international law on two counts, namely:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(1) On the basis of Document C-12, according to which Hitler
+decided, basing on a report by Raeder on 30 December 1939, that:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Greek merchant ships in the zone around England which the
+U.S.A. declared prohibited will be treated like enemy ships.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>(2) According to Document C-176, on the occasion of the delivery
+of a report to Hitler on 18 March 1941, Raeder asked for confirmation
+that “all of Greece was to be occupied, even in case of
+peaceful settlement.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the course of the Trial both accusations have turned out to
+be untenable; in both cases there is no action which violated international
+law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With reference to the first accusation it should be pointed out
+that Raeder and the German Naval Command learned in October
+or November 1939 that quite a number of Greek merchant ships
+had been put at the disposal of England, either at the request or
+with the approval of the Greek Government (Documents Number
+Raeder-53, 54). This fact cannot be reconciled with strict neutrality,
+and according to the principles of international law that gave
+Germany the right to take an equivalent countermeasure. This
+justified countermeasure consisted in treating Greek ships heading
+for England as enemy ships from the moment they entered the zone
+around England which had been declared prohibited by the United
+States.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With reference to the second accusation it must be noted that
+Germany, especially the High Command of the Navy, had received
+reports that certain Greek military and political circles had maintained
+very close connections with the Allied General Staff ever
+since 1939. As time went by more and more reports came in. What
+the Allies were planning in the Balkans is known; the intentions
+<span class='pageno' title='406' id='Page_406'></span>
+were to erect a Balkan front against Germany. For this purpose
+local conditions in Greece, as well as in Romania, were examined
+by Allied officers on behalf of the Allied General Staff in order to
+establish airplane bases there. Furthermore, preparations were
+made to land in Greece. As proof I have presented, as Exhibit
+Number Raeder-59, the minutes of the session of the French War
+Committee of 26 April 1940, which shows that the War Committee
+was at that time already examining the question of possible operations
+in the Caucasus area and in the Balkans and which further
+reveals the activity of General Jauneaud in Greece for the purpose
+of continuing investigations and preparations and shows how he
+endeavored to camouflage his trip by making it in civilian clothing
+(Document Number Raeder-63).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This attitude of Greece, and especially her falling in with Allied
+plans, represents a violation of neutrality on the part of Greece; for
+Greece did not appear as England’s ally but formally continued to
+maintain her neutrality. Therefore, Greece could no longer expect
+that Germany would fully respect Greek neutrality. Germany
+nevertheless did do so for a long time. The occupation of Greece
+took place in April 1941 only after British troops had already landed
+in southern Greece on 3 March 1941.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact that Greece agreed to the British landing is, according
+to generally recognized rules, without significance in international
+legal relations and with regard to the international legal decision
+between Germany and England and between Germany and Greece;
+it has importance only in the legal relations between England and
+Greece.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The British Prosecution tried to justify the occupation of Greece
+by pointing to the fact that Greek neutrality was menaced by
+Germany, especially by the occupation of Bulgaria on 1 March 1941.
+In this connection the Prosecution is overlooking the fact that not
+only did the occupation of Greece by British forces start considerably
+earlier than the German planning, but also the planning
+of the Allies. But be that as it may, in any case, no accusation
+whatever can be made against Raeder, because the date of the
+document submitted by the Prosecution is 18 March 1941, which
+means that it is 14 days later than the landing of the British
+in southern Greece. At that time Greece could certainly no longer
+demand that her alleged neutrality be respected. It is also an
+unjustified charge when the Prosecution points out that Raeder
+asks for confirmation that all of Greece will be occupied. This
+request by Raeder cannot be made responsible for the fact that
+all of Greece was occupied, for Hitler had already provided in
+his Directive Number 20 of 13 December 1940 that the entire
+Greek mainland was to be occupied, in order to frustrate British
+<span class='pageno' title='407' id='Page_407'></span>
+intentions of creating a dangerous basis for air operations under
+the protection of a Balkan front, especially for the Romanian oil
+district. In addition to that, the inquiry of Raeder on 18 March
+1941 was justified on strategic grounds, because Greece offered
+many landing possibilities for the British and the only possible
+defense was for Greece to be firmly in the hands of Germany, as
+the witnesses Raeder and Schulte-Mönting have explained.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This strategic conception of Raeder had nothing to do with plans
+of conquest or thirst for glory, as the Prosecution thinks, for the
+Navy won no glory whatsoever in Greece, since the occupation was
+a land operation. The occupation of an originally neutral country
+is simply the regrettable consequence of such a large-scale war;
+it cannot be charged to one belligerent if both belligerents had
+plans concerning the same state, and carried out these plans.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should like now to go on to the subject of Norway. On 9 April
+1940 troops of all three branches of the German Armed Forces
+occupied Norway and Denmark. From this and the preceding plans,
+the Prosecution have brought the gravest accusation against Grossadmiral
+Raeder, together with the collective charge of participation
+in a conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The British prosecutor pointed out that it was Raeder who first
+suggested the occupation of Norway to Hitler, and believes that
+Raeder did so out of a spirit of conquest and vainglory. I shall
+demonstrate that this argumentation is incorrect. One thing is true,
+that is that in this single instance Raeder took the initiative of
+first approaching Hitler on the subject of Norway, namely on
+10 October 1939. However, I shall show that in fact in this connection
+he acted not as a politician but exclusively as a soldier. Raeder
+sensed purely strategic dangers and pointed out these strategic
+dangers to Hitler, because he assumed that the Allies were contemplating
+the establishment of a new front in Scandinavia and
+in Norway, in particular, and realized that an occupation of Norway
+by Britain might have militarily disastrous consequences for Germany.
+I shall show that Germany committed no violation of international
+law by the occupation of Norway. Before I state the legal
+foundation and connect the facts established by the appraisal of
+evidence with the principles of international law, I should like first
+to state an important fact:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As Raeder’s examination shows and as disclosed by Schulte-Mönting’s
+interrogations, he very reluctantly advocated the Norwegian
+campaign as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy. Raeder had
+the natural feeling born of justice that a neutral state could not
+be drawn into the existing war without an absolutely imperative
+emergency. During the period between October 1939 and spring
+1940, Raeder always upheld the theory that by far the best solution
+<span class='pageno' title='408' id='Page_408'></span>
+would be for Norway and all Scandinavia to remain absolutely
+neutral.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Raeder and Schulte-Mönting were in agreement on this point
+during their interrogations; and it is, moreover, proved by documents.
+For this, I refer to Exhibit Number Raeder-69 where the
+conviction of Raeder is expressed that the most favorable solution
+would undoubtedly be the preservation of the strictest neutrality
+by Norway; this is entered in the War Diary on 13 January 1940.
+Raeder clearly saw that an occupation of Norway by Germany,
+for reasons of international law or strategy, could only be conceivable
+if Norway could not or would not maintain absolute neutrality.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has referred to the treaties between Germany
+and Norway, in particular to Document TC-31, by which the
+Reich Government, on 2 September 1939, expressly assures Norway
+of her inviolability and integrity. In this memorandum, however,
+the following legitimate remark is added:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“As the Reich Cabinet makes this declaration, it naturally
+also expects that Norway in turn will observe irreproachable
+neutrality toward the Reich and that it will not tolerate
+breaches of Norwegian neutrality, should attempts along that
+line be made by third parties.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If, despite this fundamental attitude, Germany decided to occupy
+Norway, this was done because the plans of the Allies made
+imminent the danger of an occupation of Norwegian bases by them.
+In his opening speech Sir Hartley Shawcross declared that Germany’s
+breach of neutrality and her war of aggression against
+Norway remained criminal in the sense of the Indictment even if
+Allied plans for the occupation had been correct, and he added that
+in reality such plans were not true. I believe that the argument
+advanced here by Sir Hartley Shawcross is contrary to accepted
+international law. If Allied plans for the occupation of Norwegian
+bases existed and there was a risk that Norway neither would nor
+could maintain strict neutrality, then accepted standards of international
+law did sanction Germany’s Norwegian campaign.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I would first like to bring up the juridical viewpoints based
+on prevailing international law in order to create a foundation for
+my own statements, and thereby at the same time to set forth those
+legal viewpoints which contradict the Prosecution’s interpretation.
+In order to save time in this legal exposition and make the subject
+matter clearer I have submitted as Exhibit Number Raeder-66 an
+opinion on international law with regard to the Norway campaign
+by Dr. Hermann Mosler, professor of international law at the
+University of Bonn. The High Tribunal will remember that I was
+given permission to make use of this opinion for purposes of argumentation,
+and I would therefore refer at this point to this detailed
+<span class='pageno' title='409' id='Page_409'></span>
+scientific compilation and findings. For the purpose of final plea I
+shall confine myself to a summary of the essential concepts of the
+opinion.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Articles 1 and 2 of the Hague Convention on Rights and Obligations
+of Neutrals in the event of warfare at sea stipulate that
+the parties at war are bound to respect the rights of sovereignty of
+neutral powers in the territory and coastal waters of the neutral
+power, and all hostile acts of warships of the belligerent parties
+within the coastal waters of a neutral power are strictly banned
+as violations of neutrality. Contrary to these stipulations Great
+Britain violated Norway’s neutrality through the laying of mines
+in Norwegian coastal waters for the purpose of obstructing the
+legitimate passage of German warships and merchantmen, especially
+in order to cut off shipments of iron ore from Narvik to Germany.
+In the letter from the British Foreign Office which I received in
+reply to my petition for authorization to submit files of the British
+Admiralty, confirmation as per Exhibit Number Raeder-130 was
+received to the effect that His Majesty’s forces laid mine fields in
+Norwegian waters, and in addition it was stated that this was a
+well-known fact (Documents Number Raeder-83, 84, 90).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact is presumably uncontested that thereupon Germany
+was justified in restoring the equilibrium between the belligerent
+parties, in other words by setting her Armed Forces to wrest from
+the enemy the benefit he was deriving from a violation of neutrality.
+Reaction against such a violation of neutrality is directed primarily
+against the enemy, not against the neutral. The legal relationship
+to neutrality ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT [<span class='it'>Interposing</span>]: Dr. Siemers, the Tribunal would like
+to know what your contention is on this subject. Do you contend
+that any breach of neutrality of a warring state entitles one of the
+warring nations to enter that neutral state?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: Mr. President, in this general way one certainly
+could not say that. It is a principle of international law that a
+violation of international law committed by one state only entitles
+the other warring nation to a countermeasure in proportion to the
+breach of neutrality committed. Certainly an occupation of Norway
+on the part of Germany would not be justified because Britain
+mined the coastal waters. The fact does not justify an occupation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: Would it be your contention that it made any
+difference on the rights of Germany if Germany were to be held
+to be an aggressor in the original war?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I will repeat it. According to your contention, would it make
+any difference that Germany was held, if it were held, to be the
+aggressor in the original war out of which the occupation of the
+neutral country occurred?
+<span class='pageno' title='410' id='Page_410'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: Mr. President, I beg to apologize, but I am afraid
+I cannot quite understand the sense as it comes through in translation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: I will say it again more slowly. According to
+your contention, would it make any difference if the Tribunal were
+to think that Germany had been the aggressor in the war which
+led to the occupation of the neutral state?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: My apologies, Mr. President. Now, if I understood
+that correctly, you wish me to answer the question whether
+the fact that previously a war had been begun by Germany against
+Poland would influence juridical attitude toward the question of
+Norway.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: Assuming, I only say assuming that the war
+begun by Germany against Poland were to be held to be an aggressive
+war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: Mr. President, I believe that I must answer in
+the negative, because the individual facts under international law
+must be dealt with separately. The fact that the Tribunal may
+possibly assume that an aggressive war was conducted against
+Poland cannot, from the point of view of international law, have
+any effect upon subsequent years.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That, incidentally, is the point of view which, I believe, was
+adopted by the Prosecution, for Sir Hartley Shawcross also, dealt
+with the question of Greece and the question of landings entirely
+under the aspect of Greek events and did not contend that Britain
+could occupy Greece because Germany had occupied Poland. He
+said, just as I did, that from the legal standpoint of international
+law Britain could occupy Greece because Greece was threatened
+by a German occupation. That is what I am saying from the point
+of view of international law with reference to Norway; as my
+further remarks will show, I am not trying to draw any other
+parallels.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: Yes. There is one other question which I should
+like to ask you. Is it your contention that Germany was entitled
+under international law to use the territorial waters of Norway,
+either for her warships or for the transport of ore, or for the
+transport of prisoners of war?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: In my opinion, from the standpoint of international
+law, the situation is that Germany was entitled to use the
+coastal waters, observing at the same time the various international
+rules, such as for instance, only brief stays in ports and similar
+rulings like the obligation to submit to investigation by neutrals in
+the case of the <span class='it'>Altmark</span>. But basically, carrying on shipping
+<span class='pageno' title='411' id='Page_411'></span>
+operations from Narvik was justified according to international law
+as far as I know.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: Continue.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: Mr. President, with reference to the last point,
+may I add one thing? Should the view be adopted that Germany
+was not allowed to use these coastal waters, then the mining of
+these coastal waters would have been a justified breach of neutrality
+on Britain’s part, so that, as far as I am concerned, the mining
+operation as grounds for this would have to be left out of my plea,
+though not the other facts I am citing. Mining the waters is in
+equivalent proportion to the use of the coastal waters. I myself
+consider that the mining operation was not permissible, while
+passage through coastal waters was; but this does not affect the
+entire subject of the occupation of Norway. I hope I shall be understood
+as not meaning that Germany was justified in occupying
+Norway because Britain had mined the coastal waters.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: But you are saying, are you, that Germany was
+entitled to use the coastal waters, first of all, for the transport of
+ore; secondly, for her warships?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: Yes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: And thirdly, for the transport of prisoners of war?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: Yes. It is my opinion, Mr. President, that as to
+ore shipments there is no prohibitive clause in international law,
+so that this shipping was permissible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With reference to prisoners of war, may I point out that only
+one case arose and that is the case of the <span class='it'>Altmark</span>. If Germany
+was not deemed authorized to use coastal waters for the transport
+of prisoners of war, then that could at most lead to Britain’s adopting
+an equivalent single countermeasure; but she would not be
+justified in mining the entire coastal waters. The mining of the
+entire coast, from the point of view of international law, is only
+justified if you adopt the point of view that Germany’s merchant
+shipping was prohibited from entering those coastal waters by
+international law. But that, in my opinion, is not the situation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: You may continue.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: Reaction against such violation of neutrality is
+primarily directed against the adversary, not against the neutral
+party. Legal relationship deriving from neutrality exists not only
+between the neutral party and the two belligerent parties, but the
+neutrality of the state in question is at the same time a factor in
+direct relations existing between the belligerent parties. If the
+relationship of neutrality between one of the belligerent parties
+and the neutral power suffers disturbance, the neutral power can in
+<span class='pageno' title='412' id='Page_412'></span>
+no way file complaint if the other belligerent power takes appropriate
+action; at the same time it is entirely immaterial whether
+the neutral state is unable or unwilling to protect its neutrality
+(Document Number Raeder-66).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The legal title under which the belligerent power thus placed at
+a disadvantage can proceed to take countermeasures is the “right
+of self-defense” (<span class='it'>das Recht der Selbsterhaltung; le droit de défense
+personelle</span>). As brought out in detail by this opinion, this right of
+self-defense is generally recognized by international law. It suffices
+to point out here that this basic law is not affected by the
+Kellogg Pact, which has so often been mentioned in this Court. In
+this connection I ask permission to offer the following brief quotation
+from the circular memorandum of the U.S. Secretary of
+State, Kellogg, dated 23 June 1938:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“There is nothing in the American draft of an antiwar
+treaty which restricts or prejudices the right of self-defense
+in any manner. That right is inherent in every sovereign
+state and is implied in every treaty.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Justice Jackson will permit me to mention that he himself, in
+his opening speech of 21 November 1945, referred to the “right of
+legitimate self-defense.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is interesting that in his address before Parliament on 8 February
+1940, the Swedish Foreign Minister, Guenther, recognized this
+concept, although he represented the interests of a state whose neutrality
+was endangered at the time, and in addition was speaking
+before Germany proceeded to retaliatory measures in Norway (Document
+Number Raeder-66). In that address Guenther expressed his
+opinion with regard to the British declaration that Sweden’s neutrality
+would be respected only as long as it was respected by Britain’s
+enemies. Guenther recognized the fact that Sweden, in her
+relationship to England, would lose her neutrality should Germany
+violate Sweden’s neutrality and should Sweden be neither willing
+nor able to prevent such violation of her neutrality by Germany.
+Consequently, Guenther said, Great Britain would no longer be
+required to treat Sweden as a neutral country. It is obvious that
+the conclusions drawn by Guenther in the event of a breach of
+Sweden’s neutrality by Germany must also apply to the three-cornered
+legal relationship between Great Britain, Germany, and
+Norway. What was involved, however—and this I shall set forth
+in my presentation of evidence—was not Great Britain’s mine-laying
+activity in Norwegian coastal waters but a much more far-reaching
+Anglo-French scheme aiming at the occupation of Norwegian bases
+and of a portion of the Norwegian home territory. The mine-laying
+activity enters into the picture merely as a part of the total plan.
+<span class='pageno' title='413' id='Page_413'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>According to Mosler’s opinion and in the light of the above
+remarks, it is absolutely clear that Germany was justified in occupying
+Norway had the Allies carried part of their plan into effect
+by landing at a Norwegian base before German troops made their
+appearance. This, however, was not the case. Rather, as I will
+show, was the situation such that Germany anticipated an Anglo-French
+landing; in other words, she decided on countermeasures in
+anticipation of the imminent danger which threatened.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another legal question arises therefrom: Assuming the same conditions,
+are countermeasures by a belligerent permitted only after
+the opposing belligerent has proceeded to violate neutrality, or is a
+reaction permitted beforehand in view of the imminently threatening
+violation of neutrality, in order to head off the enemy’s attack
+which can be expected at any moment?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>According to the well-founded opinion of Dr. Mosler preventive
+countermeasures are permissible; and an impending violation of
+neutrality, which can be expected with certainty, is considered equal
+to a completed violation of neutrality.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The well-known English specialist on international law, Westlake,
+states with regard to the question of measures:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Such a case in character resembles one where a belligerent
+has certain knowledge that his opponent, in order to gain a
+strategic advantage, is just about to have an army march
+through the territory of a neutral who is clearly too weak to
+resist; under the circumstances it would be impossible to
+refuse him the right to anticipate the attack on the neutral
+territory.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The justification for such a preventive measure, according to
+Westlake, lies in the right of self-defense, which applies equally
+against a threatening violation of neutrality. Any other concept
+would fail to meet the facts of life and would not correspond to the
+character of the society of nations as an aggregation of sovereign
+states with an as yet incompletely developed common code of law.
+In the domestic law system of every civilized country the prevention
+of an immediately threatening attack is a permissible act of
+defense, although in such a contingency even the help of the state
+against the law-breaker is available. In the community of international
+law, where this is not the case—at any rate not at the
+beginning of and during the second World War—the viewpoint of
+self-defense must apply to an even greater extent. In keeping with
+this concept, the British Government during this war also considered
+the preventive measure justified when it occupied Iceland
+on 10 May 1940. The British Government justified this measure
+<span class='pageno' title='414' id='Page_414'></span>
+clearly and correctly in accordance with international law in an official
+announcement of the Foreign Office, as follows:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“After the German occupation of Denmark it has become
+necessary to count on the possibility of a sudden German
+raid on Iceland. It is clear that the Icelandic Government, in
+case of such an attack, even if it were only carried out with
+very small forces, would be unable to prevent the country
+from falling completely into the hands of the Germans.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The preventive measure was carried out by Britain, although
+Iceland expressly protested by a note against the occupation. I also
+ask to note that the United States agreed with this standpoint of
+law, as is proved by the well-known message from the President of
+the United States to Congress of 7 July 1941, and the subsequent
+occupation of Iceland by armed forces of the American Navy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In accordance with these basic principles of law, the facts at
+hand must be examined. I have tried to clarify the facts in the
+presentation of evidence, and I would like to summarize the major
+factors which actually indicated a closely impending violation of
+neutrality on the part of the Allies by a partial occupation of Norway,
+and thereby justified the German campaign in Norway.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At the end of September and early in October 1939, Admiral
+Raeder, as the evidence has shown, received various items of information
+through the regular reports of Admiral Canaris as chief of
+intelligence and through Admiral Carls, which gave reason to believe
+in the danger of the Allies’ proceeding to occupy bases in Norway,
+in accordance with their plans to encircle Germany in order to put
+a stop, in particular, to ore imports from Scandinavia.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>British flying personnel camouflaged in civilian clothing had
+been seen in Oslo; and survey work by Allied officers on Norwegian
+bridges, viaducts, and tunnels up to the Swedish border had been
+identified. Furthermore, the quiet mobilization of Swedish troops,
+owing to the danger to Swedish ore territories, had become known.
+Raeder was justified in considering himself obliged to report these
+facts to Hitler and to point out to him the danger which would
+arise for Germany if British and French armed forces were to gain
+a foothold in Scandinavia. The dangers were clear. They consisted
+of the cutting-off of all imports from the industrial areas of Scandinavia,
+in particular of the ore imports, as well as in the fact that
+the Allies would obtain a favorable base for air attacks, and last
+but not least, in the fact that the German Navy would be threatened
+on its flank and its operational potentialities would be limited.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The blockade of the North Sea and Baltic would have had
+strategically disastrous consequences. As the information did not
+yet allow of a final over-all picture, Raeder did not suggest immediate
+occupation, but only pointed out the dangers, intending to
+<span class='pageno' title='415' id='Page_415'></span>
+await further developments for the time being. Neither did Hitler
+make a final decision during this discussion of 10 October 1939 but
+agreed to wait. Similar information was received during the months
+of October and November, this time also from the naval attaché,
+Korvettenkapitän Schreiber, who had in the meantime been sent to
+Oslo, whose affidavit (Document Raeder-107) I would like to cite.
+It shows that the Norwegian shipping association had made tanker
+tonnage of about one million tons available to Britain with the consent
+of the Norwegian Government (Document Number Raeder-68).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the winter of 1939-40, information took on a more definite
+form concerning espionage missions given by the British and French
+Secret Service to Norwegian agents and British harbor consulates
+for the purpose of reconnoitering landing facilities and examination
+of Norwegian railroads with regard to their capacity, particularly
+the Narvik line, and missions concerning information about land
+and sea airports in Norway. From the fact that the information
+from two different sources, namely, the naval attaché in Oslo and
+Admiral Canaris, checked and became more and more certain during
+the period from October to December 1939, the danger indicated
+appeared to keep increasing.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In addition, in December 1939 Quisling and Hagelin sent to
+Rosenberg—entirely independently of the sources of information
+which had existed up to that time—the same and similar information
+concerning the landing intentions of the Allies. This did
+not go to Raeder for the sole reason that Raeder did not know either
+Quisling or Hagelin at that time. Since the question involved was
+a purely military-strategic one, Rosenberg asked Raeder to discuss
+things with Quisling so that Raeder could examine the military-technical
+possibilities in consideration of the fact the aggression
+by the Allies in Scandinavia must be expected according to the
+information received. This is evident from the letter from Rosenberg
+to Raeder of 13 December 1939, which I submitted as Exhibit Number
+Raeder-67. Raeder considered it his duty from the purely
+military point of view to inform Hitler, with whom he had not
+discussed this question in the meantime, that coinciding information
+had since been received from Canaris, the naval attaché in
+Oslo, and Quisling. Hitler asked to speak with Quisling personally,
+whereupon he decided, in order to meet the threat, to make the
+necessary preparations for an eventual preventive measure, namely,
+the occupation of Norway (Document C-64, Exhibit Number GB-86).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The final decision was still deferred, and further information was
+awaited as to whether the danger appeared to increase. This caution
+and delay will readily be understood in the case of Raeder. As I have
+already observed, Raeder would have preferred to see the neutrality
+of Norway maintained, especially since he was against any
+<span class='pageno' title='416' id='Page_416'></span>
+conquest just for the sake of conquest. He knew, on the other hand,
+that an occupation required the commitment of the whole Navy,
+thus involving the fate of the entire Navy, and that the loss of at
+least a third of the whole fleet had to be reckoned with. It must
+surely be clear how difficult, from such political and strategic viewpoints,
+such a decision was for a responsible man and soldier.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Unfortunately, during the first months of the year 1940, the
+reports multiplied and kept becoming more certain. In March 1940
+uncommonly many English-speaking persons could be seen in Oslo,
+and Raeder received very serious and credible information about
+impending measures by the Allies against Norway and Sweden. As
+far as landing intentions were concerned, Narvik, Trondheim, and
+Stavanger were mentioned. In this manner the military planning
+actually was not undertaken until February and March 1940, and
+final instructions were issued to the Wehrmacht only in March 1940.
+In addition, numerous violations of neutrality occurred in March
+1940, which have been collected in the War Diary (Documents
+Raeder-81 and 82), and also the mine-laying in Norwegian territorial
+waters at the beginning of April.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has put in only a few documents against this
+comprehensive informative material, according to which the German
+Minister in Oslo, Breuer, did not look upon the danger as being
+so great but believed that British activities, which he also reported,
+tended merely to provoke Germany into opening war operations in
+Norwegian waters (Documents Number D-843, Exhibit GB-466;
+D-844, Exhibit GB-467; D-845, Exhibit GB-486).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Baron Weizsäcker’s point of view in cross-examination was that
+at first he did not consider the danger so great either; but he
+admitted that later on the facts proved that he and Breuer were
+wrong, while Raeder had been right in his apprehension.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This objective accuracy of the opinion of Admiral Raeder, and
+of the information on which he based his opinion, is shown in the
+various documents submitted by me and accepted by the Court.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Since 16 January 1940, the French High Command had been
+working on a plan which had in view, among other things, the occupation
+of harbors and airfields on the west coast of Norway. The
+plan provided, in addition, for an eventual extension of operations
+to Sweden and occupation of the mines of Gallivare (Document
+Number Raeder-79). Efforts have been made to justify this plan by
+stating that it was elaborated solely to help Finland against the
+Soviet Union.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To begin with, it might be argued in contradiction to this that
+an action in support of Finland does not justify any occupation of
+Norwegian territory. Moreover, the documents show that it was
+not only a question of altruistic measures in favor of Finland.
+<span class='pageno' title='417' id='Page_417'></span>
+During the inter-Allied military conferences on 31 January and
+1 February, which preceded the meeting of the Supreme Council
+on 5 February, the question of direct help for Finland was relegated
+by the British to second place; they showed themselves to be determined
+supporters of an enterprise against the mines of northern
+Sweden. This is confirmed by General Gamelin in a note of 10 March
+1940 (Document Raeder-79), and he adds that this opinion obtained
+the majority vote in the Supreme Council and that preparations for
+the Scandinavian expedition should be started immediately.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And so it came about that the Franco-British fighting forces had
+been ready for transportation since the first days of March; according
+to Gamelin, the leadership of the proposed operations in Scandinavia
+was in the hands of the British High Command. Gamelin
+adds finally that the Scandinavian plans must be resolutely pursued
+further in order to save Finland—I quote, “or at least to lay hands
+on the Swedish ore and the northern harbors.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Lord Halifax informed the Norwegian Minister on 7 February
+that Britain wished to obtain certain bases on the Norwegian coast
+in order to stop German transports of ore from Narvik (Document
+Raeder-97). By mid-February, British and French General Staff
+officers were, in agreement with the Norwegian authorities, inspecting
+landing places (Document Raeder-97). According to a report
+by the German Legation in Stockholm, dated 16 February 1940,
+British intentions in this respect were to land troops simultaneously
+at Bergen, Trondheim, and Narvik. On 21 February 1940
+Daladier communicated to the French Ambassador in London,
+Corbin, that the occupation of the most important Norwegian ports
+and the landing of the first body of the Allied fighting forces
+would give Norway and Sweden a feeling of security; and he
+goes on to say that this operation must be planned and executed
+at shortest notice, “independently of Finland’s call for assistance.”
+In the event of this <span class='it'>démarche</span> meeting with refusal by Norway,
+which was likely, the British Government was to take note of the
+Norwegian attitude and immediately seize control of the bases it
+needed for the safeguarding of its interests, doing so in the form
+of a “surprise operation.” Whether Sweden would refuse passage
+through to Finland did not appear important; what is being emphasized
+is rather—and I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“... the advantage of having secured a dominating position
+against Germany in the North, interrupted the sea transport
+of Swedish ore, and brought the Swedish ore districts within
+range of our aviation” (Documents Raeder-77 and 80).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 27 February 1940, Churchill declared in the House of Commons
+that he was “tired of considering the rights of neutrals”
+(Document Raeder-97).
+<span class='pageno' title='418' id='Page_418'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is interesting to note that unanimity was achieved in the sixth
+session of the Supreme Council on 28 March 1940—I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Every endeavor on the part of the Soviet Government to
+obtain from Norway a position on the Atlantic coast runs
+counter to the vital interests of the Allies and results in
+appropriate counteraction” (Document Raeder-83).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The view thereby adopted by the Supreme Council with reference
+to the vital interests of the Allies coincides exactly with the legitimate
+notions of the “right of self-defense” as presented by me
+and is in complete contradiction to the interpretation of international
+law propounded by the Prosecution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The ultimate execution of the operation in Norway, that is, the
+landing and the construction of bases, was decided on 28 March 1940
+between the authoritative British and French offices. This date was
+indicated at a session of the French War Council by the French
+Prime Minister (Document Raeder-59); and General Gamelin added
+that he had, on 29 March, impressed upon General Ironside the
+necessity of having everything ready for a swift occupation of the
+Norwegian ports. He said he had also informed Mr. Churchill to the
+same effect on the occasion of a visit to Paris.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One day later, 30 March, Churchill declared on the radio—I quote,
+“It would not be just if, in a life-and-death struggle, the Western
+Powers adhered to legal agreements” (Document Raeder-97).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On 2 April 1940 at 1912 hours, London notified Paris by telegram
+that the first transport was “to sail on J. 1. day,” and that J. 1. day
+was in principle 5 April (Document Raeder-85). On 5 April, Earl
+de la Warr stated that neither Germany nor the neutrals could
+be certain that “England would allow her hands to be tied behind
+her back in complying with the letter of the law” (Document
+Raeder-97).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The British Minister of Labor, Ernest Brown, on 6 April 1940
+declared that neither Germany nor the neutrals could count on “the
+Western Powers’ adhering to the letter of international law” (Document
+Raeder-97).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the same day—this was one day after the laying of mines
+by British combat forces in Norwegian territorial waters—a secret
+British operational order was given “concerning preparations for
+the occupation of the northern Swedish ore field from Narvik”
+(Document Raeder-88).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this order it was specified that the mission of the “Avon”
+Force consisted first of all in “securing the port of Narvik and the
+railway to the Swedish border.” It was added that it was the intention
+of the commander “to advance into Sweden and to occupy the
+Gallivare ore fields and important points of that territory as soon
+<span class='pageno' title='419' id='Page_419'></span>
+as an opportunity occurs,” a formulation strikingly reminiscent of
+the words in the Prosecution Document L-79, “to attack Poland at
+the first suitable opportunity.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The original plan of dispatching the first transport to Norway
+on 5 April was changed; for on the evening of 5 April the British
+High Command informed the Commander-in-Chief of the French
+Navy that—I quote:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“... the first British convoy could not depart before 8 April
+which with respect to the time schedule established would
+mean that the first French contingent would leave its embarkation
+port on 16 April” (Document Raeder-91).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To complete the story it may be mentioned that the Norwegian
+operation was designated by the Allies by the camouflage name of
+“Stratford Plan,” while the German Norwegian operation was
+referred to by the camouflage name of “Weser Exercise” (Weserübung)
+(Document Raeder-98).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All these facts go to show that, since the autumn of 1939, preparations
+for possible action in Norway were made by studying
+landing possibilities, <span class='it'>et cetera</span>. As from January and February 1940
+the danger of an occupation of bases in Norway by the Allies was
+imminent. In March 1940 the execution of the scheme was ultimately
+decided upon and the departure of the first convoy was
+scheduled for 5 April. Simultaneously, mine-laying was carried out
+in the Norwegian territorial waters and troops were at the same
+time concentrated in British and French ports for the Norwegian
+operation. Thus factual evidence of imminent neutrality violations
+existed from the point of view of international law; and neutrality
+violations had indeed been already committed to a certain extent,
+as by mine-laying. This was the point where Germany, in accordance
+with the international concept of the right of self-defense, was
+entitled to resort to equivalent countermeasures, that is, to occupy
+Norway in order to prevent the impending occupation by other
+belligerent states. It was, in fact, as was shown later, high time;
+for Germany forestalled the Allies only because the British High
+Command had postponed the departure of the first convoy, originally
+scheduled for 5 April. The German operation in Norway must
+therefore be considered as legitimate according to the principles of
+international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have the firm conviction that the High Tribunal, in view of
+the circumstances just presented in connection with existing international
+law, will conclude that Admiral Raeder, with regard to the
+occupation of Norway, acted from purely strategic points of view
+and in due consideration of international legal standards, and accordingly
+will acquit him of the charge made by the Prosecution.
+<span class='pageno' title='420' id='Page_420'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With reference to Norway, the Prosecution has moreover charged
+against Raeder—and also against Dönitz—that a violation of international
+law is involved in the fact that, according to an order dated
+30 March 1940, the Naval Forces were to fly the British ensign until
+the troops had been landed (Documents C-151, Exhibit GB-91;
+C-115, Exhibit GB-90).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This too is an error of the Prosecution as regards international
+law in sea warfare. The Hague Regulations on Land Warfare do
+expressly forbid the misuse of flags. In sea warfare, on the other
+hand, the answer to this question according to prevailing international
+law is definitely that, until hostilities begin, ships may sail
+with their own or with enemy or neutral flags or with no flags at
+all. I take the liberty, in this respect, of availing myself of Dr. Mosler’s
+juridical treatment of the question in his opinion (Document
+Raeder-66), appearing under Item 7, and in particular of his references
+to legal literature on the subject, according to which the
+use of a foreign flag is universally considered as a legitimate ruse
+of war and is allowed and especially condoned by British practice;
+this is in accordance with the historical precedent when Nelson, in
+the Napoleonic wars, flew the French flag off Barcelona to lure
+Spanish ships. This dispute is, however, superfluous in the present
+case, because actually these orders to fly the British flag were
+according to documentary evidence canceled on 8 April, that is to
+say, prior to the execution of the Norway operation (Document
+Raeder-89).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In conclusion I wish to emphasize, with reference to the subject
+of Norway, that after the occupation of Norway Raeder and the
+German Navy did everything they could to give a friendly character
+to the relations with Norway, to treat the country and the people
+decently during the occupation, and to spare them every unnecessary
+burden. Raeder and the commanding admiral in Norway, Admiral
+Böhm, moreover endeavored to conclude a peace with Norway
+guaranteeing Norwegian national interests. Their efforts were
+frustrated through the creation by Hitler and Himmler of a so-called
+civil administration under Reich Commissioner Terboven which,
+unlike the Armed Forces, was linked with the Party, the SS, SD,
+and Gestapo (Documents Number Raeder-107 and 129). As confirmed
+by Böhm in his affidavit, Raeder repeatedly intervened with Hitler
+in favor of treating the Norwegian people well and for an early
+conclusion of peace and, together with Böhm, proceeded with the
+utmost vigor against Terboven. Here again, the tragic fact is that
+the Armed Forces, despite its utmost efforts, was neither able to
+oppose Hitler’s dictatorial methods nor the dictatorial methods
+employed, with Hitler’s knowledge, by such a mediocre Reich Commissioner
+as Terboven. The Norwegian people who had to suffer
+<span class='pageno' title='421' id='Page_421'></span>
+under the occupation know—and this is the only gratification for
+Raeder—that the Navy was not the cause of these sufferings. On
+the other hand, it is interesting to know that the differences which
+cropped up between Hitler and Raeder with reference to Norway
+are precisely among the chief motives which ultimately caused
+Raeder to insist upon his resignation in September 1942. Other
+motives were that Raeder also had differences with Hitler over
+France, because here again Raeder urged the conclusion of peace,
+while Hitler, with his extreme nature, was opposed to conciliatory
+steps of that kind in occupied territories. Raeder also had differences
+with Hitler regarding Russia, because he was in favor of observing
+the German-Russian treaty, and declared himself opposed
+to breaking the Treaty and going to war with Russia.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SIEMERS: I now come to the charge of the Prosecution with
+regard to a war of aggression against Russia. The charge of the
+Prosecution on this subject cannot be very well understood. Land
+warfare only was concerned, so that the Navy did not have to make
+any preparations, with the exception of a few in the Baltic Sea. The
+Prosecution itself has furthermore stated that Raeder had been
+opposed to the war against Russia. The only thing which might be
+left of the charge of the Prosecution is its claim that Raeder had
+fundamentally been in favor of the war against Russia also and had
+only been opposed to Hitler with regard to the time factor. With
+reference to Document Number C-170 the Prosecution states that
+Raeder had only recommended the postponement of the war against
+Russia until after the victory over Britain. In the light of Document
+C-170 this actually might appear plausible. In reality, however,
+the case is different, and the true state of affairs has been
+cleared up by the detailed presentation of evidence. The witness
+Admiral Schulte-Mönting has clearly stated, without being contradicted
+in cross-examination, that Raeder not only raised objections
+with regard to the time but that he argued with Hitler about
+a campaign against Russia and did so for moral reasons and reasons
+of international law, because he was of the opinion that the Non-Aggression
+Pact with Russia as well as the trade agreement should
+be observed under all circumstances. The Navy was especially
+interested in deliveries from Russia and always tried to observe the
+treaties strictly. Besides this basic principle of observing treaties,
+that is, besides this general reason, Raeder was of the opinion that
+a war against Russia would also be wrong from the strategic
+<span class='pageno' title='422' id='Page_422'></span>
+standpoint. His own testimony and that of Schulte-Mönting show
+that in September, November, and December 1940 Raeder tried
+again and again to dissuade Hitler from contemplating a war against
+Russia. It is correct that in Document C-170 only the strategic
+justification for his opposition has been recorded. However, this
+is not at all surprising because in the papers of the Naval Operations
+Staff naturally only justifications were recorded which were of
+naval-technical and strategic importance, but not political reasons.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have already shown that as a general principle Hitler did not
+permit Raeder, as Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, to intervene
+in questions concerning foreign policy, that is to say, in things
+which did not belong in his department. If Raeder did on occasion
+undertake this contrary to the will of Hitler in cases of special
+importance, then he could do so only privately, and was then unable
+to record these conversations in the War Diary. However, he always
+told everything to his Chief of Staff as his closest confidant. As a
+result Schulte-Mönting could absolutely confirm that Raeder in this
+case opposed Hitler because of misgivings with regard to morality
+and international law, and furthermore also employed strategic
+reasons in the hope of thus being able to bring more influence to
+bear on Hitler. Schulte-Mönting even stated—just like Raeder—that
+in November the latter had gained the impression, after a discussion,
+that he had dissuaded Hitler from his plans. I believe that
+this has clarified the matter, and only the tragic fact remains that
+Hitler paid just as little attention to Raeder’s political objections
+with regard to Russia as with regard to Norway and France.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A similar situation obtains with regard to the charge of the
+Prosecution referring to the war of aggression against the United
+States and the violation of the neutrality of Brazil. Both of these
+charges are sufficiently refuted within the framework of the evidence,
+so that I am only going to discuss them very briefly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>According to the statement of the Prosecution, Raeder somehow
+collaborated in the plan to induce Japan to attack the United States.
+As a matter of fact no naval strategic conferences were held between
+Japan and Raeder. Raeder always held the conviction that a war
+against the United States must be avoided just as much as a war
+against Russia. This attitude is understandable seeing that he had
+always held the opinion that Hitler should under no circumstances
+wage a war against Britain. Since the war against Britain had now
+come about, it was Raeder’s duty as Commander-in-Chief of the
+Navy to use all his strength to fight successfully against Britain.
+Raeder knew the limitations of the fighting capacity of the Navy;
+and it was, therefore, quite out of the question that he should have
+collaborated in an extension of the naval war, considering, as he
+did, that the conduct of a war against Britain was already a too
+<span class='pageno' title='423' id='Page_423'></span>
+difficult task. Document C-152 submitted by the Prosecution therefore
+mentions only a proposition that Japan should attack Singapore
+and is based on the assumption that the United States should be
+kept out of the war. This suggestion made to Hitler that Japan
+should attack Singapore was correct in every respect. After all, we
+were at war with England, and Raeder was forced to try to concentrate
+all his forces against that country. He was thus justified
+in suggesting that Japan—as Germany’s ally—should attack England.
+Moreover this, the only discussion by Raeder, was not held
+until 18 March 1941, while Hitler had already in his Directive
+Number 24 of 5 March 1941 established the guiding principle that
+Japan must attack Singapore, which he considered a key position
+of Britain (Document C-175).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should like to interpose one sentence here. It can be seen from
+the report by General Marshall that no common plan had been
+found to exist between Germany and Japan.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As Schulte-Mönting has affirmed, Raeder was just as surprised
+by the sudden attack by Japan on Pearl Harbor as every other German.
+The attempt of the Prosecution to discredit this statement
+during the cross-examination of Schulte-Mönting by introducing a
+telegram from the naval attaché in Tokyo to Berlin, dated 6 December
+1941 (Document D-872), failed. In the first place Raeder probably
+only received this telegram after the Japanese attack on Pearl
+Harbor on 7 December had already started; and besides, Pearl
+Harbor is not mentioned at all in the telegram.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The charge of the Prosecution with regard to Brazil has been
+refuted just as effectively because, after my statements during the
+hearing of evidence, the Prosecution did not revert to this point
+in any of the cross-examinations of Raeder, Schulte-Mönting, and
+Wagner. The charge was that, according to Jodl’s diary, the Naval
+Operations Staff authorized and approved the use of arms against
+Brazilian warships and merchant vessels fully 2 months before
+the outbreak of war between Germany and Brazil (Document
+1807-PS).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Apart from the testimony of witnesses, this case is refuted by
+documents, namely, the complete excerpt from Jodl’s diary which
+I submitted as Exhibit Number Raeder-115, as well as by Documents
+Number Raeder-116 to 118. These documents reveal that
+Brazil had violated the rules of neutrality by permitting the United
+States to make use of Brazilian airfields as a base for attacks on
+German and Italian U-boats. The Brazilian Air Ministry had
+furthermore officially announced that attacks had been made by
+the Brazilian Air Force. Considering such conduct, which is against
+all the rules of neutrality, the demand of the Naval Operations Staff
+for armed action against Brazilian vessels is justified. So here again
+<span class='pageno' title='424' id='Page_424'></span>
+the Prosecution failed to prove Raeder to have committed a crime
+or even a violation of international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has very painstakingly submitted an exceedingly
+large amount of material, and the wealth of detail called for great
+care in the submission of evidence for the Defense. I have endeavored
+to deal with all the charges in the submission of evidence or
+in my final plea, and have made efforts to show as clearly as possible
+that none of them, partly on factual, partly on legal grounds,
+comply with the requirements of a criminal case within the meaning
+of this Charter. Insofar as I have not, in spite of my desire for
+great exactitude, dealt with certain documents, it was because they
+seemed to me of small importance and in any case of no importance
+in criminal law; for instance, the many cases in which Raeder was
+only mentioned because—without officially taking any part—he
+received a copy of the documents for routine reasons. It would have
+been tedious to go into such recurrent cases, even if the Prosecution
+reiterated these formal indications, so that one was often tempted
+to recall the saying of Napoleon that repetition is that turn of speech
+which acts as the best evidence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I further believe that in my final plea for Admiral Raeder I may
+forego argumentation regarding genuine war crimes, the crimes
+against humanity, since I am unable to establish any connection
+between these and Raeder from the material submitted by the
+Prosecution. Also no particular charge is made against Raeder in
+this connection, with the exception of the two cases connected with
+the Commando Order, namely, the shooting of two soldiers in Bordeaux
+and the shooting of the British soldier Evans, who was made
+a prisoner by the SD on the Swedish border after he had previously
+participated in the midget submarine attack on the <span class='it'>Tirpitz</span>. Thus
+far the charge has been refuted by testimony insofar as it concerns
+the Navy. Both cases did not come, or came only later, to the
+knowledge of the Naval Operations Staff—just before Raeder’s
+departure. In both cases action was taken on the basis of the
+Commando Order by Hitler himself or by the SD without the
+knowledge and will of the Naval Operations Staff; and what is most
+important, in both cases the documents of the Prosecution showed
+that these soldiers were in civilian clothes and, therefore, were not
+entitled to the protection of the Geneva Convention (Document
+Number D-864, Exhibit GB-457 and Document UK-57, Exhibit
+GB-164).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All the other criminal facts which the Prosecution submitted,
+especially applying to the East, I need not deal with, as Raeder did
+not participate in them. I hope that here also I shall have the
+approval of the Court in mentioning the handling of the Katyn
+case, in which the Court pointed out that Raeder was not involved
+<span class='pageno' title='425' id='Page_425'></span>
+and therefore refused to allow me to act as defense counsel in this
+connection; from this I draw the legal conclusion that Raeder cannot
+even by implication through the conspiracy be considered as burdened
+with these criminal facts, since he did not know of these
+events and had nothing to do with them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The case for the Prosecution is founded on a desire to see its
+basic theory accepted and acknowledged, namely, the conception
+that so many crimes cannot have emanated from the will of a single
+individual but rather that they result from a conspiracy, a plot,
+involving many persons. These conspirators could logically, in the
+first place, only have been Hitler’s own collaborators, that is to say,
+the real National Socialists. Since however, Hitler wished to achieve
+and did achieve concrete results of military and economic import,
+something peculiar transpired: There were no specialists among the
+National Socialists for these tasks. Most of the National Socialist
+collaborators had not previously followed a trade providing technical
+education. Hitler, therefore, despite his desire to have only
+National Socialists around him, took on as key people in particular
+fields specialists who were not National Socialists, such as for
+instance Neurath for politics, and Schacht for economics; and for
+military tasks, Fritsch for the Army and Raeder for the Navy. The
+Prosecution followed this process from the angle of its conspiracy
+theory, without paying attention to the fact that these people, not
+being National Socialists, could in no way be counted among the
+conspirators and without taking into account that Hitler used these
+non-National Socialists only as technicians in a well-defined field,
+and only as long as it seemed absolutely necessary to him; therefore
+he agreed to the departure of these men, who were essentially
+not in sympathy with him, as soon as the differences between them
+seemed unbridgeable, which was bound to happen sooner or later
+with each of them, depending on the particular field involved.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>By this all-embracing conception of the idea of conspiracy and
+by this extension of the Prosecution’s fight to non-National Socialists,
+the Prosecution abandoned the basic concept formerly propagated
+abroad, namely, that of fighting National Socialism but not
+against the whole of Germany—two ideas which at no time and in
+no place have been really identical, as the Prosecution now tries
+to make out. I do believe that thereby the Prosecution is also going
+back on President Roosevelt’s basic idea.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Yet another factual and legal point of view has not been taken
+into consideration by the Prosecution. I mean the concept of the
+division of competence under state law, that is to say the subdivision
+into individual departments. This division of competence,
+founded on the idea of division of labor, is essentially separative
+<span class='pageno' title='426' id='Page_426'></span>
+in character; it divides the field of work according to local, functional,
+and technical points of view. Thereby it defines positively
+the limits within which each division is to become active, and at
+the same time it defines negatively the boundaries of such activity
+by specifying which problems no longer concern the agencies in
+question, that is to say, where they must not exercise any official
+activity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In a democracy additional contacts exist by virtue of general
+Cabinet meetings and through the Prime Minister, the Reich President,
+or the Reich Chancellor, as the case may be. In a dictatorship
+it is different, particularly if the dictator, as was the case with
+Hitler in the National Socialist State, exploits the segregation of
+the various departments with extreme skill and sees to it that they
+are kept as isolated as possible, with the result that all power of
+decision rests finally with him as the dictator, who may even play
+off one department against the other. The strict partitioning into
+governmental departments as carried out in the National Socialist
+State in itself refutes the concept of conspiracy and renders it
+extremely difficult for the individual to exceed the limits of his
+own department in any manner.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This significance may be illustrated by the following example:
+The maintenance of political relations with other states, the contracting
+or cancellation of agreements or alliances with other states,
+the declaration of war and conclusion of peace, are matters within
+the jurisdiction of the authority directing foreign affairs; but they
+are not within the jurisdiction of the agencies concerned with
+domestic tasks, such as for instance the Reich Finance Administration,
+Justice, or the Military.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus, since the decision concerning war and peace is not a matter
+for the military, the military has to accept the decisions made by
+the political leadership, decisions which have a binding material
+effect on the military authorities. The military commander must
+assume for his department the consequences resulting from the
+decision. As soon as war is declared, the military forces must fight.
+They do not bear any responsibility for the war, since they were
+not able to take part in the decision that war should be declared.
+Consequently, for an army the concept of war of aggression exists
+in the strategic sense only. Aside from that, any war it may be
+obliged to wage is, to the army, simply war, regardless of how it
+may be qualified legally (Article 45 of the Reich Constitution).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Responsibility, from the point of view of state law and criminal
+law, is in proportion to the extent of jurisdiction. Therefore, if the
+commander-in-chief of a branch of the Armed Forces is responsible
+solely for the waging of war, though not for the causes leading to
+<span class='pageno' title='427' id='Page_427'></span>
+war, his responsibility in respect to a strategic plan must be confined
+to the plan as such, but not to the possible origin of the war
+for which the strategic plan was worked out.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This officially and legally important segregation of governmental
+departments and the distribution of authority was, in the interest
+of strengthening his own power in a particularly emphatic manner,
+carried out by Hitler in many domains, such as for instance the
+creation of the “Delegate for the Four Year Plan,” whose field of
+work should have belonged to the Ministry of Economics; the
+creation of Reich Commissioners in the occupied territories, whose
+activity really should have come under military administration;
+and, finally, a fact of interest in the Raeder case, the very precise
+delimitation of the three branches of the Armed Forces and the
+elimination of the Reich Defense Minister or Minister of War who
+held the three branches of the Armed Forces together and unified
+them. The greater the number of governmental departments
+became, the stronger Hitler became as dictator, being the only
+person with authority over all the innumerable agencies. But along
+with this the official as well as the legal responsibility for strategic
+plans on the part of any one individual department decreased; in
+this instance, that of the Navy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Consequently, the commander-in-chief of a branch of the Armed
+Forces, for instance the Navy, can in case of strategic planning only
+be responsible for the planning of naval strategy; he is not afforded
+an over-all picture of the total plan. The total plan was discussed
+nowhere; politically and militarily it was in Hitler’s hands exclusively,
+because he alone was the center where all threads, all activities
+of the individual departments joined.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May I add a sentence here and remind you that, for instance,
+in the case of the Norway action even Göring was not informed
+until March 1940, which is one proof of the extreme segregation of
+the individual departments within the Armed Forces. In addition,
+purely strategic planning as such cannot be criminal, because it is
+customary in every country and because in every country the military
+commander of a branch of the Armed Forces does not and
+cannot know to what end the political leadership will use the plan
+prepared by him, whether for a war of aggression or a defensive
+war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The documents submitted in my document books prove convincingly
+that the military agencies in Allied countries as well as in
+Germany worked out strategic plans in the same manner, for the
+same areas, and at the same times, namely, in regard to Norway,
+Belgium (Documents Number Raeder-33 and 34), Holland, Greece,
+Romania; moreover, the Allied plans included the destruction of the
+Romanian oil fields and especially of the oil sources in the Caucasus
+<span class='pageno' title='428' id='Page_428'></span>
+(Document Number Ribbentrop-221 and Number Raeder-41). Particularly
+the plans concerning the Caucasus on the part of the
+Supreme Council, that is, the combined British and French General
+Staff, show the correctness of the statements. The Supreme Council
+would certainly refuse to be made politically responsible for these
+strategic plans, although the Soviet Union was still neutral at the
+time and the execution of the plans was to strike a blow not
+only at an enemy country, Germany, but also at a neutral, the
+Soviet Union, as the documents show.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The similarity of the documents concerning such plans is absolutely
+convincing and shows a strong parallel trend. May I point
+in this connection to statements I made here on occasion of the
+comprehensive discussion regarding the relevance and admissibility
+of the documents submitted by me; may I point, in addition,
+to Document Number Raeder-130, the letter of the Foreign Office,
+in which submission of the British Admiralty files is refused but
+in which the plans in regard to Norway and the whole of Scandinavia
+are admitted, with the remark that the plan was not put
+into effect, which fact was due only to Germany’s having forestalled
+the execution of the plan.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Anyone is entitled to be a pacifist and, therefore, basically
+opposed to the military. However, one must be consistent and
+take a stand not only against German military force but against
+any military force. One may condemn the fact that the military,
+as the operational authority, prepares military plans; and one may
+for the future insist that such planning shall be punishable. But
+in that case not only German military planning, but foreign
+military planning also must be punishable.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These points show that the Prosecution misjudges both actual
+and legal conditions in desiring to make Raeder responsible for
+political decisions, although he had nothing to do with them but
+always worked simply as a soldier. Just as there could be no
+suggestion 130 years ago of bringing before a court an admiral
+of Napoleon, the dictator, it is impossible now to condemn an
+admiral of Hitler, the dictator. With dictators, in particular—and
+this the Prosecution overlooks—not only the power and the
+influence of a military commander diminishes, but his responsibility
+must also diminish to the same extent, for the dictator will
+have seized all power and with it all responsibility—especially
+if he is possessed of such an extraordinary will and such immense
+power as Hitler. The French prosecutor stated literally and very
+aptly on 7 February 1946 before this Tribunal: “Hitler was actually
+the incarnation of all will.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The resulting strength and power has not been sufficiently
+appreciated by the Prosecution, and has certainly not been taken
+<span class='pageno' title='429' id='Page_429'></span>
+into consideration in the presentation of the facts and the legal
+conclusions. How great this power is, Gustave le Bon shows in his
+famous book <span class='it'>Psychology of the Masses</span> (published by Alfred Kröner)
+in the chapter entitled, “The Leaders of the Masses.” I quote
+from it:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Within the class of leaders quite a strict division can be
+made. The energetic people with strong wills but without
+perseverance belong to the one kind; the people with a
+strong, persevering will belong to the other kind, which
+is much rarer.... The second class, those with a persevering
+will, exercise a much greater influence in spite of their less
+brilliant appearance.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='noindent'>Hitler belongs to this second class of leaders, who, in accordance
+with this quotation, exercised an immense influence while, on the
+other hand, he was definitely unimpressive in his brown uniform.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gustave le Bon continues:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The unyielding will which they possess is an exceedingly
+rare and exceedingly powerful attribute which subdues
+everything. One does not always realize what a strong and
+persistent will can achieve. Nothing can resist it, neither
+nature, nor gods, nor men.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These words make it clear enough that Raeder could not resist
+either.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Accordingly, only the question remains: Is it ever a soldier’s
+duty to revolt—to resort to open mutiny? This question will be
+denied by every commander all over the world and likewise by
+every other person with a sole exception, namely, if it concerns
+the case of a dictator commanding the commission of a crime, the
+criminality of which is recognized by the military commander
+himself. Accordingly Raeder could be made responsible for a
+military crime only, but not for a political one, because for the
+political crime the dictator himself must answer. When the Prosecution
+came to the opposite conclusion regarding Raeder, this was
+due—as I have already emphasized in my introduction—only to
+their misconception of the actual and juridical facts; they regarded
+Raeder as politician and soldier. But he was a soldier only. He
+lived for the Navy alone, for the welfare of the Navy, for which
+he is now equally prepared to bear responsibility to the full extent.
+He led the Navy along uniform lines and, aided by his officer-corps,
+taught it those decent views and that form of chivalrous
+fighting which humanity expects of a soldier. It must not be
+allowed to happen that, as a result of the deeds of a Hitler and
+his National Socialism, the officers and soldiers of this Navy
+be defamed by hearing their highest-ranking officer declared a
+criminal. From a historical viewpoint Raeder may be guilty,
+<span class='pageno' title='430' id='Page_430'></span>
+because he, like many others within the country and abroad, did
+not recognize or see through Hitler and did not have the strength
+to resist the dynamic strength of a Hitler; but such an omission
+is no crime. What Raeder did or left undone in his life occurred
+in the belief that he was acting correctly and that as a dutiful
+soldier he had to act in such a way.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Raeder is a highly esteemed officer who is no criminal; and he
+cannot be a criminal, since all his life he has lived honorably
+and as a Christian. A man who believes in God does not commit
+crimes, and a soldier who believes in God is not a war criminal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I therefore ask the High Tribunal to acquit Admiral Dr. Erich
+Raeder on all points of the Indictment.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Sauter for the Defendant Von Schirach.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: Gentlemen of the Tribunal, Baldur von Schirach,
+who at that time was Reich Youth Leader, in 1936 welcomed the
+guests to the Olympic Games in Berlin with the following words:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Youth throws a bridge across all frontiers and seas! I call
+upon the Youth of the World and through them, upon Peace!”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And Baldur von Schirach, then Gauleiter of Vienna, said to
+Hitler in 1940: “Vienna cannot be conquered with bayonets, but
+only with music.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Those two utterances are characteristic of the nature of this
+defendant. It is the task of the Defense to examine the evidence
+produced in this Trial for the purpose of ascertaining whether
+the same Baldur von Schirach, who expressed such thoughts, really
+committed those crimes against law and humanity with which
+he is charged by the Prosecution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach is the youngest defendant here. He is also, of all the
+defendants, the one who was by far the youngest when joining
+the Party, which he did when he was not yet 18. Those facts in
+themselves are perhaps of some significance in judging his case.
+When still at school he came under the spell of rising National
+Socialism; he was particularly attracted by the Socialist idea, which
+had already in his country school recognized no difference between
+the sons of fathers of different classes and professions; those boys
+around Schirach saw in the popular movement of the twenties
+in Germany a promise of the resurgence of our fatherland from
+the aftermath of the lost Great War into a happy future; and fate
+willed it that as early as 1925, when he was seventeen, Schirach
+came into personal contact with Hitler in Weimar, Goethe’s home.
+Hitler’s personality made a fascinating impression on young
+Schirach, as he himself admitted; the program for the National
+Community (Volksgemeinschaft), which Hitler had evolved at that
+time, met with Schirach’s wholehearted enthusiasm, because he
+<span class='pageno' title='431' id='Page_431'></span>
+thought he saw reproduced therein on a full-size scale that which
+he had personally experienced in a small way in the comradeship
+of the country school and in his youth organization. To him and
+his comrades Hitler appeared as the man who would open for
+the younger generation the road into the future; of him this
+younger generation had hopes for its prospects of work, its prospects
+of a secure existence, its prospects of a happy life. Thus
+the young man became a convinced National Socialist; this fact
+was the result of the environment in which he had spent his youth
+and which formed a soil only too fertile for the growth of that
+ideology which young Schirach embraced because at that period
+he held it to be the right one. This environment of his childhood
+and a vast amount of one-sided political literature, which the young
+man devoured in his thirst for knowledge, made of him, while
+still an inexperienced youth, also an anti-Semite. He certainly
+did not become an anti-Semite in the sense of those fanatics
+who ultimately did not shrink even from acts of violence and
+pogroms, of those who finally created an Auschwitz and murdered
+millions of Jews; but an anti-Semite in the moderate sense, who
+would merely curb Jewish influence in the government of the
+state and in cultural life but for the rest would leave untouched
+the freedom and rights of Jewish fellow citizens and who never
+thought of exterminating the Jewish people. At least that is the
+conception of Hitler’s anti-Semitism which young Schirach evolved
+during those years.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That this was really Schirach’s opinion is also substantiated
+by the statement which Schirach made here on the morning of
+24 May 1946, when he described without reservation the crimes
+committed by Hitler as a shameful episode in German history,
+as a crime which fills every German with shame; that statement
+in which he openly states that Auschwitz must signify the end
+of any and every racial and anti-Semitic policy. That statement
+here in this courtroom came from the bottom of the heart of the
+Defendant Schirach; it was the result of the terrible disclosures
+which this Trial brought to him also, and Schirach made this statement
+here openly before the public in order to bring back German
+youth from a wrong path to the road of justice and tolerance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Gentlemen, I would now like to bring to your attention the
+more important accusations which have been raised against
+Schirach, and the major results which the evidence has produced
+in the various points. The Defendant Schirach is first of all accused
+of the fact that before the seizure of power, that is, before the
+year 1933, he actively promoted the National Socialist Party and
+the youth organization affiliated with it and that he thereby contributed
+to the rise of the Party to power. He had been, as stated
+<span class='pageno' title='432' id='Page_432'></span>
+in the trial brief, a close and abject follower of Hitler; he had
+stood in blind loyalty to Hitler and the latter’s National Socialist
+world of thinking; and he had, as leader of the student’s league,
+led the students ideologically and politically to National Socialism
+and won them over to it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All this, if Your Honors please, is not denied by Schirach in
+any manner. He has done what he is being accused of in this
+respect; this he confesses openly, and for this he naturally takes
+responsibility. The only thing which he denies with regard to this,
+and all the more emphatically with regard to the later period,
+is the accusation that he participated in a conspiracy. Schirach
+himself pointed out that the Leadership Principle and dictatorship
+in their character and their theory are absolutely incompatible with
+the idea of a conspiracy, and a conspiracy appears to him a logical
+impossibility if many millions of members are to be included and
+when its existence and aims lie exposed before the country concerned
+as well as before the world. We furthermore know from
+the results of this Trial that Hitler, aside from Bormann and
+Himmler, did not have a single friend or adviser with whom he
+discussed his plans and aims; on the contrary he carried the Leadership
+Principle to the furthest extreme. He dispensed with all
+advisory meetings or discussions which might have affected his
+decisions in any way, reaching his decisions all by himself without
+even listening to the opinion of those closest to him. For him it
+was a matter of orders on his own part, and unconditional obedience
+on that of the others. I wish to refrain from further statements
+about that chapter, but that is what the “conspiracy” really
+looked like; and all of us who have witnessed this Trial would
+never have felt this ultra-radical application of the Leadership
+Principle to be possible had not all the defendants and all the
+witnesses familiar with the facts, in complete agreement and
+without a single exception, presented the same picture to us over
+and over again.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now Schirach is not denying at all that already in his very
+early years he came completely under the influence of Hitler, that
+he placed himself with his whole young personality at the service
+of these ideas, and that at the time, as stated quite correctly in
+the Indictment, he was devoted to Hitler with unconditional loyalty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If this was a crime on the part of young Schirach, a crime which
+millions of older, more experienced, mature Germans have committed
+with him, then you, as his judges, may condemn him for
+this if our code of law furnishes a legal basis for it. That would
+be but a further disappointment in addition to the many others
+which he has been experiencing for years. Schirach knows today
+that he gave loyal support unto the end to a man who did not
+<span class='pageno' title='433' id='Page_433'></span>
+deserve it; and he also knows today that the ideas, about which
+he was enthusiastic in his young years and for which he sacrificed
+himself, led in practice to ends of which he himself had never
+dreamed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But even the Schirach of today, purged by many bitter experiences,
+cannot see any criminal act in the activity of his younger
+years which he carried out in good faith, together with millions
+of other Germans, for Hitler and his Party. For the Party at that
+time appeared quite legal to him; Schirach never had any doubt
+that it also came into power by legal means. The seizure of power
+by the Party, the appointment of Hitler as Reich Chancellor by
+Reich President Von Hindenburg, the winning of the majority of
+the people for the Party by repeated elections, all this confirmed
+to young Schirach again and again the legality of the movement
+he had joined. If today he were to be punished because he acknowledged
+as his Führer this same Hitler whom millions of Germans
+and all the countries of the world recognized as legal head of
+the State, Schirach would never be able to acknowledge such a
+decision as being just. In spite of the severe judgment which he
+himself has pronounced in this courtroom on Hitler according to
+his personal conviction, he would consider himself a victim of
+his political convictions if he were to be sentenced because, as a
+young enthusiastic man, he joined the National Socialist Party and
+collaborated in its construction and seizure of power. At the time
+he did not look upon that as a crime but from his standpoint considered
+it his patriotic duty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The second and by far more important accusation which has
+been raised against the Defendant Von Schirach is to the effect
+that he, as Reich Youth Leader in the years 1932 to 1940, to quote
+the Indictment literally, “poisoned the thought of youth with Nazi
+ideology and especially trained it for aggressive war.” Schirach has
+always contested this claim emphatically, and this claim has not
+been substantiated by the results of the evidence either.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The law on the Hitler Youth of 1936 described Schirach’s task
+as Reich Youth Leader as being “to educate youth, outside the
+parental home and outside school, physically, intellectually, and
+morally for service to the people and to the national community in
+the spirit of National Socialism through the Hitler Youth movement
+and its leader,” that is, the Defendant Von Schirach. This was
+the program. This program is repeated word for word in the
+enactment decree of 1939, which was postponed for so long—3
+years—because Schirach did not want to introduce compulsory
+membership until the movement already practically included the
+entire German youth on the basis of voluntary membership, so that
+future joining by compulsion would exist on paper only.
+<span class='pageno' title='434' id='Page_434'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Hitler Youth program, as it was formulated by Schirach in
+his speeches and writings—and no other program of the Hitler
+Youth exists—does not contain a single word which would point
+toward military education of youth, much less an education in
+aggressive warfare; nor does in practice the education of youth,
+in Schirach’s opinion, in any way give evidence of a military
+education of German youth for such a purpose. In that respect
+the point was stressed by the Prosecution that the Hitler Youth
+movement was organized in various detachments and divisions. That
+is true, although the designations listed by the Prosecution are
+not correct and although they have not the slightest reference to
+military formations. But in the last analysis every youth movement
+the world over will show a classification into smaller or
+larger units; each of these units naturally will also need a name
+and some responsible leader. As in the other countries, so also in
+the German Hitler Youth the leader of the unit was discernible
+by some sign of his rank, be it a leader’s cord, stars, or other
+insignia of rank. This naturally has nothing to do with the military
+character of youth education.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From personal familiarity with the practice in foreign countries
+Schirach knows that foreign youth organizations, in Switzerland
+as well as in France and other countries, have similar classifications
+and similar insignia, although it never occurred to us so far to
+make that a reason for considering such foreign youth organizations
+as military associations.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was furthermore stressed that formations of male youth in
+Germany were also given training in shooting. That is also correct
+but equally proves very little, in the opinion of Schirach, because
+the shooting instruction for the Hitler Youth organization took
+place, without exception, with small-bore rifles, in other words,
+with a type of short, light target rifle which is nowhere in the
+world considered as a military weapon and which is not even
+mentioned in the enumeration of military weapons in the Versailles
+Treaty. The Hitler Youth movement in Germany did not possess
+a single military weapon, no infantry rifle or machine gun, no
+power-driven airplane, no cannon or tank, throughout its whole
+existence. After all, when speaking of military training, then such
+training would primarily have had to take place with military
+weapons such as are used in modern warfare. To be sure, as has
+been established in the cross-examination of Schirach, in order to
+give added importance to his office, a certain Dr. Stellrecht, the
+technical adviser on shooting instruction in the leadership of the
+Reich Youth movement attempted to ascribe a certain special
+importance to this particular branch of youth training. Schirach,
+however, was able to show without being refuted that for this
+<span class='pageno' title='435' id='Page_435'></span>
+very reason differences of opinion arose between him and this
+technical adviser and that he therefore finally dismissed Dr. Stellrecht
+because he, Schirach, opposed any development which might
+have tended toward military training of youth. In any case, this
+very Dr. Stellrecht, who was produced by the Prosecution as a
+witness against Schirach, nevertheless for his part admitted that
+“not a single boy in Germany was trained in handling weapons
+of war” and that “not one boy was given a military weapon.” That
+is, word for word, the testimony of Stellrecht.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Also of importance in considering these questions is the fact
+that Schirach, as a matter of principle, refused to permit young
+people to be trained by active officers or former officers because
+he considered these persons entirely unsuitable to educate young
+people in that spirit which he envisaged as the goal of his activity.
+Moreover, neither Schirach nor any of his closer associates were
+officers before the war; and the same holds true for the overwhelming
+majority of the high or low ranking HJ leaders subordinate
+to him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All these facts are firmly established by the testimony of the
+Defendant Schirach himself and through depositions made by the
+witnesses Lauterbacher, Gustav Hoepken, and Maria Hoepken during
+their examination. For many years these witnesses were
+Schirach’s closest collaborators; they are thoroughly familiar with
+his views and principles and they have unanimously confirmed
+that it is entirely incorrect to speak of a military or even premilitary
+training of the Hitler Youth.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At this point, Gentlemen, I should like to add one thing. I have
+just mentioned, as a witness, the name Lauterbacher. The Prosecution,
+during their cross-examination, made an attempt to impugn
+the credibility of the witness Lauterbacher by asking him, during
+his interrogation on 27 April 1946, how many people he had hanged
+publicly and furthermore by charging that he had ordered four
+or five hundred prisoners from the penitentiary in Hameln to
+be poisoned or shot. In this connection the American prosecutor
+had submitted seven affidavits under Exhibit USA-874, among
+them one by a certain Josef Krämer, who in fact made the assertion
+in his affidavit that the witness Lauterbacher, who appeared
+here for Schirach, in his function as Gauleiter of Hanover had
+given him orders for the murder of the prisoners.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During the Court’s session of 27 May 1946, I protested against
+the use of that affidavit by Krämer and produced, Gentlemen, a
+newspaper article according to which the witness Krämer, on 2 May
+1946, had been sentenced to 7 years’ imprisonment by a court of
+the 5th British Division. Several days ago I submitted as evidence
+a report from the <span class='it'>Rhein-Neckar Zeitung</span> of 6 July 1946 which states
+<span class='pageno' title='436' id='Page_436'></span>
+that the witness Hartmann Lauterbacher in the meantime had been
+acquitted by the Supreme British Military Court in Hanover. From
+that it can be seen that the doubts which the Prosecution cast
+upon the credibility of the witness Lauterbacher and which they
+based on the affidavit of this Krämer were unfounded.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May I now continue in my presentation on Page 8.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With reference to the premilitary training of the HJ it has also
+been repeatedly emphasized in rebuttal that the Hitler Youth wore
+a uniform. That is correct, but proves nothing, for the youth
+organizations of other countries, too, are accustomed, as is generally
+known, to wear a common costume, some sort of uniform, without
+anybody for this reason terming them military or semimilitary
+organizations; and Schirach and several of his associates have
+informed me that in many democratic countries, which certainly
+do not contemplate war, much less a war of aggression, male youth
+is trained in handling proper military weapons and that every
+year contests are held in shooting with military rifles.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Why was it that Schirach introduced a uniform for the Hitler
+Youth—and indeed not only for the boys but also for the girls?
+We have heard the answer to this from several witnesses. Schirach,
+I may quote here, saw in the uniform of the boys and in the
+uniform costume of the girls the “dress of socialism,” the “dress
+of comradeship.” Schirach wrote at that time already that the
+child of the rich industrialist was to wear the same clothes as the
+child of the miner, the son of the millionaire the same clothes as
+the son of an unemployed man. The uniform of the Hitler Youth
+was to be, as Schirach wrote in 1934 in his book <span class='it'>The Hitler Youth</span>,
+the expression of an attitude which did not consider class and
+property, but only effort and achievement. The uniform of the
+Hitler Youth was for Schirach, as expressed further in this same
+book, “not the sign of any militarism, but the symbol of the idea
+of the Hitler Youth, namely, classless society,” in the spirit of the
+election slogan which he gave the Hitler Youth in 1933: “Through
+Socialism to the Nation.” Schirach remained faithful to the principle
+expressed in these quotations as long as he was Youth Leader.
+Thus, in the official publication of the Hitler Youth in 1937, he
+wrote—I quote word for word:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The uniform is not the expression of a martial attitude but
+the dress of comradeship; it overcomes class difference and
+re-establishes social equality for the child of the most insignificant
+laborer; the young generation in our new Germany
+must be united in an inseparable community.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach had this comradeship and this socialism in mind when,
+in 1934, he describes in his book <span class='it'>The Hitler Youth</span> how he conceived
+this socialism; and I quote again, word for word:
+<span class='pageno' title='437' id='Page_437'></span></p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“Socialism does not mean taking the fruits of his work
+away from one person in order to give everybody something
+produced by the work of one individual. Everyone shall
+work, but everyone shall also harvest the fruits of his work.
+Nor must one person be allowed to get rich while thousands
+of others must suffer want for his sake. Whoever exploits
+his workers and spoliates the community in order to fill his
+cash box is an enemy of the German people” (Document
+Schirach-55).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='noindent'>That ends the quotation describing the attitude of Von Schirach at
+that time.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach has pointed out again and again in his numerous
+writings, articles, and speeches, which have been collected in the
+document book and have been submitted to the Tribunal, that,
+to use his expression, he did not desire any “pseudo-military drill,”
+which would only spoil the joy of the young people in their
+movement.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The training of the young people in small-bore shooting was in
+line with the training in all sports activities and corresponded to
+the inclination of the boys, in all countries, who are particularly
+interested in the sport of shooting. But this training played a very
+minor role in volume and importance by comparison with the
+greater aims which Schirach pursued in the Hitler Youth movement,
+about which not only Schirach but the other witnesses examined
+give as clear a testimony as the writings and speeches of Von
+Schirach. These aims of the Hitler Youth education shall be listed
+here briefly as they have been demonstrated by the presentation
+of evidence; Schirach is naturally not accused in connection with
+these other aims of the Hitler Youth education, but one must
+nevertheless consider and evaluate them when desiring to obtain
+a total picture of his personality, his activity, and his plans.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Apart from this education of youth in terms of comradeship
+and of socialism in the sense of overcoming class distinction,
+Schirach had, as he explained here, primarily four aims in mind:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>First the training of youth in the various types of sports, and
+in connection therewith juvenile health supervision; this branch
+of youth education took up a very large part of Hitler Youth
+activities, and the fact that German youth obtained such an unexpected
+success at the Olympic Games in 1936 was to a certain
+extent due to the activity of the Hitler Youth leadership in co-operation
+with the Reich Sports Leader Von Tschammer-Osten.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another aim was postgraduate training and advancement of
+working youth and the improvement of the position of adolescent
+wage earners through youth legislation, particularly by prohibiting
+<span class='pageno' title='438' id='Page_438'></span>
+night work, increasing spare time, granting paid vacations, prohibiting
+child labor, raising the protected age of adolescents, <span class='it'>et
+cetera</span>. Advanced vocational training was promoted so successfully
+that finally more than a million boys and girls entered for the
+annual occupational competitions, and from year to year the
+average performance in each branch rose very considerably.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A third main aim of youth education was the promotion of love
+of nature, far away from the dens of iniquity of large cities, through
+hiking trips and in youth hostels. Thousands of youth homes and
+youth hostels were built in the course of these years on Schirach’s
+initiative out of the Hitler Youth movement’s own funds, in order
+to get the young people out of the large cities with their temptations
+and vices and return them to rural life to show them the
+beauties of the homeland and to afford a vacation to even the
+poorest child.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But Schirach concentrated his chief attention on the fourth goal
+of youth education, namely, co-operation with the youth of other
+nations; and this activity is a particularly suitable test for the
+question as to whether one can accuse the Defendant Von Schirach
+of having taken part in the planning of wars of aggression and of
+having committed crimes against peace. Schirach has told us here
+on the witness stand that time and again, both in summer and
+winter of every year, foreign youth groups were the guests of German
+youth; and it is shown by the documents in Von Schirach’s
+document book that, for instance, already in the year 1936 no less
+than 200,000 foreign youths received overnight lodgings in German
+youth hostels, and correspondingly year after year German youth
+delegations went abroad, especially to England and France, in
+order to enable young people to get acquainted with and respect
+one another. Those very endeavors of Schirach’s, which would be
+absolutely incompatible with any intention to prepare wars of
+aggression, received unreserved recognition abroad before the war.
+In 1937 in one of the special numbers of the Hitler Youth magazine
+<span class='it'>Wille und Macht</span> dedicated to this task of understanding, which was
+also published in French and circulated very widely in France and
+which is quoted here only as an example, the French Prime Minister
+Chautemps—I have the evidence in the document book—declared
+his willingness, as head of the French Government, to promote
+these peaceful meetings.</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I wish”—he wrote—“that the young men of both nations
+could live every year side by side by the thousands and in
+this way learn to know, to understand, and to respect each
+other.” And further:</p>
+
+<p>“Our two nations know that an understanding between them
+would be one of the most valuable factors for world peace;
+<span class='pageno' title='439' id='Page_439'></span>
+therefore it is the duty of all those on either side of the
+frontier who have a clear view and human feeling to work
+for the understanding and <span class='it'>rapprochement</span> of both nations.
+But no one could do it more sincerely and more enthusiastically
+than the leaders of our wonderful youth, of French
+and German youth. If they could manage to unite this youth,
+they would hold in their hands the future of European and
+human culture” (Document Schirach-110).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The mayor of Versailles of that time wrote in the same spirit
+to Schirach, ending his appeal in the monthly organ of the Hitler
+Youth with the words:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The education of youth in this spirit is one of the most
+important tasks of the politicians of both our countries”
+(Document Schirach-111).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The French Ambassador, François Poncet, gave credit to
+Schirach’s efforts no less heartily in the same publication under
+the title “Youth as a Bridge” and concluded his lengthy article
+with the words:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“French participation enriches German soil. German influence
+fertilizes the French spirit.... May this exchange develop
+further. May also the generations which will at some time
+benefit from it contribute to bringing the two halves of
+Charlemagne’s empire closer and to create between them
+those relations of mutual respect, harmony, and good comradeship
+for which both nations are deeply longing, because
+their instinct tells them that the welfare of European culture
+depends on it and because they know for certain, when they
+look into themselves, that they have many more reasons to
+respect and admire than to hate each other” (Document
+Schirach-112).</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And Schirach himself answered in the next issue of his monthly
+publication, which also appeared in French, with an enthusiastic
+article under the title, “Salute to France!” In it he writes, for
+instance:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The <span class='it'>rapprochement</span> of our two peoples is a European task of
+such urgent necessity that youth has no time to lose in order
+to work for its achievement.”—He then continues—“Youth
+is the best ambassador in the world; it is disinterested, frank,
+and without the eternal distrust of which diplomats can
+frequently not be cured because, to a certain extent, it is
+their professional disease. However, there must be no
+propaganda intentions hidden behind youth exchange.”—And
+he concludes—“I consider it now my task to bring
+about an exchange of views between German and French
+youth, which must not, on the German side, consist of nice
+<span class='pageno' title='440' id='Page_440'></span>
+statements from me, but of many personal conversations of
+thousands of young Germans with just as many young
+Frenchmen. One must believe in youth because they, above
+all, can achieve a true understanding.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At the end Schirach calls attention to the fact that all higher
+youth leaders of the German Hitler Youth movement had a short
+time previously expressed their respect in the name of the young
+generation of Germany to the French Unknown Warrior by placing
+a wreath under the Arc de Triomphe, and he concludes with
+the words:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“The dead of the Great War died while fulfilling their patriotic
+duty and nobly devoting themselves to the ideal of liberty,
+and Germans as well as French were always filled with
+respect for a gallant foe. If the dead respected each other,
+then the living should try to shake hands. If the returned
+combat veterans of both nations could become comrades, why
+should the sons and grandsons not become friends?” (Document
+Schirach-113.)</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, are the words of the same
+Baldur von Schirach whom the Prosecution tries to brand as a
+deliberate partner in a Hitlerian conspiracy for war. The Prosecution
+wants to make a war criminal out of this untiring prophet
+for international understanding and peace, who is charged with
+having militarized youth and prepared it, bodily and psychologically,
+for wars of aggression and of having worked against peace.
+So far, the Prosecution has not been able to furnish evidence to
+this effect.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach has written various doctrinal books for youth, which
+were held against him in the trial brief; he has published a quantity
+of essays on a vast variety of problems of youth education; his
+innumerable speeches addressed to youth have been printed; his
+orders and instructions to youth are available to you and the
+Prosecution in collected form. Yet it must be concluded that
+among all these, which constitute his views during the whole of
+the time when he was active as Reich Youth Leader, not a single
+item is to be found in which he made inflammatory remarks in
+favor of war or preached attacks against other countries.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has stated in this very connection that he
+referred to the “Lebensraum” in his book <span class='it'>The Hitler Youth</span>, which
+I have repeatedly mentioned, and by so doing adopted as his own a
+slogan of Hitlerite aggression policy. This claim is incorrect, for
+the whole book, <span class='it'>The Hitler Youth</span>, does not, any more than every
+other speech and writing of Schirach, contain this word at all.
+True, he has referred at two points to “Eastern space” in his book,
+<span class='it'>The Hitler Youth</span>, published in 1936; but he quite obviously did
+<span class='pageno' title='441' id='Page_441'></span>
+not in any way employ this term with reference to Polish or Soviet-Russian
+territories but to the eastern provinces of the former German
+Empire, that is to say, to territories which formerly belonged
+to. Germany; they were known to be very thinly populated and
+well suited for the settlement of excess German population.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nowhere has Schirach, I would like to state in conclusion with
+regard to this topic, at any time up to the outbreak of the second
+World War expressed the idea that he might wish Germany to
+conquer foreign territories; neither has he ever uttered the odious
+slogans of the German “Master Race” or the “Sub-humanity” of
+other nations; on the contrary, he was always in favor of preserving
+peace with the neighboring nations and always advocated the
+peaceful settlement of any conflicts that cropped up out of inevitable
+clashes of interests. Gentlemen of the Tribunal, had Hitler
+possessed but a fraction of the love of peace which his Youth
+Leader preached time and again, then perhaps this war would have
+been spared us Germans and the whole world.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 18 July at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' title='442' id='Page_442'></span><h1><span style='font-size:larger'>ONE HUNDRED<br/> AND EIGHTY-FIRST DAY</span><br/> Thursday, 18 July 1946</h1></div>
+
+<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='it'>Morning Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>MARSHAL: May it please the Tribunal, the Defendants Hess,
+Von Ribbentrop, and Fritzsche are absent.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: May it please the Tribunal, yesterday at the end
+of my statement I dealt with the charge of the Prosecution that the
+Defendant Von Schirach had trained and educated the youth of the
+Third Reich in a military sense, that he had prepared them for the
+waging of aggressive wars and had participated in a conspiracy
+against peace. Now I turn to a further accusation which has been
+made by the Prosecution against Defendant Von Schirach.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Since the Prosecution could not prove that the Defendant
+Von Schirach had ever promoted Hitler’s war policy before the war,
+he is being charged with having had various connections with the
+SS and SA, and especially with the fact that the SS, the SA, and
+the Leadership Corps of the Party obtained their recruits from the
+Hitler Youth. This last fact is quite correct, but it proves nothing
+as to Schirach’s attitude toward Hitler’s war policy and is equally
+pointless as regards the question of his participation in Hitler’s war
+conspiracy. For since 90 or 95 percent or more of German youth
+belonged to the Hitler Youth movement it was only natural that the
+Party and its formations as the years went by should receive their
+young recruits in an ever-increasing measure from the Hitler Youth.
+Practically no other youth was available.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has referred to the agreement between the Reich
+Youth Leadership and the Reichsführer SS, dated October 1938,
+concerning the patrol service of the Hitler Youth, which was submitted
+to Your Honors as Document 2396-PS; however, no inference
+can be drawn therefrom, for patrol service in the Hitler Youth was
+merely an institution designed to check up on and supervise the
+discipline of Hitler Youth members when they appeared in public.
+It was, therefore, a kind of organization police which was employed
+by the Hitler Youth movement entirely within its own ranks. In
+order, however, to guard against difficulties with the regular Police,
+an arrangement with the Reichsführer SS Himmler was necessary
+because as chief of the whole police organization in Germany he
+might have made trouble for the institution of the HJ patrol service.
+<span class='pageno' title='443' id='Page_443'></span>
+This was the only object of the agreement of October 1938, which
+in reality had just as little to do with providing recruits for the SS
+as with the conduct and preparation of war. Moreover, it can clearly
+be seen how resolutely Schirach strove against any influence on the
+part of the Party over the Hitler Youth from the fact that in 1938
+he protested very sharply against having the education of the Hitler
+Youth during their last 2 years from 16 to 18 taken over by the SA.
+He emphatically opposed this plan and through personal intervention
+with Hitler prevented the Führer decree in question from being
+applied in practice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As for his attitude toward the SS, we know from the testimony
+of the witness Gustav Hoepken, who was heard here on 28 May 1946,
+and from the affidavit of the witness Maria Hoepken, Schirach Document
+Book Number 3, that Schirach always feared he was being
+shadowed and spied upon by the SS in Vienna. He always had an
+uncomfortable feeling because at the beginning of his activity in
+Vienna a permanent deputy had been appointed for him in his
+capacity as Reich Governor (Reichsstatthalter) and Reich Defense
+Commissioner in the person, of all things, of a higher SS leader, a
+certain Dr. Delbrügge; he was, as Schirach knew, closely associated
+with the Reichsführer SS who, as has been proved, proposed to
+Hitler in 1943 that Schirach should be imprisoned for defeatism and
+brought before the Peoples’ Court, which meant in practice that
+Himmler would have had Schirach hanged. These facts alone are
+already proof of the real relationship between the Defendant
+Von Schirach and the SS, and it will be understood why Schirach
+finally refused even the police protection squad assigned to him and
+preferred to entrust his personal protection to a unit of the Wehrmacht
+which was not subordinate to the order of Himmler. (See
+affidavit of Maria Hoepken in Schirach Document Book Number 3.)</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another accusation which has been made against the Defendant
+Von Schirach concerns his attitude in the Church question. This
+attitude corresponds to the impression given by the present proceedings,
+and while this issue is not given any prominence in the
+Indictment, it is nevertheless of considerable importance as far as
+the appreciation of Schirach’s personality is concerned.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach himself, as well as his wife, always remained members
+of the Church. To the foreign critic this circumstance may perhaps
+appear an unimportant detail, but we Germans know what pressure
+was exerted upon high-ranking Party officials in these very matters,
+and how few in his position ventured to resist such pressure.
+Schirach was one of those few. He was the one high-ranking Party
+Leader who constantly and invariably punished with extreme
+severity any hostile interference and outrages against the Church
+on the part of the Hitler Youth. He has also been reproached for the
+<span class='pageno' title='444' id='Page_444'></span>
+fact that various songs were sung by the Hitler Youth which contained
+offensive remarks about religious institutions, but in this
+respect Schirach could with a clear conscience confirm on his oath
+that partly he was unaware of those songs, which is quite conceivable
+where an organization of 7 or 8 million members is involved;
+on the other hand, certain songs now considered objectionable
+date back to the Middle Ages and figured in the song book of the
+Wandervogel, a former youth organization which the Prosecution
+surely does not propose to condemn. Schirach has however especially
+pointed out that during the years 1933 to 1936 several million youths
+from an entirely different spiritual environment joined the Hitler
+Youth and that during the first revolutionary years, that is, in the
+period of storm and stress of the Movement, it was quite impossible
+to hear of and prevent all lapses of this sort. Whenever Schirach did
+hear of such things he intervened and remedied abuses of that kind,
+which after all represented offenses on the part of isolated elements
+incapable of compromising the youth organization as a whole.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is Schirach’s conviction that the examination of evidence leaves
+no doubt as to his conciliatory behavior in the matter of the Church,
+and that he strove to establish proper relations of mutual respect
+between the Church on the one hand and the Third Reich, and more
+especially the Reich Youth Leadership, on the other hand, and to
+observe their respective rights and competences. At his own request
+Schirach was permitted by the Reich Minister of the Interior to take
+part in conducting the Concordat negotiations with the Catholic
+Church in 1934, because he hoped to achieve an agreement with the
+Catholic Church more easily by his personal co-operation. He
+honestly endeavored to find a formula for the settlement of the
+youth question by which agreement with the Catholic Church could
+be possible. His moderation and good will in this respect were
+frankly acknowledged by the representative of the Catholic Church
+at that time. But everything was ultimately frustrated by Hitler’s
+opposition and the complications created for these negotiations by
+the events of 30 June 1934, the so-called Röhm Putsch.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With the Protestant Church, on the other hand, Schirach achieved
+an agreement with the Reich Bishop, Dr. Müller, so that the incorporation
+of the Protestant youth groups into the Hitler Youth was
+not attained by constraint but by mutual agreement, not by breaking
+up these associations by the State or the Party, as the Prosecution
+assumes, but upon the initiative of the Protestant ecclesiastical head
+and in complete agreement with him. It must be pointed out here
+that it was always Schirach’s policy that no restrictions were to be
+imposed on church services by the Youth Leadership, neither then
+nor later. On the contrary, as he himself has testified and as was
+confirmed by the witness Lauterbacher, Schirach emphatically
+<span class='pageno' title='445' id='Page_445'></span>
+stated in 1937 that he would leave it to the churches to educate the
+younger generation according to the spirit of their faith, and at the
+same time he ordered that, as a principle, no Hitler Youth service
+was to be scheduled on Sundays during the time of church services.
+He gave strict orders to the unit leaders of the Hitler Youth not to
+schedule duties which might disturb church services. If, however,
+in individual cases such interference did occur and some religious
+authorities lodged complaints as the cross-examination revealed,
+then the Defendant Schirach cannot be blamed for this, nor does
+it alter the fact that he had every good intention.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During the Trial not a single case could be proved in which he
+stirred up feeling against the Church or made antireligious statements;
+on the contrary, at numerous rallies as submitted to the
+Tribunal in the Schirach document book, he not only repeatedly
+opposed the allegation that the Hitler Youth were enemies of the
+Church or atheists, but he always positively impressed upon the
+leaders and members of the Hitler Youth the necessity of fulfilling
+their obligation toward God; he would not tolerate anyone in the
+Hitler Youth who did not believe in God; every true teacher, he
+told them, must imbue youth with religious feeling, since it was the
+basis of all educational activities; Hitler Youth service and religious
+convictions could very well be associated with each other and exist
+side by side; no Hitler Youth leader was to engender conflicts of
+conscience whatsoever in his boys. Leave of absence was to be
+granted to Hitler Youth members for religious services, rites,
+<span class='it'>et cetera</span>. Such was Von Schirach’s point of view.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Whoever gives such instructions to his subleaders, and continues
+to do so over and over again, can demand that he should not be
+judged an enemy of the Church and an enemy of religious life.
+Incidentally, it is interesting in this connection to note what such
+a reliable judge as Nevile Henderson wrote in his oft-quoted book
+<span class='it'>Failure of a Mission</span> about a speech which he heard Schirach deliver
+at the 1937 Reich Party Rally, parts of which have been submitted
+in Schirach’s document book. Henderson, who as Ambassador in
+Berlin knew German conditions intimately, evidently expected that
+Baldur Schirach would speak against the Church at the Reich Party
+Rally and would influence the young people in the spirit of enmity
+to the Church, as was often done by other leaders of the Party.
+Henderson writes, and I quote two sentences:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“That day, however, it was Von Schirach’s speech which ...
+impressed me most, although it was quite short.... One part
+of this speech surprised me when, addressing the boys, he
+said, ‘I do not know if you are Protestants or Catholics, but
+that you believe in God, that I do know.’ ”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='446' id='Page_446'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>And Henderson added:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I had been under the impression that all references to
+religion were discouraged among the Hitler Youth, and this
+seemed to me to refute that imputation.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What Schirach really thought with regard to religion, and in
+what sense he influenced youth, is indicated not only by a statement
+he made on the occasion of a speech before the teachers of the Adolf
+Hitler Schools at Sonthofen, to the effect that Christ was the greatest
+leader in the history of the world, but likewise by the small book,
+submitted to you in evidence, entitled, <span class='it'>Christmas Gift of the War
+Welfare Service</span>. This book, which was sent out in large numbers,
+was dedicated by Schirach to the front-line soldiers who joined from
+the ranks of the Hitler Youth movement in 1944, at a time when
+radicalism in all spheres of German life could hardly become more
+pronounced.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Here also Schirach was an exception: You will find no swastika,
+no picture of Hitler, no SA song in the book of Reichsleiter
+Von Schirach, but among other things a distinctly Christian poem
+from Schirach’s own pen, then a picture of a Madonna, and next to
+it a reproduction of a painting by Van Gogh who, as is generally
+known, was strictly banned in the Third Reich. Instead of inflammatory
+words, we find an exhortation to a Christian way of thinking
+and the “Wessobrunner Gebet,” familiar as the earliest Christian
+prayer in the German language. Bormann stormed when he saw
+the pamphlet, but Schirach remained firm and refused to withdraw
+the little book or alter it in any way.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Von Schirach has been charged with having once
+undertaken a hostile act against the Church, and with having
+thereby taken part in the persecution of the Church. From a letter
+by Minister Lammers of 14 March 1941 (Document R-146), it appears
+that Schirach had proposed to keep confiscated property at the
+disposal of the Gaue, and not to hand it over to the Reich, but this
+case is no justification at all for connecting the Defendant Von
+Schirach in some way or other with the persecution of the Church.
+The case mentioned by the Prosecution does not concern church
+property at all, but confiscated property of a Prince Schwarzenberg
+in his Vienna palace. This affair therefore never had anything to do
+with the Church. This is also confirmed unequivocally by Minister
+Lammers’ letter of 14 March 1941 (R-146), which mentions only,
+I quote, “a confiscation of the property (of persons) hostile to the
+people and the State,” whereas Bormann’s far-reaching personal
+intention becomes apparent and betrays his hostile attitude toward
+the Church when he writes about “church properties (monastic
+possessions, and so forth)” in his accompanying letter of 20 March
+1941 referring to this case. Moreover, the confiscation of Prince
+<span class='pageno' title='447' id='Page_447'></span>
+Schwarzenberg’s property was not caused, pronounced, or carried
+out by Schirach. Schirach had nothing to do with the confiscation as
+such; Schirach, however, in agreement with the other Gauleiter of
+the Austrian NSDAP, and at their request, personally applied to
+Hitler and asked that such confiscated property should not be taken to
+the Reich and not be used on behalf of the Reich, but that it
+should remain in Vienna. This suggestion met with approval. Hitler
+complied with his request, the result of Schirach’s efforts being that,
+when the confiscation was rescinded later on, the property could be
+returned to the legitimate owner, whereas it would otherwise have
+been lost by him. By acting thus, Schirach no doubt rendered a
+service to the Gau of Vienna and to the owner of the property
+seized. This instance surely cannot be construed as a charge against
+the Defendant Von Schirach; on the contrary, it speaks in his favor
+just as the other case where, disregarding Bormann, he intervened
+on behalf of Austrian nuns and as a result brought about, by a
+direct order from Hitler, the discontinuance from one day to the
+other of the whole project of confiscating church and monastic
+property in the whole Reich.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the Prosecution further undertakes to charge the Defendant
+Von Schirach with the fact that the Vienna authorities subordinate
+to him proposed to establish an Adolf Hitler School in the monastery
+of Klosterneuburg in 1941, I must point out that even prior to the
+requisitioning of this monastery, and entirely independently of
+Schirach, the Vienna police and several Vienna courts had uncovered
+a considerable number of criminal offenses in this monastery,
+furthermore that the confiscation of part of the monastery seemed
+entirely justified to the Defendant Von Schirach, since the very
+spacious rooms of this religious establishment were not required for
+monastery purposes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It should also be noted that the monastery, as can be seen from
+documents submitted, did not file any protest with the Reich Minister
+of the Interior against the decision to confiscate, and thereby recognized
+the confiscation as legal, although it had been expressly
+informed in the confiscation decree of the possibility of lodging a
+complaint. Moreover, the confiscated quarters were afterward not
+used for the establishment of an Adolf Hitler School, but for the
+Museum of Historical Art (thus not for a Party establishment),
+which again testifies to the fact that the confiscation decree had in
+no way been issued because of a hostile attitude on the part of
+Schirach toward the Church. Had it been Schirach’s object to attack
+the monastery because it was an ecclesiastical institution, he would
+have included in the confiscation the rooms used for religious
+ceremonies. These, however, he strictly excluded.
+<span class='pageno' title='448' id='Page_448'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Moreover, when appraising this case, attention should be paid to
+the fact that the justification of the confiscation decree of 22 February
+1941 displays remarkable reticence. The decree restricts
+itself to justifying the confiscation by the fact that on the one hand
+Vienna badly needed room and that on the other hand the premises
+confiscated were not required for the purposes of the monastery.
+Not a single word mentions or even suggests that criminal offenses
+had taken place in the monastery, as recorded in a police report of
+23 January 1941, which is submitted to the Court. If this confiscation
+had been the result of a hostile attitude of Schirach toward
+the Church, we could have been sure that somehow or other
+reference would have been made to these criminal offenses to justify
+the confiscation. At Schirach’s wish a monthly indemnification was
+paid to the clergy who had occupied some of the confiscated rooms,
+for which payment there existed no official obligation whatever.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Defendant Von Schirach’s further behavior does not reveal any
+hostile attitude toward the Church, particularly if one considers,
+when judging this behavior, that during these years even a Reichsleiter
+was under strong pressure by the Reich Chancellery and by
+Bormann, and that at that time a considerable amount of courage
+was necessary to resist this pressure and carry on a policy in
+opposition to the official Berlin policy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The witness Wieshofer of Vienna, who had the opportunity of
+watching Schirach’s activities, confirmed before the Court that in
+Vienna Schirach likewise strove to establish correct relations with
+the Church, that he was always willing to listen to any complaints
+of the Cardinal of Vienna and took severe measures against the
+excesses of individual members of the Hitler Youth or Hitler Youth
+leaders. In Vienna he thus displayed a policy toward the Church
+quite different from that which his radical predecessor Bürckel had
+favored, and it is beyond doubt that ecclesiastical circles in Vienna
+and the whole of the Viennese population appreciated Schirach’s
+attitude toward the Church. This is also confirmed by the witness
+Gustav Hoepken who was examined here and who, by order of
+Schirach, held regular conferences with a Vienna theologian, Professor
+Ens, in order to be able to inform the Defendant Schirach of
+the wishes of the Church and the differences which had arisen with
+ecclesiastical authorities. Unless he wished to expose himself to the
+most serious danger, Schirach could do no more under the prevailing
+political circumstances, which are described in the affidavit of Maria
+Hoepken, Document Book Schirach Number 3.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now turn to another point of the Indictment, to the question of
+the concentration camps. The Prosecution has connected the defendant
+with concentration camps, although not in the Indictment but
+during the presentation of evidence; and the witness Alois Höllriegel,
+<span class='pageno' title='449' id='Page_449'></span>
+who was questioned here, was asked in the witness box whether
+Schirach had ever been inside the Mauthausen Concentration Camp.
+To this I should like to remark that the Defendant Von Schirach
+mentioned his visit to Mauthausen at his interrogation by the
+American Prosecution before the beginning of the Trial; it would,
+therefore, not have been necessary to have this visit confirmed again
+by the witness Höllriegel. He visited the Mauthausen Concentration
+Camp in the year 1942, not in 1944, as the witness Marsalek
+erroneously stated; the correct year, 1942, has been confirmed by
+the witness Höllriegel and also by the witnesses Hoepken and Wieshofer,
+from whom we heard that neither after 1942 nor at any other
+time did Schirach visit other concentration camps. The visit to
+Mauthausen in 1942 cannot implicate the defendant Schirach in the
+sense of his having known, approved, and supported all the conditions
+and atrocities in concentration camps. In 1942 he saw
+nothing in Mauthausen which might have indicated such crimes.
+There were no gas chambers and the like in 1942. At that time
+mass executions did not take place at Mauthausen. The statements
+of the Defendant Von Schirach concerning his impression of this
+camp appear quite plausible, because the testimony of numerous
+witnesses who have been heard during the course of this Trial has
+confirmed again and again that on the occasion of such official visits,
+which had been announced previously, everything was carefully
+prepared in order to show to the visitors only that which need not
+fear the light of day. Maltreatment and torture were concealed
+during such official visits in the same manner as arbitrary executions
+or cruel experiments. This was the case at Mauthausen in 1942
+and certainly also at Dachau in 1935, where Schirach and the other
+visitors were shown only orderly conditions, which at a superficial
+glance appeared to be better than in some ordinary prisons.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As a result, Schirach only knew that since 1933 there were
+several concentration camps in Germany where, as far as he knew,
+incorrigible habitual criminals and political prisoners were confined.
+However, even today Schirach is unable to believe that the mere
+knowledge of the existence of concentration camps is in itself a
+punishable crime, since he at no time did anything whatsoever to
+promote concentration camps, never expressed his approval of this
+institution, never sent anybody to a concentration camp, and would
+in any case never have been able to make any changes in this
+institution or to prevent the existence of concentration camps.
+Schirach’s influence was always too small for that. As Reich Youth
+Leader, of course, he had nothing to do with concentration camps
+in the first place, and it was lucky for Schirach that in his entire
+Vienna Gau district there was not a single concentration camp. His
+relations with concentration camps were therefore limited to
+repeated attempts to have people released from them, and it is after
+<span class='pageno' title='450' id='Page_450'></span>
+all significant that his sole visit to the Concentration Camp Mauthausen
+resulted in his exerting his influence to obtain the ultimate
+release of inhabitants of Vienna who were imprisoned there.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal, I do not want to go again into many
+details which have played a larger or smaller part in the presentation
+of evidence for the case of Schirach. In the interest of saving
+time I shall not deal more specifically with his alleged connection
+with Rosenberg or Streicher, nor with his alleged collaboration in
+the slave labor program, in which connection not even the slightest
+participation of the Defendant Schirach could be proved, nor with
+a telephone conversation which has been used by the Prosecution
+and which allegedly took place between one of the Viennese officials
+and an SS Standartenführer regarding the compulsory labor of the
+Jews, about which Von Schirach knew nothing at all.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But I should like to insert a short remark about one subject
+which arose particularly in connection with the case of Rosenberg,
+that is, a brief explanation concerning the Hay Action by which
+thousands of children in the Eastern combat zone were collected and
+brought partly to Poland and partly to Germany. The apparent aim
+of this operation, as far as Schirach could see from the documents
+presented here, was to collect children who were in the zone of
+operations, that is, immediately behind the front and wandering
+around without their parents, with a view to giving them professional
+training and work so that they should be saved from physical
+and moral neglect.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Von Schirach doubts whether this can be looked
+upon as a crime against humanity, or as a war crime; but one thing
+is certain, that the Defendant Von Schirach did not know anything
+of that affair at the time. He was not the competent authority. That
+entire affair was handled by Army Group Center in collaboration
+with the Ministry for the Eastern Occupied Territories, and, of
+course, it is quite plausible that neither the Eastern Ministry nor the
+Army Group Center saw fit to approach the Gauleiter of Vienna in
+order to get his approval of that action, or even to notify him
+about it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The only thing which, a considerable time later, came to the
+attention of the Defendant Von Schirach and may have some bearing
+on that, the Hay Action, was an incidental report by Reich Youth
+Leader Axmann that so and so many thousand youths had been
+brought to the Junkers works at Dessau as apprentices.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Von Schirach was anxious to clear up this matter
+in view of his former office as Reich Youth Leader, and he wishes
+to make it quite clear that even after leaving that office he would
+of course never have undertaken anything against the interests
+of youth.
+<span class='pageno' title='451' id='Page_451'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May I add another remark here concerning the letter which the
+Defendant Von Schirach sent to Reichsleiter Bormann after the
+murder of Heydrich, in which he suggested reprisal measures to
+Bormann in the form of a terror attack upon an English center of
+culture? That letter was actually sent by the defendant to Bormann.
+He acknowledges it. I have to point out at the very beginning that
+fortunately the suggestion remained a suggestion, and it was never
+carried out. The defendant, however, has told us that at that time
+he was very upset by the assassination of Heydrich, and it was clear
+to him that a revolt of the population in Bohemia would necessarily
+lead to a catastrophe for the German armies in Russia, and in his
+capacity as Gauleiter of Vienna he had considered it his duty to
+undertake something to protect the rear of the German army
+fighting in Russia. And that explains that teletype to Bormann in
+1942 (Document 3877) which, as I have already pointed out, fortunately
+was not acted upon.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal, I shall proceed with my statement,
+the middle of Page 26.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall not deal in detail with the Adolf Hitler Schools which
+were founded by Schirach, nor with the Fifth Column which was
+somehow, quite wrongly, connected with the Hitler Youth, although
+nothing definite could be charged to the defendant. I shall not go
+into either the repeated efforts on behalf of peace undertaken by
+the Defendant Schirach and his friend Dr. Colin Ross, nor shall
+I discuss the merits of the defendant with reference to the evacuation
+of children to the rural areas, which took millions of
+children from bomb-endangered districts during the war into more
+quiet zones and thus saved their lives and health.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Von Schirach has already talked about all these
+affairs in detail himself, and I should therefore like to refer to his
+own statements, which you will consider in your judgment.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As counsel for the Defendant Von Schirach, I shall discuss only
+one more problem here, namely Schirach’s opinion and attitude
+concerning the Jewish question. Schirach has admitted here on the
+witness stand that he has been a convinced National Socialist, and
+thus also an anti-Semite from his earliest youth. He has also made
+clear to us what he understood by anti-Semitism during those years.
+He thought of the exclusion of the Jews from civil service and of
+the limitation of Jewish influence in cultural life and perhaps also
+in economic life, to a certain extent. But that was all which in his
+opinion should be undertaken against the Jews, and this was in
+accordance with the suggestion which he had already made as leader
+of the students’ organization for the introduction of a quota system
+for students. The defendant’s decree concerning the treatment of
+Jewish youth is, for example, also important in establishing his
+<span class='pageno' title='452' id='Page_452'></span>
+attitude (Schirach Document Number 136). This is a decree in
+which he expressly orders that Jewish youth organizations should
+have the right and the opportunity to practice freely within the
+limitations imposed upon them. It says that they were not to be
+disturbed in their own life.</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“In its youth the Jewish community shall already today take
+up that secluded but internally unrestrained special position
+which at some future time the entire Jewish community will
+be given in the German State and in German economy.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Those are the very words of that decree. Obviously Schirach
+was not at all thinking about pogroms, bloody persecutions of the
+Jews, and the like; rather did he believe at that time that the
+anti-Semitic movement had already achieved its aim by the anti-Jewish
+legislative measures of the years 1933-34, thereby eliminating
+Jewish influence as far as it seemed unhealthy to him. He was
+therefore surprised and very alarmed when the Nuremberg Laws
+were promulgated in 1935, which formulated a policy of complete
+exclusion of the Jewish population and carried it out with barbaric
+severity. Schirach in no way took part in the planning of these
+laws; he has nothing whatsoever to do with their content and their
+formulation. That has been proved here.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When on 10 November 1938 he heard about the pogrom against
+the Jews and about the brutal excesses which were staged by
+Goebbels and his fanatic clique his indignation became known
+throughout the entire youth movement. The evidence proved this
+also. We have heard from the witness Lauterbacher how Schirach
+reacted to the report of these excesses: He immediately called his
+assistants together and gave them the strictest orders that the
+Hitler Youth must be kept out of such actions under all circumstances.
+He at once had the leaders of the Hitler Youth in all
+German cities notified by telephone to the same effect and warned
+every subordinate that he would hold him personally responsible
+if any excesses should occur in the Hitler Youth.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But even after November 1938 Schirach never considered the
+possibility that Hitler was contemplating the extermination of the
+Jews. On the contrary, he only heard it mentioned that the Jews
+were to be evacuated from Germany into other states, that they
+should be transported to Poland and settled there, at worst in
+ghettos, but more probably in a closed settlement area. When
+Schirach in July 1940 received Hitler’s order to take over the Gau
+of Vienna, Hitler himself also talked to him along the same lines,
+namely, that he, Hitler, would have the Jews brought from Vienna
+into the Government General; and even today Schirach has no
+doubt that Hitler himself was not thinking about the so-called
+<span class='pageno' title='453' id='Page_453'></span>
+“final solution” of the Jewish question at that time, 1940, in terms
+of the extermination of the Jews. We learn from the Hossbach
+minutes and other evidence of this Trial that Hitler was planning
+the evacuation of Poland already in 1937, but that he decided on
+the extermination of the Jewish people only in 1941 or 1942.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach had nothing at all to do with the evacuation of the Jews
+from Vienna, as is alleged by the Prosecution; the execution of
+this measure was exclusively in the hands of the Reich Security
+Main Office and the Vienna branch of that office, and it is known
+that SS Gruppenführer Brunner of Vienna has in the meantime
+been sentenced to death for that very reason. The only order which
+Schirach received and carried out concerning the Viennese Jews
+was to report to Hitler in 1940 how many Jews there were still
+left in Vienna, and he made this report in a letter of December
+1940 where he gave the figure of the Viennese Jews for 1940 as
+60,000. It will be remembered that Minister Lammers answered
+this letter from the Defendant Schirach by a letter dated 3 December
+1940 (1950-PS), which shows with all clarity that it was not Schirach
+who ordered the evacuation of the Viennese Jews to the Government
+General but Hitler himself, and that again it was not Schirach
+who carried out this measure but the Reichsführer SS Himmler,
+who delegated this task to his Vienna office. It must therefore be
+stated here categorically that Schirach is in no way responsible
+for the deportation of the Jews from Vienna; he did not carry
+out this program and he did not initiate it; when he came to Vienna
+in the summer of 1940 as Gauleiter, the majority of the Viennese
+Jews had already voluntarily emigrated or had been forcibly
+evacuated from Vienna, a fact which was confirmed by the Defendant
+Seyss-Inquart. The remaining 60,000 Jews who were still there
+at the beginning of Schirach’s time in Vienna were deported from
+there by the SS without his participation and without his
+responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach did make the well-known speech in Vienna in September
+1942, where he stated that every Jew working in Europe was a
+danger to European culture. Schirach furthermore said in this
+speech that if it was desired to reproach him with the fact that
+he had deported tens of thousands of Jews into the Eastern ghetto
+from this city, which had once been the metropolis of Judaism, he
+would but answer that he considered this an active contribution to
+European culture. That is how this passage reads. Schirach has
+openly and courageously admitted that he actually expressed himself
+in this manner at that time, and expressed his regret by stating:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“I cannot take back this wicked statement; I must take the
+responsibility for it. I spoke these words, which I sincerely
+regret.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='pindent'><span class='pageno' title='454' id='Page_454'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Should the Tribunal see in these words a legally punishable
+crime against humanity, Schirach will have to make atonement for
+this single anti-Semitic remark which can be attributed to him,
+though it was merely a spoken word and did not have any harmful
+result. Schirach’s attitude in this respect does not exempt the
+Tribunal from its duty to verify carefully what Schirach actually
+did; furthermore, under what circumstances he made this isolated
+remark, and finally whether Schirach also made any other spiteful
+remarks against the Jews or committed any malicious acts against
+the Jewish race as a whole.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The foremost question is: What did Schirach really do? The
+reply to this, emerging from the revelations of this Trial, can only
+be: Apart from the fact that he made this isolated anti-Semitic
+remark in his speech in Vienna in September 1942, he has not
+committed any crime against the Jews. He had no competence in
+the question of the deportation of the Vienna Jews, he did not
+participate in it at all, and having too little power he could not
+have prevented it in any case. It is just as the Prosecution incidentally
+stated: He boastfully attributed to himself an action which
+in reality he had never committed and, in view of his entire attitude,
+he never could have committed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What, however prompted Schirach to make this remark in his
+Vienna speech? How did he come to attribute to himself a deed and
+charge himself with an action which he had obviously never committed?
+Here too the answer is given by the results of the evidence
+in the Trial: It demonstrates what a very difficult position Schirach
+had in Vienna. Without giving any reason, Hitler dismissed him as
+Reich Youth Leader, presumably because he no longer trusted
+him. From year to year Hitler’s fear was growing lest the young
+people might stand behind Schirach and become alienated from him,
+Hitler, to the same degree that the black wall of his SS was isolating
+him from the people. Hitler possibly saw in his Youth Leader
+the personification of the coming generation which thought in
+world-wide terms, whose feelings were human and who felt
+themselves more and more bound to those precepts of true morality
+which Hitler had long ago jettisoned for himself and his national
+leadership, because they had long since ceased to be concepts of
+true morality for him but mere slogans of a meaningless propaganda.
+This feeling of Hitler’s may have been the deeper reason
+why he dismissed Schirach as Youth Leader suddenly in the summer
+of 1940, without word of explanation, and put him in the
+especially difficult position of Gauleiter in Vienna, the city which
+he, Hitler, hated from the bottom of his heart, even while he spoke
+of his “Austrian fatherland.”
+<span class='pageno' title='455' id='Page_455'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In Vienna Schirach’s position was extremely complicated. Wherever
+he went he was shadowed and spied upon, his administrative
+activity there was sharply criticized, he was reproached for neglecting
+the interests of the Party in Vienna, for almost never being
+seen at Party meetings, and for not making any political speeches.
+I refer in this connection to the affidavit of Maria Hoepken, Schirach
+Document Book Number 3. The Berlin Party Chancellery accepted
+any complaints the Vienna Party members made about their new
+Gauleiter with satisfaction, and this fact alone can explain the
+unfortunate speech Schirach made in September 1942, which was
+diametrically opposed to the attitude he had always maintained concerning
+the Jewish question. After the interrogation of the witness
+Gustav Hoepken here in this courtroom there can be no doubt as
+to how the Vienna speech came about, for it reveals that Schirach
+had expressly charged his press officer Günther Kaufmann to
+emphasize this particular point when telephoning his report of the
+Vienna speech to the German News Agency in Berlin, because he,
+Schirach—I quote—“had to make a concession to Bormann in this
+respect.” Schirach himself stressed this point in the course of his
+interrogation with the statement that out of false loyalty he had
+morally identified himself with these acts of Hitler and Himmler.
+This ugly speech which Schirach made in September 1942 is, however,
+in another sense a very valuable point in favor of Schirach:
+He speaks of a “transfer of the Jews to the ghettos of the East.”
+Had Schirach known at that time that the Viennese Jews were to
+be sent away in order to be murdered in an extermination camp,
+he would in view of the purpose of this speech doubtless not have
+spoken of an Eastern ghetto to which the Jews had been sent, and
+would have reported the extermination of the Viennese Jews; but
+even at this time, in the autumn of 1942, he never had the slightest
+suspicion that Hitler proposed to murder the Jews. That he would
+never have approved and never accepted; his anti-Semitism at no
+time went so far.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach also frankly stated here that at that time he approved
+of Hitler’s plan to settle the Jews in Poland, not because he was
+inspired by anti-Semitism or hatred of the Jews, but by the reasonable
+consideration that in view of existing conditions it was in the
+Jews’ own interest to leave Vienna and be taken to Poland, because
+the Jews would not in the long run have been able to stay in Vienna
+under the Hitler regime without being exposed to increasingly
+serious persecution. As Schirach declared on 24 May 1946, considering
+Goebbels’ temperament it always seemed possible that incidents
+like those of November 1938 might be repeated from one day to
+the other, and under such conditions of legal insecurity he could
+not visualize the existence of the Jewish population in Germany.
+<span class='pageno' title='456' id='Page_456'></span>
+He thought that the Jews would be safer in a restricted settlement
+area of the Government General than in Germany and Austria,
+where they were exposed to the whims of the Propaganda Minister
+who, indeed, had been the main supporter of radical anti-Semitism
+in Germany. Schirach was well aware of this fact. He could not
+shut his eyes to the realization that the drive against the Jews in
+Germany obviously became more drastic, more fanatic, and more
+violent every day. This conception of the Vienna speech of September
+1942 and the true cause of its genesis coincide with the
+statements of the Defendant Schirach at the meeting of the city
+councillors of Vienna on 6 June 1942 (Document Number 3886-PS),
+to the effect that in the late summer and autumn of that year all
+Jews would be expelled from the city, and likewise with the file
+note of Reichsleiter Bormann of 2 October 1940 (USSR-142), according
+to which, at a social meeting at Hitler’s home, Schirach had
+remarked that he still had more than 50,000 Jews left in Vienna
+which the Governor General of Poland must take over from him.
+This remark was caused by Schirach’s embarrassing situation at that
+time. Hitler, on the one hand, kept insisting on the expulsion of
+the Jews from Vienna, while on the other hand Governor General
+Frank was reluctant to receive them in the Government General.
+This disagreement was evidently the reason for Schirach’s discussing
+this fact at the above-mentioned meeting on 2 October 1940, in
+order to avoid renewed reproaches by Hitler. Personally he was in
+no way interested in the removal of the Viennese Jews, as was
+proved by the testimony of the witness Gustav Hoepken regarding
+the conference between Schirach and Himmler in November 1943.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I should like to add a word here concerning that discussion.
+During that conference with Himmler, Schirach presented the point
+of view that the Jews might be left in Vienna, especially since they
+were wearing the Star of David anyway. That has been testified to
+by the witness Hoepken as being a statement made by Schirach
+during the conversation. However, Hitler demanded the expulsion
+of the Jews from Vienna and Himmler insisted on having it carried
+out.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution thought it possible to charge Schirach with
+having made another malicious anti-Semitic remark in connection
+with a speech which he supposedly made in late December 1938,
+certainly before the spring of 1939, at a students’ meeting at Heidelberg.
+Across the Neckar River he pointed to the old university town
+of Heidelberg where several burned-out synagogues were the silent
+witnesses to the anti-Semitic activities of the students of Heidelberg.
+I refer to the affidavit of Ziemer, in which “the stout little
+Reich Student Leader”—as it is stated literally—is said to have
+approved and commended the pogroms of 9 November 1938 as a
+<span class='pageno' title='457' id='Page_457'></span>
+heroic act. This charge, as already mentioned, is supported by the
+declaration under oath of a certain Gregor Ziemer. However, there
+can be no doubt that this statement of Ziemer’s is false. Ziemer
+never belonged to the German student movement or the Hitler
+Youth, and obviously was not personally present at the student
+assembly in question. The affidavit does not state from what source
+he is supposed to have obtained his knowledge. However, that his
+claim is false is already proved by his description of physical
+appearance when he speaks of a “stout little student leader”; for
+this does not at all resemble Schirach. Perhaps it would to some
+extent apply to his successor, who was Reich Student Leader at the
+end of 1938, but it certainly was not Schirach. As is known, he had
+already in 1934 given the office of Reich Student Leader back into
+the hands of the Führer’s deputy, after he himself had in the meantime
+been appointed Reich Youth Leader. Schirach did not make
+a speech at the end of 1938 or at any other time before Heidelberg
+students, and by the affidavit of the witness Maria Hoepken
+(Schirach Document Book Number 3) it has been clearly proved
+that at the time stated Schirach was not in Heidelberg at all.
+Schirach has also confirmed this under oath and his own statement
+can lay claim to credibility because he has not whitewashed anything
+for which he was responsible, and he has not falsely denied
+anything, but on the contrary has accounted for all his actions with
+courage and truthfulness during his entire examination.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Still another fact decisively confirms the claim that the Ziemer
+affidavit is untrue, at any rate in regard to the person of Schirach.
+In the presentation of evidence it happened to be stated by chance
+how Schirach reacted to the November pogroms of the year 1938.
+The witness Lauterbacher has informed us here, as already mentioned
+at another point, that Schirach on 10 November 1938 condemned
+most vehemently the events of 9 November 1938 in the
+presence of his co-workers, and declared that he felt ashamed for
+the others and for the whole Party. The 9th of November 1938,
+Schirach said, would go down in Germany history as a unique disgrace
+of German culture of which we would never be able to cleanse
+ourselves. Such a thing might have happened among an uncivilized
+people, but it should never have occurred among us Germans who
+consider ourselves to be a highly civilized people. The youth leaders,
+Schirach explained at that time, had to prevent such excesses
+under all circumstances. He did not wish to hear anything like this
+about his own organization, either now or in the future. The Hitler
+Youth must be kept outside such things under all circumstances.
+These are sworn statements by the witness Hoepken. By a telephone
+message from Berlin, Schirach had all the offices of the Hitler
+Youth informed in the same terms. If Schirach in November 1938
+condemned and criticized in such an extremely sharp manner the
+<span class='pageno' title='458' id='Page_458'></span>
+events of 9 November 1938, it is impossible for him to have praised
+at about the same time the bloody acts which had been committed
+and thus to have incited the Heidelberg students, and the question
+therefore arises as to why not a single participant at that student
+meeting in Heidelberg was brought here as a witness instead of one
+who could only testify from hearsay. Incidentally, the Prosecution
+did not revert to this alleged Heidelberg speech during cross-examination,
+thereby acknowledging Schirach’s own presentation of the
+facts to be correct.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is also a very significant fact that the Hitler Youth did not
+participate in the excesses of 9 November 1938, nor did they commit
+any excesses of this sort either before or afterward. The Hitler
+Youth at that time was the strongest Party organization. It comprised
+some seven or eight million members, and in spite of that
+not one single case has been proved where the Hitler Youth participated
+in such crimes against humanity, although its members
+were mainly of an age which, according to experience, is only too
+easily tempted to participate in excesses and acts of brutality. The
+only exception which has been claimed so far concerns the testimony
+of the French woman Ida Vasseau, who is said to be the
+manager of an Old People’s Home in Lemberg and is supposed to
+have claimed, according to the report of the Commission, Document
+Number USSR-6, that the Hitler Youth had been given children
+from the ghetto in Lemberg whom they used as living targets for
+their shooting practice. This single exception, however, which so far
+has been claimed but not proved, could not be cleared up in any
+way, particularly not in respect of whether members of the Hitler
+Youth had really been involved. But even if there had been such
+a single case among the eight million members during 10 or 15 long
+years, this could not in any way prove that Baldur von Schirach
+had exercised an inciting influence, and that, if I may add this
+here, at a time when he was no longer Reich Youth Leader.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: We will adjourn now.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SAUTER: If the Tribunal please, I shall proceed from Page 36
+of my statement. Let us just examine all the speeches and articles
+which Von Schirach wrote as Reich Youth Leader, and which are in
+the possession of the Tribunal in the Schirach document book. They
+extend over a long period of years, yet they do not contain a single
+word inciting to race hatred, preaching hatred of Jews, exhorting
+youth to commit acts of violence, or defending such acts. If it has
+<span class='pageno' title='459' id='Page_459'></span>
+been possible to keep the members of the Hitler Youth, who numbered
+millions, clear of such excesses, this fact also goes to prove
+that the leaders endeavored to imbue the younger generation with
+a spirit of tolerance, love of one’s neighbors, and respect of human
+dignity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Just what Von Schirach thought about the treatment of the
+Jewish question is clearly evident from the scene with occurred in
+the spring of 1943 at Obersalzberg, which is also described in the
+affidavit of the witness Maria Hoepken (Document Book Schirach
+Number 3). In this case I refer to the scene where Schirach had an
+eyewitness describe to Hitler at his home at Obersalzberg how he
+had witnessed with his own eyes at night from a hotel window in
+Amsterdam the manner in which the Gestapo deported hundreds of
+Dutch Jewesses. Schirach himself could not dare at the time to
+bring such matters to Hitler’s attention; a decree by Bormann had
+expressly prohibited the Gauleiter from doing this. Schirach therefore
+tried through the mediation of a third person, who had been
+a witness himself, to gain Hitler’s approval of a mitigation in the
+treatment of the Jewish question. No success was achieved; Hitler
+dismissed it all bluntly with the remark that this was all sentimentality.
+Because of this intervention on behalf of the Dutch Jews
+the situation of the Defendant Von Schirach had become so critical
+that he preferred to leave Obersalzberg immediately, early in the
+morning of the following day, and from that time on, Hitler was
+in principle no longer accessible to Schirach.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This intervention of Schirach for a milder treatment of the
+Jewish question perhaps also contributed to the fact that Hitler,
+a few months later, in the summer of 1943, seriously considered
+having Schirach arrested and brought before the Peoples’ Court,
+for the sole reason that Schirach had dared, in a letter to Reichsleiter
+Bormann, to describe the war as a national disaster for
+Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In any case all this shows that Schirach, as much as he was able,
+advocated moderation in the Jewish question in a manner which
+endangered his own position and existence. In spite of the fact that
+he was an anti-Semite—and just because of this it deserves attention—he
+withstood all pressure from Berlin and refused to have an
+anti-Semitic special edition published in the official journal of the
+Hitler Youth, while he had published his own special editions for
+an understanding with England and France and for a more humane
+treatment of the Eastern nations. It is no less worthy of consideration
+that Schirach, in conjunction with his friend Dr. Colin Ross,
+endeavored to attain the emigration of the Jews into neutral foreign
+countries in order to save them from being deported to a
+Polish ghetto.
+<span class='pageno' title='460' id='Page_460'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has endeavored to substantiate its allegation
+that the Defendant Von Schirach bears a certain share of the responsibility
+for the pogroms against Jews which occurred in Poland and
+Russia, by trying to use against him the so-called “Reports on Experiences
+and Situation,” which were regularly sent by the SS to the
+Commissioner for Defense of the Reich in the Military Administrative
+District XVII. In fact it must be said that if—and I emphasize,
+if—Schirach had at that time had cognizance of these regular “Reports
+on Experiences and Situation by the Operational Groups (Einsatzgruppen)
+of the Security Police and the Security Service in the
+East,” then this fact would indeed constitute for him a grave moral
+and political charge. Then he could not be spared the accusation
+that he must have been aware of the fact that, apart from the military
+operations in the East, extremely horrible mass murders of
+Communists and Jews had also taken place. The picture of Von
+Schirach’s character which we have so far, who was described even
+by the Prosecution as a “cultured man,” would be tainted very
+materially if Von Schirach had actually seen and read these reports.
+For then he would have known that in Latvia and Lithuania, in
+White Ruthenia and in Kiev, mass murders had taken place, quite
+obviously without any legal proceedings of any kind and without
+sentence having been passed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What has, however, actually been proved by the evidence? The
+reports referred to were sent, among dozens of other offices, also to
+that of the “Reich Commissioner for Defense in Military Administrative
+District XVII” and, moreover, with the specific address
+“attention of Government Councillor Dr. Hoffmann” or “attention
+of Government Councillor Dr. Fischer.” From this style of address
+and from the way in which these reports were initialed at the
+office of the “Commissioner for Defense of the Reich,” it can be
+established beyond question that Schirach did not have an opportunity
+of seeing these reports and that he obtained no knowledge
+of them in any other way either.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach, it will be remembered, held three extensive offices in
+Vienna: as Reich Governor (Reichsstatthalter) and Reich Defense
+Commissioner he was the chief of the whole State administration;
+as Lord Mayor he was the head of the municipal administration;
+and as Gauleiter of Vienna he was the head of the local Party
+machinery. It is only natural that Schirach could not fulfill all these
+three tasks by himself, especially since in 1940 he had come from
+a completely different set of tasks, and first had to make himself
+acquainted with the scope of work in State administration and in
+municipal administration. He therefore had a permanent deputy
+for each of his three tasks, and for the affairs of the State administration,
+which interests us here, this was the Regierungspräsident
+<span class='pageno' title='461' id='Page_461'></span>
+of Vienna. This official, Dr. Delbrügge, was to handle the current
+affairs of the State administration completely on his own initiative.
+Schirach occupied himself only with such matters of State administration
+as were forwarded to him by his permanent deputy, the
+Regierungspräsident, in written form, or about which his deputy
+reported to him orally.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, if this had been the case with regard to the afore-mentioned
+“Experience and Situation Reports,” then this would have
+somehow been noted on the documents in question. However, on
+the “Experience and Situation Reports of the SS” submitted here
+there is not a single note which indicates that these reports were
+shown to the Defendant Von Schirach or that he was informed about
+them. This will readily be understood without further explanation
+because, after all, the experiences which the Police and the SD had
+accumulated in the partisan struggles in Poland and Russia were
+completely inconsequential for the Vienna administration; therefore
+there was not the least cause to inform the Defendant Baldur
+von Schirach of these reports in any way, since he was very much
+overburdened anyhow with administrative matters of all kinds.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This conclusion, Gentlemen, rests primarily not only on the
+testimony under oath of the defendant here in Court, but also on
+that of the two witnesses Hoepken and Wieshofer, who, one as chief
+of the Central Office and the other as adjutant of the defendant,
+were able to give the most exact information about conditions in
+Vienna. It is certain that these “Experience and Situation Reports”
+never came into the distribution center of the Central Office in
+Vienna, but only into the distribution center of the Regierungspräsident,
+and that Hoepken, as chief of the Central Office, as well
+as Wieshofer, as adjutant of the defendant, likewise had no previous
+knowledge of these reports but saw them for the first time
+here in the courtroom during their questioning. And I would like
+to insert here that the two officials of the Defendant Von Schirach
+who were mentioned by name, Dr. Fischer and the other one, were
+entirely unaware of them. In any case the result, as has been
+proved by the file notes which are on the documents, is that Schirach
+did not have any knowledge whatsoever of these reports, and that
+he is not coresponsible for the atrocities described therein, and
+therefore cannot be criminally charged on the basis of these activity
+reports.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal, in judging the personality of Schirach,
+his behavior during the last weeks in Vienna is also not without
+importance. For Schirach it was a matter of course not to carry out
+the various insane orders which came from Berlin at that time. He
+absolutely condemned the lynching of enemy aviators which was
+ordered by Bormann, and likewise the order to hang defeatists
+<span class='pageno' title='462' id='Page_462'></span>
+without mercy, regardless of whether they were men or women.
+His summary court was never even in session, and did not pronounce
+a single death sentence. No blood is on his hands. On the
+other hand, for example, he did everything in order to protect from
+the excited mob enemy aviators who had made an emergency landing
+and again, as we have heard from the witness Wieshofer, he
+immediately sent out his own car in order to bring to safety American
+aviators who had parachuted. Thereby he again placed himself
+in deliberate opposition to an order of Bormann that such aviators
+were not to be protected against lynching by the civilian population.
+Nor did he pay any attention to the order that Vienna was to be
+defended to the last man, or that in Vienna bridges and churches
+and residential sections were to be destroyed, and he emphatically
+refused compliance with the order to form partisan units in civilian
+clothing or to continue the hopeless struggle in a criminal manner
+with the aid of the Werewolf organization. He turned down such
+demands out of his sense of duty, all the more since this would
+have caused him to violate international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The characterization of the Defendant Von Schirach would be
+incomplete if we were not also to recall at this moment the declaration
+which he deposed here on the morning of 24 May 1946. I
+am speaking of that declaration in which he described Hitler as an
+unmitigated murderer, here before the whole German people and
+before the entire world public. Already last year Schirach made
+declarations which show his feeling of responsibility and his preparedness
+to answer fully for his actions and those of his subordinates.
+This was the case on 5 June 1945, for example, when he
+was hiding in the Tyrol and heard over the radio that all Party
+leaders were to be brought before an Allied court. Schirach thereupon
+gave himself up immediately, and in his letter to the American
+local commander stated he was doing so in order to protect other
+people, who had only executed his orders, from being called to
+account for his actions. He surrendered voluntarily, although the
+British radio had already announced the news of his death, and
+although Schirach could have hoped to remain undiscovered in his
+hiding place. This behavior deserves consideration in judging the
+personality of a defendant.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same feeling of responsibility was then shown by Schirach
+in the autumn of 1945 when he was heard by the Prosecution. He
+believed at that time that his successor Axmann had been killed,
+as he had been reported to be dead. In spite of this, Schirach did
+not attempt to put the responsibility on his successor; on the contrary,
+he expressly stated that he was assuming full responsibility
+also for the time his successor was in office, as well as for what had
+been done under his successor in the Reich Youth Leadership. The
+<span class='pageno' title='463' id='Page_463'></span>
+keystone in this line of conduct is furnished by the statement which
+Schirach made here on 24 May 1946, which went out from this
+courtroom to the whole world, to all the German lands, down to
+the last farm, down to the last workman’s hut.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal: Any man may err, he may even
+make mistakes that he later may not understand himself. Schirach
+also has erred; he brought up the younger generation for a man
+whom he for many years held to be unimpeachable and whom he
+must now brand as a diabolical criminal. In his idealism and out
+of loyalty he remained faithful and true to his oath to a man who
+deceived and cheated him and the youth of Germany and who, as
+we learned here from Speer, up to his last breath placed his own
+interests higher than the existence and the happiness of 80 million
+people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach is perhaps the one defendant who not only clearly
+realized his mistakes, however they may be regarded, but who
+confessed to them most honestly and who through his plain
+speaking prevented the creation of a Hitler legend in the future.
+Such a defendant must be given consideration for trying to repair
+as far as he can the damage which he caused in good faith.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach had tried to do that; he took pains to open the eyes
+of our people about the “Führer” in whom, together with millions
+of Germans, he saw for many years the deliverer of the fatherland
+and the guarantor of its future. He publicly rendered an account
+which the German people are entitled to ask of every subleader
+since Hitler committed suicide. He did this so that foreign countries
+could see how the conditions of the last six years had come about
+in Germany and just who was responsible for them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>But above all, the former Youth Leader, in making his statement
+on 24 May 1946, desired to tell the youth of Germany openly that
+so far, quite unknowingly and with the best of intentions, he had
+led them astray and that now they must take another path if the
+German people and German culture are not to perish. In doing so
+Schirach did not think of himself nor of his life’s work which had
+been destroyed; he was thinking of the youth of today, which not
+only faces the ruins of our cities and dwellings, but also wanders
+about among the wreckage of its former ideals; he was thinking of
+German youth, which is in dire need of new guidance and which
+must base its future existence on another foundation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Schirach hopes that the entire youth of Germany has heard his
+words. What was particularly valuable in his confession of 24 May
+1946 was his assurance that he alone takes the guilt for youth, just
+as he formerly assumed command. If this point of view is acknowledged
+as being right, and if the necessary conclusions are drawn
+<span class='pageno' title='464' id='Page_464'></span>
+therefrom, this would be a valuable result of this Trial for our
+German youth.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal, I am now coming to the end of my
+survey of the case of Von Schirach. In the treatment of this case
+I desisted from making general statements, and especially those of
+a political nature. Rather, I confined myself to the appreciation of
+the personality of the defendant, his actions and his motives.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection I should like to add, to complete the picture,
+that these considerations and this appreciation by the Defense have
+shown that the Defendant Von Schirach is not guilty in the sense
+of the Indictment and cannot be punished, for he did not commit
+a punishable act, since you as judges will not judge political guilt
+but rather criminal guilt in the sense of the penal code.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At the end of my remarks in the case of Von Schirach I should
+like to have the privilege of making a few general statements, not
+immediately connected with the personality of Schirach, but suggesting
+themselves to a German defense counsel at the end of
+this Trial.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal, you are the highest tribunal of
+our times; the power of the whole world stands behind you; you
+represent the four mightiest nations on earth; hundreds of millions
+of men, not only in the defeated countries, but also in the victorious
+nations listen to your opinions and anxiously await your judgment,
+ready to be taught by you and to follow your advice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This high authority affords you, Gentlemen, an opportunity of
+doing much good through your verdict and particularly through
+the statement of the basis for the judgment, in order that out of
+today’s disaster the way to a better future may be found for the
+benefit of your own people and for the good of the German people.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Today, Gentlemen of the Tribunal, Germany lies beaten to the
+ground, a poor people, the poorest of all. The German cities are
+destroyed; German industry is smashed to pieces; on the shoulders
+of the German people rests a national debt representing many
+times the entire national wealth and spelling want and poverty,
+hunger and slavery, for many generations for the German people
+if your peoples do not help us. The findings supporting your verdict
+will in many respects point the way and give the help needed to
+emerge from this desperate plight.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To be sure, for reasons of sentiment it may be hard for you
+to consider this point of view and to take it into account when
+you think of the misfortune which the past six years also brought
+to your own countries. It becomes doubly hard, because for
+months this Trial has revealed nothing but crimes, crimes committed
+for a great number of years by a German tyrant misusing
+<span class='pageno' title='465' id='Page_465'></span>
+Germans and the name of this same German people of whose
+future you as judges are now asked to think benevolently and
+whom you are now required to help.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>May it please the Tribunal: Hitler is dead—with him his tools
+who in these years committed crimes without number tyrannizing
+Germany and nearly all of Europe and disgracing the German
+name for generations to come. The German people on the other
+hand live, and must be allowed to live if half a universe is not
+to fall into ruins.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With this Trial and during this epoch, the German people are
+undergoing a very serious operation. It must not bring death;
+it must bring recovery. Your verdict can and must make a contribution
+in that direction, so that in the future the world may
+not see in every German a criminal, but revert again to the concept
+of Professor Arnold Nash of the University of Chicago, who
+a few days ago, when questioned about the purpose of his present
+trip to Europe, replied: “Every scientist has two fatherlands, his
+own and Germany.” These words ought to be a warning also for
+all of those irresponsible critics who even today see it as their
+task, with propaganda means of every sort, to stir up feeling
+against everything German and to tell the world that at least
+every other person in Germany is a criminal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>You, as impartial judges, will not wish to forget one thing:
+There always was and there still is today another Germany, a
+Germany that knows industriousness and economy; a Germany of
+Goethe and Beethoven, a Germany that knows loyalty and honesty
+and other good qualities which in past centuries were proverbial
+for the German character. Believe me, Gentlemen of the Tribunal,
+in this epoch, when Germany is regaining consciousness as after
+a severe illness, as she proceeds to rebuild a better future from
+the ruins of an evil past, a future for her youth which has no
+part in the crimes committed, at this time some 70 or 80 million
+German people are looking to you and are awaiting from you a
+verdict which will open the way for the reconstruction of German
+economy, the German spirit, and true freedom.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>You are, Gentlemen, truly sovereign judges, not bound by any
+written law, not bound to any paragraph, pledged to serve your
+conscience only, and called by destiny to give to the world simultaneously
+a legal order which will preserve for future generations
+that peace which the past was unable to preserve for them. A well-known
+democrat of the old Germany, the former Minister Dr. Diltz,
+said in a recent article on the Nuremberg Trial: In a monarchist
+state justice would be administered in the name of the king; in
+republics courts would pronounce their rulings in the name of
+<span class='pageno' title='466' id='Page_466'></span>
+the people; but you, the Nuremberg Tribunal, should administer
+justice in the name of humanity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is, indeed, a wonderful thought for the Court, an ideal aim,
+if it could believe that its verdict could in fact make real the
+precepts of humanity, and that it could prevent Crimes against
+Humanity for all time. But in certain respects this would still
+remain an unsteady foundation for a verdict of such magnitude
+as confronts you, because ideas on what humanity demands or prohibits
+in individual cases may vary, depending upon the epoch,
+the people, the party concepts according to which one judges.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I believe you may find a reliable foundation for your verdict
+when you revert to a maxim which has endured throughout the
+centuries and which certainly will remain valid in ages to come:
+<span class='it'>Justitia est fundamentum regnorum</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus the German people, and with them the entire world, await
+from you a judgment which will not just be hailed today by the
+victor nations as the final victory over Germany, but which history
+will recognize as proper; a verdict in the name of justice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Servatius for the Defendant
+Sauckel.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: Mr. President, may it please the Tribunal:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defense of the Defendant Sauckel has, in the first place,
+to deal with the charge of “slave labor.” What is slave labor?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One cannot accept this as an established term comprising all
+the occurrences which, in bewildering abundance, are charged
+against the Defendant Sauckel under the heading “slave labor.”
+Particularly, those actions ought first to be examined from a legal
+point of view. The legal basis for this examination is the Charter.
+However, this Charter does not say what is to be understood by
+“slave labor” or by “deportation.” Therefore, these concepts must
+be clarified by interpretation. Article 6 of the Charter deals in
+two passages and from two different points of view with deportation
+and slave labor. Deportation is designated both a war crime
+and a crime against humanity, and forced labor appears as “slave
+labor” under the heading of War Crimes, and as “enslavement”
+under the heading of Crimes against Humanity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The question of under what heading the mobilization of labor
+by the Defendant Sauckel should fall is of decisive importance;
+if it is a war crime, then it should be judged exclusively under
+martial law. If it is a crime against humanity, then the latter
+presupposes the commission of a war crime or of a crime against
+peace.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It follows therefrom that the deportation mentioned in Article
+6(b) cannot be the same thing as deportation according to
+<span class='pageno' title='467' id='Page_467'></span>
+Article 6(c), nor can forced labor according to Article 6(b) be
+identical with forced labor under Article 6(c). The difference
+between the two kinds must be found in ...</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT [<span class='it'>Interposing</span>]: That paragraph of your speech
+which is in English on Page 2, the second paragraph:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>“It follows therefrom that deportation mentioned in Article 6(b)
+cannot be the same as deportation according to Article 6(c) ...”
+is not altogether clear to the Tribunal. Could you make it clearer?</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: In Article 6(c) we deal with Crimes against
+Humanity, whereas in Article 6(b) we deal with War Crimes. In
+both articles the expressions deportation and forced labor are used,
+but there must be some differentiation, and my examination is
+directed at establishing this difference more exactly. I believe,
+Mr. President, that my further statements will make this clearer
+than it has heretofore been.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I turn now to the terminology used in the Charter. I was
+talking of the difference between the two kinds of slave labor
+and deportation. The difference between the two kinds is to be
+found in the fact that something has to be added to the war
+crimes which violates the rules of humanity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The correctness of this interpretation may also be recognized
+in the terminology of the Charter, however fluctuating it may be.
+For instance, the Russian text for deportation as a war crime
+chooses the word <span class='it'>uvod</span>, which means only removal from a place,
+whereas, on the other hand, it uses for crimes against humanity
+of the same nature the technical expression <span class='it'>ssylka</span>, by which penal
+deportation under the rule of the czars is understood as denoting
+deportation in the sense of penal deportation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: The French is not coming through. Will you
+just wait a minute, there is some difficulty with the French translation,
+Dr. Servatius. The Tribunal must adjourn.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>MARSHAL: The Court will remain adjourned until a quarter
+to two.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal recessed until 1345 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<h2><span class='pageno' title='468' id='Page_468'></span><span class='it'>Afternoon Session</span></h2>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: I was speaking of the terminology of “deportation”
+in the Russian text. I pointed out the distinction between the
+word <span class='it'>uvod</span> meaning only transportation, and <span class='it'>ssylka</span> meaning a
+deportation as a form of punishment. From that one may conclude
+that deportation from the occupied territories for the purpose of
+work can only be regarded as a war crime, while it becomes a crime
+against humanity when assuming the penal character of a transportation
+of prisoners.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>However, the question arises whether, beyond this, according to
+the Charter any removal of the population is punishable as a war
+crime, regardless of whether it occurs for allocation of labor or for
+other reasons. According to the text of the Charter, the latter seems
+at first sight to be the case, since it renders punishable “removal for
+slave labor, or for any other purposes.” Upon closer examination,
+however, it becomes evident that this rule cannot be meant in such
+a sense, as there are cases in which a removal is not only consistent
+with international law but even becomes imperative.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Accordingly, the Charter could only be understood to mean that
+the punishable act does not consist of plain “removal” but comprises
+the composite concept “removal for slave labor” and “removal for
+any other purpose.” The clause, “or for any other purpose,” should
+be understood so as to mean only that an illegal purpose equivalent
+to slave labor exists. If removal of any kind was to have been made
+punishable, then the qualifying addition “for slave labor or for any
+other purpose” would be contradictory to common sense. This
+definition is important for the Defendant Sauckel, as otherwise proof
+of deportation classified as a war crime would be evident from the
+acts admitted by him.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Just as for the various kinds of deportation, the difference
+between the kinds of slave labor, according to the Charter, must be
+clarified. Here, too, a clue to the interpretation is provided by the
+terminology of the different languages, though not because of their
+clarity and consistency but by the very opposite:</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The English version speaks of “slave labor” as a war crime and
+of “enslavement” as a crime against humanity; the French version
+states <span class='it'>travaux forcés</span> and <span class='it'>réduction en esclavage</span>, the Russian
+version accordingly <span class='it'>rabstvo</span> (slavery) and <span class='it'>poraboshtshenie</span> (enslavement).
+It is not discernible how the terms chosen differentiate
+<span class='it'>in re</span>. Basing upon the fact that labor inconsistent with laws of
+humanity must be carried out under more severe conditions than
+other labor and assuming “slave labor” to be the severest forms
+of labor, it will be seen that no definition can be derived from this
+<span class='pageno' title='469' id='Page_469'></span>
+terminology of the Charter and that more of an ethical discrimination
+and stigmatization is intended.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Accordingly an objective division of the kinds of labor should
+be carried out independent of the terminology by considering
+exclusively the degree of severity of labor conditions. If one tries
+to analyze the terminology used, one finds the designation “enslavement,”
+<span class='it'>esclavage</span>, and <span class='it'>poraboshtshenie</span> for the inhuman form of
+labor, whereas the labor not inconsistent with laws of humanity is
+called “forced labor,” <span class='it'>travaux forcés</span>, and <span class='it'>prinudidjenaja rabota</span>.
+Slave labor (“slave labor,” <span class='it'>travaux forcés</span>, and <span class='it'>rabstvo</span>) consequently
+is the general term comprising both kinds.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What does this definition mean for the defense of the Defendant
+Sauckel? He admits having negotiated “compulsory labor” in the
+form of obligatory labor which, as stated before, has been termed
+“slave labor” in general. He denies, however, having demanded
+“slave labor,” which might be looked upon as inhuman labor, in
+other words, enslavement. A different standard applies, just as for
+deportation, to these two categories; “obligatory labor” is only a war
+crime and must be judged according to the rules of war; crimes
+against humanity, as I already stated above in connection with
+deportation as a crime against humanity, bear the additional
+characteristics of being connected with war crimes or crimes
+against peace. If it can be proven that the mobilization of manpower
+as ordered by the Defendant Sauckel was permitted by the rules of
+war, then the same act cannot be held to be a crime against
+humanity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Indictment, too, has made a difference as to the kinds of
+labor. It has treated, under Paragraph 3, Section VIII (H), as a
+separate war crime under the title of “Conscription of Civilian
+Labor,” the mobilization of manpower as directed by the Defendant
+Sauckel, which I shall call “regulated labor mobilization,” and
+mentions only “forced labor.” The French version speaks here of
+<span class='it'>travaux forcés</span> and uses terms such as <span class='it'>les obligèrent à travailler</span> and
+<span class='it'>mis en obligation</span>; the Russian version follows this and also speaks
+only of “compulsory labor” as <span class='it'>prinuditjelnaja rabota</span> but does not
+refer to this as being slave labor.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel does not deny the facts taken here as a
+basis, but I shall submit the legal reasons which justify this
+mobilization of labor, and I shall prove that it does not involve any
+war crime that would break international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The rules of international law are authoritative in determining
+the question whether “regulated labor mobilization” is a war crime.
+The Charter cannot prohibit what international law permits in
+wartime. Such precepts of international law are laid down in the
+agreements on the rules of war and in the general legal principles
+and usages as applied by all states.
+<span class='pageno' title='470' id='Page_470'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution bases its opinion that labor mobilization is a
+war crime on the definitions of the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare, as well as on the agreements and rules of war and the
+criminal codes of the countries concerned. If it is shown that labor
+mobilization is permitted by international law, then a judicial
+inquiry into the penal regulations is, of course, not necessary.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Hague Convention on Land Warfare can be considered as a
+basis for the laws of warfare with which we are concerned here.
+Whether it was recognized by all the states involved here is, from
+a practical point of view, of little importance, for inasmuch as it was
+not recognized or cannot be directly applied, it is a case of a shortcoming
+in international law which is filled as a matter of course
+according to the principles of the belligerent’s needs and his duty
+to respect the laws of humanity. The principles of international law
+as established in the Hague Convention on Land Warfare are in all
+cases an important guide.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution quotes, in the first place, Article 46 of the Hague
+Convention on Land Warfare, which is designed to safeguard the
+fundamental rights of the population. It is typical for labor
+mobilization that it does restrict liberty, whereas this particular
+basic right is not protected by this article.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the Hague Convention on Land Warfare is examined for a
+definite rule concerning deportation and forced labor, it will be
+realized that no such regulation exists. Just as in the sphere of air
+warfare and the use of new weapons, the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare could not deal with questions which, at the time of its
+drafting, were far from the mind of the contracting parties. The
+first World War was still fought between two armies with already
+prepared material, and after it was used up the fight would be
+ended. The idea of a long war consuming huge amounts of material
+and requiring a continuous production with all available labor was
+for the Hague Convention on Land Warfare not yet a problem ripe
+for discussion.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Article 52 of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare, which
+deals with the right to requisition, touches on the matter; but it can
+be seen that the rules deal only with purely local requirements of
+an army which appears fully equipped and has only supplementary
+local requirements. It is characteristic for the purely local meaning
+that the requisitioning authority is entrusted to the local commanders,
+in contrast to Article 51 of the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare which permits only an independent commanding general
+to impose compulsory contributions. The literature about the right
+to requisition in international law accordingly quotes only examples
+of local significance.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Although Article 52 of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare
+can accordingly not be directly applied, its basic principles are
+<span class='pageno' title='471' id='Page_471'></span>
+nevertheless binding on the belligerents. The basic idea is that an
+army can demand practically everything necessary for the satisfaction
+of its requirements. There are only two limitations: It may
+not take more than it needs and not more than is compatible with
+the resources of the country.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The idea of a local obligation to furnish services will have to be
+adapted to modern warfare. The Hague Convention on Land Warfare
+envisaged the employment of smiths and wheelwrights necessary
+for the maintenance of the equipment of the army; work within
+the home country of the occupying power was, in view of undeveloped
+transportation conditions, impracticable and remained
+unconsidered.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Today the necessary work will no longer be done in the vicinity
+of the front-lines but must be carried out in the belligerents’ own
+countries, so that it must be possible to demand that labor should
+be available at the only place where it can be done and where it is
+necessary. It must also be possible to demand such labor for modern
+war requirements of mass production for current replacements.
+What is necessary at any given time can be asked for, the amount
+depending on prevailing conditions. If in earlier times, according to
+the principle “the war feeds the war,” an army far removed from
+its homeland was even to a large extent equipped in occupied territory,
+it must surely be possible today to supply the army by moving
+the workers to the factories in the belligerent’s own country. The
+evolution of the laws of warfare is influenced by the requirements
+which these laws have to serve.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With the basic idea of the obligation to furnish services the basic
+idea on limitations will have to be accepted, too. These limitations
+must also be interpreted to apply to the changed conditions. While
+the obligation to furnish services is justified, no more work may be
+demanded than the occupying power requires of its own people at
+home. The intensity of the war as total war must be taken into
+consideration. The obligation to work may thereby assume considerable
+proportions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The meaning and the purpose of the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare is certainly not to place the nationals of a defeated state in
+a better position than those of the victorious state which occupied
+the country. This, however, would be the result if the Hague Convention
+on Land Warfare were interpreted according to its original
+wording. If this is maintained, then France, which had surrendered
+unconditionally together with all the other occupied countries, would
+have been able to look on in security while Germany, strangled by
+the blockade, was exhausting herself in an indefatigable struggle
+by sacrifices of life and property. Can one really demand that the
+prisoner in a besieged fortress should live more comfortably than
+<span class='pageno' title='472' id='Page_472'></span>
+the defender of the fortress? If Germany today could live according
+to the romantic concepts of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare,
+this would certainly be preferable to the burden of the peace treaty
+to be expected.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Actually, the Hague Convention on Land Warfare has not been
+adhered to even in its original interpretation, if it is true that
+already before the conclusion of the armistice the Soviet Union as
+occupying power transferred the population on a large scale from
+the eastern parts of Germany for the purpose of performing labor
+outside Germany. The Tribunal could obtain official information
+about this through an inquiry with the Control Council. I also have
+information that German civilian internees are used for work in
+France today. Here too the Tribunal could obtain official information.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The second limitation of the obligation to work is embodied in
+the rule that no participation in war operations against the home
+country of the worker may be demanded. Any work done for the
+occupying power indirectly benefits its war effort; the prohibition
+is therefore restricted to direct participation in operations of the
+fighting force. The literature on international law contrasts the
+participation in military operations with the permissible participation
+in preparations. Participation in war operations in this sense
+was not asked of any worker; on the contrary, the purpose was to
+employ workers away from these operations and without disturbance
+by the war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Consequently only such activity as is directed against the
+workers’ own country is forbidden, thus taking the feelings of the
+individual into consideration. No protection of the enemy state is
+thereby intended. Wherever, therefore, the individual renounces his
+country and in a struggle of ideologies opposes the government of
+his country, such a restriction no longer applies. In connection with
+this I wish to point to the vast number of foreigners who adopted
+such an attitude and who, in part, still live in Germany today.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The same applies when the state to which the worker belongs has
+ceased fighting. This question is of special importance with regard
+to the obligation to work in the armament industry. The rules of
+the Geneva Convention with regard to the work to be done by
+prisoners of war are known. The basic notion, that no one may be
+forced to make weapons against his own brothers, must apply to
+civilian workers also.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The fact, however, that one’s country is no longer in a legal state
+of war is one of the reasons that nullify this restriction. The need
+for protection also ceases to exist when a country, though legally
+still participating in war, to all intents and purposes no longer
+possesses any fighting forces and has thus ceased to exist as a
+<span class='pageno' title='473' id='Page_473'></span>
+military object of attack. The fact, that this country may have allies
+who fight for it cannot arbitrarily extend this limitation beyond the
+terms of the Geneva Convention; nor is it the duty of a subject of a
+given state to protect allies fighting for it and to participate in the
+policies of his government.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Puppet governments cannot change reality. Recognition cannot
+be granted to them unless they reappear as independent combatants
+under a command of their own and are recognized as such. This
+applies to all states defeated by Germany.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>At the time of the mobilization of labor only Britain, the United
+States, and the Soviet Union were active combatants against Germany.
+British and American subjects were not affected by this
+mobilization, although citizens of the Soviet Union were in part
+used in armament production.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The legal position of citizens of the Soviet Union is however
+fundamentally different. Under Document Number EC-338, USSR-356,
+the Prosecution has submitted a decree by the People’s Commissars
+dated 1 July 1941. This decree deals with the utilization of
+prisoners of war for labor purposes; but it also, however, refers to
+the employment of interned civilians. According to the wording,
+armament production is not forbidden for either category of
+workers; and only two limitations are specified in the decree,
+namely, work in the combat zone and services required of an orderly.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus, from the point of view of reciprocity, no objection can be
+raised against the employment of Soviet citizens in armament production.
+In his examination before the Tribunal the witness General
+Paulus stated that prisoners of war were employed in factories of
+the Soviet Union, which means that in a state with a directed
+economy they were employed during the war in the armament
+industry. According to the decree it must be assumed then that
+these workers were also employed in the production of weapons.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The significance of such a violation of the principle that armament
+production shall be forbidden lies in the serious consequence
+that no formation of a generally recognized rule of international law
+in this new field of utilization of manpower can thereby be proven.
+Under these circumstances therefore Germany was likewise free to
+employ workers of the Soviet Union and workers of all other states
+in armament production.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Hague Convention on Land Warfare thus does not forbid the
+regulated utilization of manpower, but there are also further international
+aspects permitting such a utilization of manpower. The
+assent of the government of the occupied state is of primary consideration.
+This assent was given by France. The objection that
+Marshal Pétain’s Government was not a constitutional government
+is invalid, for it was the legitimate successor to the provisional
+<span class='pageno' title='474' id='Page_474'></span>
+armistice Government. That it represented the French State with
+foreign governments is of decisive consideration in international
+relations. This authority of representation was confirmed by the
+United States by its keeping an ambassador in Vichy even after its
+own entry into the war. Great Britain also negotiated the terms of
+an armistice with a general of the Vichy Government in Syria
+in 1941.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This Government once recognized could not be deprived of its
+legality by the simple declaration of an oppositional government,
+even though the latter might have been recognized by the Allies.
+A government loses its international position only if it is forced to
+transfer its actual power to the oppositional government. Up to that
+moment it retains authority within its sphere of influence.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The other objection that the Government of Marshal Pétain was
+not free to act as it wished and that consequently agreements with
+Germany in the field of utilization of manpower were reached by
+coercive measures and are therefore invalid, is not justified from
+the point of view of international law. Armistice and peace treaties
+are always concluded under great pressure. That this does not
+curtail the validity of such treaties is an obvious point of international
+law. This has constantly been emphasized when refusing
+German demands for a revision of the Treaty of Versailles.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Agreements which are reached in periods between the armistice
+and the peace treaty are subject to the same conditions. This also
+applies to the agreement with France with respect to the utilization
+of manpower. Thus, if—contrary to the statement of the Defendant
+Sauckel—negotiations about the utilization of manpower were conducted
+in the form of an ultimatum, there could from the point of
+view of international law still be no reason for an objection.
+Besides, Sauckel’s influence surely cannot have been so great that
+he could have exerted an excessive amount of pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The validity of such agreements is open to doubt only under
+very special conditions, such as would mean that excessive obligations
+were to be assumed which obviously violate principles of
+humanity; for instance, if the agreements contain a clause stating
+that work must be performed under slave-like conditions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The motive for these agreements was, however, to offer,
+especially to the French workers, favorable working conditions
+and salaries for their obligatory labor in Germany, thus to attract
+the workers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Military reasons too can command the evacuation of an occupied
+territory by part of the population and thereby cause a
+displacement of manpower. This may happen when the population
+participates in partisan warfare or is active in resistance groups
+and thus endangers security instead of behaving obediently and
+<span class='pageno' title='475' id='Page_475'></span>
+peacefully. It even suffices for the population in the so-called
+partisan territories to be drawn upon even against its will for
+the support of the partisans. That such conditions were organized
+by Germany’s enemies as combat measures in an increasing degree,
+first in the East and later in the West, is today looked upon as a
+patriotic achievement. In view of this one must not forget that
+the resulting displacement of workers was precisely the consequence
+of their activities and that such action was permitted by
+international law. Evacuation had to be carried out in the interest
+of security, and assignment of labor elsewhere was necessary if
+only to maintain order. It is the privilege of the occupying power
+to utilize this labor within a regulated state economy in the manner
+deemed most appropriate under the prevailing conditions. Similar
+measures might also be imposed in areas of retreat after it had
+been ascertained that the male population illegally took part in
+hostilities during the retreat, as it had been called upon to do by
+the enemy, sometimes even being supplied with weapons.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Evacuation measures for the security of combat troops are
+equally permissible under international law. To engage persons
+evacuated from the combat zone in new work is not only legal but
+is actually the duty of the occupation administration. The state
+which calls upon its subjects to fight and thereby intensifies combat,
+bears the guilt for such evacuation. The necessary retaliatory
+measures therefore must be legal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Whenever such evacuations become necessary, they must be
+carried out without undue suffering for the population. For this
+preparatory measures, which alone can avoid unnecessary hardships,
+are necessary. That is the duty of administration as laid
+down in Article 43 of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare.
+Thereto appertain the proposals made by Sauckel for the evacuation
+of territories of retreat in France in the event of invasion
+(Document 1289-PS). These proposals did not materialize and cannot
+therefore incriminate the Defendant Sauckel.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This administrative duty may also call for a displacement of
+labor in order to avoid unemployment and famine. This, for
+example, occurred when the industrial areas of the Soviet Union
+were occupied, where there were no more working possibilities after
+the population became unemployed following the scorched earth
+policy adopted by the Soviet Union, and supplies failed to arrive
+because of transport difficulties.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These military and administrative points of view of international
+law can invalidate a number of reproaches; but they do
+not answer the basic question, namely, whether the enlistment of
+workers is also permitted outside the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare for the very purpose of intensified labor to enable the
+<span class='pageno' title='476' id='Page_476'></span>
+state to carry on the war through increase of production and to
+allow it to release its own workers for service at the front.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A purely military emergency would provide no excuse for disregarding
+international law. Victory jeopardized must not be
+sought by breaking the law when in distress, because the laws of
+warfare are intended to govern that very combat, which is of
+necessity connected with distress. International law inclines differently
+where it is a case of a measure to be taken to safeguard
+the existence of the state. That is a law of self-preservation which
+every state is entitled to because higher institutions are lacking
+which could protect it from destruction.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It has repeatedly been stressed by all concerned that in this
+war our existence was at stake. This became evident for Germany
+after the fatal battles on the Eastern Front in the winter 1941-42.
+Whereas up to that time no wholesale employment of foreign labor
+had been necessary, new equipment now had to be produced immediately.
+The German labor reserves, were depleted due to the
+drafting of 2 million workers for service at the front. The employment
+of unskilled women and young people could not immediately
+relieve the situation. During the later stages of the war, especially
+through aerial warfare, armament demands increased to such an
+extent that, in spite of the increased employment of women and
+young people, the level could no longer be maintained. The means
+were exhausted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The official figures which the Defendant Sauckel made public
+in his speech in Posen in February 1943 (see Document 1739-PS)
+proved that already in 1939, at the beginning of the second World
+War, more than twice as many women were being employed than
+at the end of the first World War and that their number at the
+end of the second World War had increased by another 2 million
+to a total of over 10 million. This figure exceeds the entire number
+of male and female workers in the armament industry at the end
+of the first World War. Yet in spite of that there was a shortage
+of labor. This has been confirmed by the witness Rohland for
+Codefendant Speer in Document Speer-56, according to which
+Speer also declared that foreign labor was needed under all
+circumstances.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The crux of the matter did not concern the problem of female
+labor, where by introducing additional home labor the limit was
+attained, but that of procuring specialists and men for heavy labor.
+Among the 10 million German women who were at work, there
+were also the wives of front-line officers and others from similar
+classes of society.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The notion that in Britain the women were conscripted for work
+in a higher degree than in Germany is wrong. In Germany the
+<span class='pageno' title='477' id='Page_477'></span>
+women had to work up to 45 and later 50 years of age, and they
+actually worked in factories and did not have fake jobs of a social
+kind. Even schoolchildren beginning with the age of 10 were
+required to work, and from 16 years onward they were switched
+to regular labor or occupied in other services. Families were disrupted;
+schools and universities were closed; pupils and students
+worked in the armament industry, and even the wounded could
+not continue their studies. A grim fight was waged over every
+person capable of work. Speer’s reserve of workers did not exist.
+What efforts were made in this sector is shown among others by
+Enclosure 2 of the Wartburg Document RF-810.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another point of view illustrating the necessity of employing
+additional labor is the fact that the powers in possession of colonies
+brought labor from their colonies; France (see Document RF-22,
+Page 17), for instance, took in about 50,000 workers from North
+Africa and Indo-China, which were under the command and supervision
+of officers and noncommissioned officers. Since Germany,
+having been refused colonies and on account of the blockade, was
+unable to draw upon such reserves, she was entitled to some means,
+in her fight for existence, of procuring labor where it could be
+found inactive in occupied territories.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This is in outline the basis, with regard to international law,
+for judging the regulated mobilization of labor as a war crime.
+One may, with regard to certain points, differ in opinion; and it
+will generally be found that in international law a uniform interpretation
+will not be readily arrived at. The interests of individual
+members in the community of international law play an important
+part and are not always identical; legal principles are often not
+recognized because some state does not wish to place itself officially
+in contradiction with its former actions, or because it prefers
+to remain unbound for the future.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As counsel for the Defense, I am in a position to present my
+interpretation of law without such inhibitions. The significance of
+my statement for the Defense, apart from the objective side, lies
+in the fact that the Defendant Sauckel, subjectively, was for good
+reasons entitled to believe in the lawfulness of a regulated mobilization
+of labor and that to him his actions were not discernible
+as being in contradiction with international law. This was supported
+by the impression which the Defendant Sauckel could not
+but gain of the permissibility of a regulated mobilization of labor,
+as shown by the attitude of other superior offices. When Sauckel
+entered upon his office, foreign workers had already been enlisted
+by individual action; and he could take it for granted that the
+State would equally proceed in a legal manner. None of the highest
+offices has ever raised legal objections before Sauckel. These offices,
+<span class='pageno' title='478' id='Page_478'></span>
+both the competent Foreign Office and the highest civil and military
+offices in the occupied territories, accepted his orders as a matter
+of course; and no questions of doubt on international law were
+raised.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the opinion of the Defendant Sauckel the attitude of the
+foreign agencies concerned was necessarily of special importance,
+notably the consent of the French and the Belgians, who came to
+Berlin personally for discussions. From this resulted the good
+co-operation with the local authorities in the occupied territories,
+as was the case before enemy propaganda intervened.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Whether cognizance of breaking a law is indispensable when
+committing a crime against international law may be a moot point;
+but to establish guilt leading to a conviction, cognizance of the
+realization of all the criminal facts is essential. This includes
+cognizance of the fact that the action performed was contrary to
+international law. The subjective aspect of the facts, involving
+criminal guilt of the Defendant Sauckel, cannot be proved in
+respect to application of the regulated mobilization of labor. It
+would be impossible to commit the Defendant Sauckel for yet
+another legal reason, even if the regulated mobilization of manpower
+really were a violation of international law. According to
+the Hague Convention on Land Warfare, no individual responsibility
+exists. The Hague Convention on Land Warfare differentiates
+between two kinds of war crimes; those which can be committed
+by an individual, such as murder and ill-treatment, and those which
+can be committed only by parties in a war. The regulated utilization
+of manpower is a proceeding which can only be initiated by
+the state. While the individual action is punished according to the
+penal code of the different states, a special regulation was laid
+down for offenses committed by parties in a war in Article 3 of
+the introductory agreement to the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare. This specifies only a liability for damages on the part of
+the state. This passage of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare
+still applies today, since it cannot be rescinded by agreement among
+the Allies alone. The Charter, which specifies the immediate
+criminal responsibility of the state organs or its executors, is void
+insofar as it is contradictory to the Hague Convention on Land
+Warfare.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I do not have to refer to the fact that Germany, as one of the
+parties to the agreement, would have had to agree to the suspension
+of Article 3; there are other reasons which speak for a continuation
+of this stipulation. A modification of the Hague Convention on
+Land Warfare in the sense of the Charter might have resulted from
+the law of usage or general custom due to changing legal conceptions.
+The presupposition for this assumption would be, however,
+<span class='pageno' title='479' id='Page_479'></span>
+that the contracting powers relinquish their sovereignty, since only
+then would the punishment of the state organs be possible.
+However, such a renunciation of the rights of sovereignty has not,
+as far as I am aware, taken place to such an extent as would
+generally render such punishment permissible. With regard to this
+point, I refer to the general statements made by Professor Jahrreiss
+before the Tribunal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I shall now deal with the utilization of manpower as a crime
+against humanity. If a regulated utilization of manpower appears
+permissible according to international law, there remains the problem
+of the method of its execution, namely, the question of up
+to what point this utilization of manpower can still be regarded
+as in order and when it will exceed the permissible limit.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Charter fails to define the concept of humanity. As far as
+international law is concerned, the term can only be transposed
+from the practice of the nations. In endeavoring to establish the
+limit for actions permissible under international law, we must, for
+the sake of comparison, mention the bombing of large cities and the
+use of the atomic bomb, as well as deportations and evacuations
+as still in progress today. These are all incidents which have
+occurred before the eyes of the world and were regarded as permissible
+by the executing countries.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Once again we are confronted with the conception of necessity
+and find that it is being interpreted in a very flexible manner. This
+should be kept in mind when examining the mobilization of labor
+as to any violation of the principle of humanity involved. Its aim
+is not the sudden killing of hundreds of thousands; however, it
+naturally entails hardships and is certainly also subject to mistakes
+which arise unintentionally or are due to the shortcoming of
+individuals. An answer will be required to the question of whether
+deliberate killing does not always weigh heavier than the
+temporary infliction of other sufferings. Also, the Charter does
+not prescribe punishment for every violation of the principles of
+humanity but only when inhuman treatment occurred in the
+execution of, or in connection with, a crime for which the Tribunal
+is competent. However, the Tribunal is competent only for Crimes
+against Peace and for War Crimes. As for Crimes against Peace,
+inhuman treatment may be admissible in self-defense, while it is
+punishable when committed by an aggressor; or alternatively, it
+must be a case of a war crime.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This does not apply when compatriots are ill-treated, for they
+are not protected by the laws of warfare. Prosecution for an act
+against humanity committed toward them can only take place if
+a crime against peace is involved at the same time.
+<span class='pageno' title='480' id='Page_480'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>From an objective point of view labor commitment furthered the
+waging of the war which has been designated by the Prosecution
+as a war of aggression or as a war violating treaties. If this is
+established and if it is proved moreover that the mobilization of
+labor was carried out in an inhuman way, then the requirements
+of the Charter will have been met and a crime against humanity
+committed, regardless of whether the mobilization of labor was
+allowed or not allowed by the rules of war, since it was committed
+in connection with a crime against peace. But punishment can be
+inflicted only if the culprit himself knows that an unlawful war is
+being waged and that he is furthering it by his action. Since the
+Defendant Sauckel denies any such knowledge, it must be proved.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The other possibility of meeting the factual requirement occurs
+when the inhuman act serves to carry out a war crime or is connected
+with it. Of the examples given by the Charter for violation
+of the rules of war, the following in the main can be taken to
+apply to the mobilization of labor: murder, ill-treatment, and
+deportation of the civilian population. As shown by this enumeration,
+these war crimes are not, however serious they may be, in
+themselves crimes against humanity. Some aggravating circumstance
+making the act inhuman must be added. As shown by the
+examples of inhuman “extermination” and “enslavement,” the acts
+in question must be objectively of particular scope or cruelty.
+Subjectively, however, an inhuman disposition of the culprit and
+the knowledge of the inhuman character of the act, that is to say,
+knowledge of the scope of the measure or of the cruelty of its
+execution, is additionally required. How far these conditions apply
+to the Defendant Sauckel must be investigated later on. A “regulated
+mobilization of labor,” as allowed by international law can
+never in itself be a crime against humanity; but its execution may
+be carried out in such a way that it involves killings and ill-treatment,
+which for their part might be war crimes.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Such ill-treatment could result from regulations issued by the
+highest authority involved, who thereby would bear the responsibility.
+It may, however, also be committed by subordinate
+agencies acting on their own authority without the knowledge or
+intention of their superior authorities. In that case the head of the
+agency acting on its own accord bears the responsibility. Lastly,
+it may be a case of a purely individual act committed against the
+regulations in force. For such an act the individual is solely
+responsible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It follows that the Defendant Sauckel is responsible, to begin
+with, only for such general orders and instructions which he has
+given, not however for independent acts by superior authorities
+in the occupied territories or by supreme Reich authorities, such as
+<span class='pageno' title='481' id='Page_481'></span>
+the Chief of SS and Police, which were not under his jurisdiction.
+The orders and directives of the Defendant Sauckel have been submitted,
+and they must show whether the mobilization of labor as
+ordered by him was in fact a regulated one or was tantamount
+to an “ill-treatment” of the population. Apart from the call for
+volunteers, mobilization of labor took place on the basis of a compulsory
+service decree, signed as a legal measure in accordance
+with Hitler’s instructions by the territorial commanders. The
+authority to issue such laws exceeded the powers of the Defendant
+Sauckel, nor could he ask that any such laws be issued. He did
+however approve of them and made them the basis for his work.
+The contents of these laws were consistent with the fundamental
+ideas of the German laws concerning compulsory labor service.
+These laws were coercive. The use of coercive measures is not
+called for as long as the legal authority of the occupying power
+is acknowledged by the population; they become necessary only
+when such authority fails.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In this connection the Defendant Sauckel has repeatedly asked
+for the maintenance of executive authority by operations in partisan-infested
+territories for overpowering the resistance movement
+(Document R-124). No legal objections can be raised against the
+fact that to this end he demanded the use of means provided by
+the State. He is wrongly incriminated only by the words “SS and
+Police,” which have been connected by the Prosecution with the
+conception of crime. Such an incrimination would only be justified
+if the criminal character of the Police had been proven and if the
+Defendant Sauckel at that time had had cognizance of such criminal
+activity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>That force may be used in case of resistance against orders of
+the occupation force cannot be disputed. The question is, where
+are the limits of force and whether or not there are legal and
+illegal, admissible and inadmissible, human and inhuman, measures
+of force.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If fundamental laws are no longer deemed to be valid when
+a state of siege is declared within a state, surely this will apply
+all the more to a power occupying another country in wartime.
+Anyone who refuses to carry out the orders of the occupying power
+knowingly participates in the fight to which he is not entitled and
+has to accept the consequences. Obedience is the primary duty
+toward the occupying power; and where patriotism and obedience
+are conflicting issues, the law decides against patriotism. The
+punishment meted out is, as such, not subject to any limitation;
+and the threats of punishment by an occupation power are, for purposes
+of intimidation, usually extremely severe. The question is
+whether there exists a limit, from the standpoint of humanity,
+which prohibits punishment in excess of the legitimate purpose
+<span class='pageno' title='482' id='Page_482'></span>
+which may be considered unwarranted. Orders like the burning of
+houses, which were issued independently by subordinate offices
+in connection with the recruitment of labor, must be examined
+from this point of view.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This question is not easy to answer, if one bears in mind the
+special underlying circumstances and realizes that it was a case
+here of an open struggle between the occupying power and the
+population, with official support from the enemy. In case of
+uprisings and organized general resistance one cannot disclaim the
+applicability of the military laws as practiced by the combat troops.
+Necessity alone must be the decisive factor in this case. International
+law has put only one limit to coercive measures in forbidding,
+in Article 50 of the Hague Convention on Land Warfare,
+collective punishment of an entire population for the deeds of
+individuals for which the population cannot be held partially
+responsible. It is essential that such partial responsibility shall have
+been established by actual events and not construed through orders.
+It is not specified wherein collective punishment may consist. The
+limitations of humanity, as I already pointed out, must be respected,
+but in war this is a vague conception; necessity and practical value
+must always have preference.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Next to the manner of recruiting labor, the conditions of work
+may represent an ill-treatment which can be looked upon as a
+war crime. On principle, there can be no question of ill-treatment
+whenever the foreign workers are generally treated in the same
+way as the workers of the home country. Different treatment is
+only permissible when special circumstances justify it. Whereas
+generally foreign workers work on the same level as the Germans,
+the so-called, Eastern Workers were discriminated against. The
+most striking difference here was the limitation of freedom. If this
+had been arbitrary, that would be sufficient reason for declaring
+this to be ill-treatment. But the reasons for this limitation of freedom
+were not arbitrary; they were conditioned by the State’s
+need for security. During wartime the presence of an enemy alien
+in the country always represents a danger, and it is for that very
+reason that originally the bringing in of foreign workers had been
+dispensed with. Only when necessity demanded the utilization of
+foreign workers did the need of security have to be taken into
+account simultaneously. The measures to be taken will depend
+upon the danger, which will vary according to the attitude of the
+alien. Whereas police measures with regard to the French were
+almost imperceptible, the Eastern Workers were in the beginning
+kept under supervision in camps.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The natural interest of the state lies in attaining security by
+winning the aliens over inwardly because their collaboration is
+<span class='pageno' title='483' id='Page_483'></span>
+desired. This will never be achieved by depriving them of their
+freedom. As long as the attitude of the alien cannot be clearly
+assessed, especially if he be like the citizens of the Soviet Union,
+propagandistically trained, more stringent control may be necessary.
+However, it must not develop into permanent captivity, and
+should at most constitute a sort of quarantine. To deprive people
+without guilt of their liberty for an extended period is not admissible,
+because that would correspond to a forbidden collective
+punishment. The mere assumption of danger is not sufficient to
+justify such limitations; there must be certain acts which show that
+such foreign workers appear dangerous even under normal working
+conditions. The custody of Eastern Workers behind barbed wire
+and without permission to go out, as ordered by Himmler, must
+be regarded as ill-treatment if it is a permanent practice.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel, guided by a feeling that in this matter
+the limits of the permissible had been overstepped, immediately
+took steps against this and in a tough fight against Himmler
+demanded and obtained the withdrawal of barbed wire and the
+prohibition to go out, as can be seen from the ensuing decrees,
+Document Number Sauckel-10, Exhibit USA-206.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Where in spite of later arrangements the old methods were still
+applied by the police, Sauckel always intervened whenever he heard
+of such occurrences. This has been confirmed repeatedly by witnesses.
+I refer particularly to Exhibit Sauckel-10, the statement by
+the witness Goetz.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another controversial point was the identification by a badge
+“Ost,” which was maintained until 1944 and then replaced by a
+national insignia. This identification of the Eastern Workers, who
+were free to move among the population, was necessary for security
+reasons. This cannot be considered ill-treatment. The distaste for
+this sign shown by the Eastern Workers was chiefly due to the
+defamation of this badge by propaganda, and the Defendant Sauckel
+always tried to change this insignia and to replace it by a national
+insignia such as the other workers wore voluntarily. He finally
+prevailed here also against Himmler (Document RF-810, Page 12).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Equality must also exist between a nation’s own workers and
+foreign workers with regard to the rules concerning maintenance
+of discipline. With all belligerent states the war has raised the same
+problem as to how to deal with those workers who do not properly
+fulfill their work duties; that is to say, slackers, shirkers, and saboteurs.
+The practice of discharge, common in peacetime, is ineffective
+during war; on the other hand, deserters from work cannot be
+tolerated today by any belligerent. In cases amounting to sabotage,
+police and penal measures were called for, the principal one being
+a short term in a labor training camp; in certain extreme cases,
+<span class='pageno' title='484' id='Page_484'></span>
+imprisonment in a concentration camp was inflicted. Document
+1063-PS, RF-345, shows the similarity in the execution of the regulations
+as applied to Germans and foreigners.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Such police measures, which are caused by disloyal conduct of
+the worker, are justified. The Wartburg Document RF-810 shows
+in the report of the expert Dr. Sturm that such measures were
+carried out on a very moderate scale and that only 0.1 to 0.2 per
+thousand were thus punished.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Hence it follows that the issue of regulations concerning the
+maintenance of discipline is not yet in itself an ill-treatment which
+might form the basis for a crime against humanity. Such ill-treatment,
+however, can consist of excesses such as did occur outside the
+competence of the Defendant Sauckel. He can only be held responsible
+for those if he himself was subjectively to blame in that he
+knew of such excesses and approved of them although he might
+have prevented them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In summing up one can say that the “regulated mobilization
+of labor” is permissible in international law and that restrictions
+imposed on workers within the limits of necessities must be permitted
+for reasons of state security. On the other hand, excesses
+in carrying out the regulations must be looked upon as ill-treatment
+and may amount to crimes against humanity. Responsibility for
+those rests with whoever has instigated them or who, within the
+sphere of his competence, failed to prevent them in the performance
+of his duty. When measuring the grave charges brought against
+the Defendant Sauckel by the standards of the aforesaid legal considerations,
+it will be necessary first of all to single out those fields
+in which the evidence reveals him to be absolutely clear of any
+responsibility.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In the first place, it is not proved that the Defendant Sauckel can
+be connected with the biological extermination of the population.
+His whole interest, as has been shown, pointed toward the opposite
+direction, since his purpose was to obtain people as laborers. He
+had nothing to do with migration measures and any methods used
+in that respect.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Work in concentration camps was just as far removed from the
+Defendant Sauckel’s responsibility. Himmler’s speech in Posen in
+October 1943 (Document 1919-PS, Page 21) reveals that the SS had
+erected gigantic armament plants of their own. We know that
+Himmler covered his extensive labor requirements by despotic
+arbitrary arrests of persons in occupied territories. Inside Germany
+he had workers engaged in regular employment arrested on insignificant
+pretexts and brought to concentration camps, fraudulently
+using the regular labor offices. This is clearly shown in Document
+1063-PS, containing a letter dated 17 December 1942 as well as a
+<span class='pageno' title='485' id='Page_485'></span>
+letter dated 25 June 1943, in which a requirement of 35,000 prisoners
+is signified. Moreover, no correspondence with reference to concentration
+camp labor ever passed through Sauckel’s offices. As an
+example, I refer to Document 1584-PS containing some correspondence
+with Himmler’s department. The Defendant Sauckel’s name
+is never mentioned with reference to a conscription of prisoners,
+and the witnesses have unanimously stated that the Defendant
+Sauckel had no connection with these matters. This is also confirmed
+by the statement of the Director of the armament ministry’s
+Labor Office, Schmelter, who received the prisoners required direct
+from Himmler.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another field which must be eliminated is the conscription of
+Jews for labor. This formed a part of labor conscription of concentration
+camp prisoners; it was Himmler’s own personal secret
+sphere. This is revealed for instance by Document R-91, in which
+Himmler’s service orders the arrest of 45,000 Jews as concentration
+camp prisoners.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>By the production of Document L-61 the Prosecution has attempted
+to convict Sauckel of a share of guilt in this field. This document
+is a letter, dated 26 November 1942, from Sauckel’s office to
+the presidents of the provincial labor offices, stating that by agreement
+with the Chief of the Security Police and SD, Jewish workers
+remaining in the plants must be withdrawn and evacuated to Poland.
+As a matter of fact, this letter actually confirms that Sauckel had
+nothing to do with Jewish labor in the concentration camps, since
+Jewish workers were withdrawn from his department under the
+very pretext of evacuation. The measure is indeed solely concerned
+with the purely technical matter of excluding the Jewish laborers
+and replacing them by Poles, an operation which could not have
+been carried out without the participation of Sauckel’s office.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This letter is in continuation of a correspondence which can be
+traced back to the period prior to Sauckel’s assumption of office,
+and Document L-156 subsequently deals with the same technical
+operation. The unimportant character of the matter is attested by
+the fact that these letters were not sent from the Defendant
+Sauckel’s head office in the Thüringerhaus, but from an auxiliary
+office in the Saarlandstrasse. The Defendant Sauckel disclaims
+knowledge of this correspondence and points out that the letters do
+not bear his original signature but were, according to the routine
+of his service, made out in his name just because they were of
+minor importance. The fact that the letters begin with the routine
+business term of “by agreement with,” instead of “by consent of,”
+the Chief of Police and SD does not mean that they refer to an
+agreement reached, but simply points to the agency in charge of
+the matter.
+<span class='pageno' title='486' id='Page_486'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Next, reference has been made to “extermination by labor.”
+However, Documents 682-PS and 654-PS, dated September 1942,
+unmistakably show that this is a case of a secret maneuver of
+Himmler and Goebbels in co-operation with the Reich Minister of
+Justice, Thierack. The Defendant Sauckel is not involved.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Neither was the conscription of workers for the Organization
+Todt under Sauckel’s responsibility. The accusations proceeding
+from Document UK-56 in this respect, bearing upon labor conscription
+methods in the Channel Islands, do not therefore concern him.
+The documents do not show that the Defendant Sauckel was aware
+of these proceedings or that he could have prevented them. This
+separation between the Defendant Sauckel’s labor jurisdiction and
+the Organization Todt is confirmed in Document L-191, the report
+of the International Labor Office in Montreal.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The enlistment of labor by civil and military departments is
+another chapter. This was to a certain extent carried out as “pirate”
+mobilization and kept secret from the Defendant Sauckel, because
+he opposed these practices and endeavored to prevent them by all
+means. Occasionally he was by-passed by higher orders. In this
+category there is labor enlistment by the SS, the Reichsbahn, Air
+Force construction battalions, Speer’s transport and traffic units,
+fortification and engineering staffs, and other services.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The exclusion of these aspects from the scope of the Indictment
+should exonerate Sauckel all the more since in these cases his
+directives did not apply.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Document 204-PS illustrates in this respect the circumstances in
+which transport auxiliaries were produced in White Russia. Document
+334-PS shows the same with regard to the execution of an
+independent drive for Air Force auxiliaries, which cannot be held
+against Sauckel. The commitment of adolescents, known as the
+Hay Action, according to Document 031-PS of 14 June 1944,
+remained outside Sauckel’s jurisdiction and activities, as becomes
+clear from the document itself. The 9th Army together with the
+Eastern Ministry were the originators.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A letter from the Codefendant Rosenberg to Reich Minister Lammers
+of 20 July 1944 (Document 345-PS) falsely refers to the “agreement”
+of the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor;
+on the other hand it states that the Defendant Sauckel was not
+connected with an SS helper action and that he refused co-operation
+in this affair. According to this, as stated by Document 1137-PS of
+19 October 1944, a special office in the Rosenberg Ministry with
+its own personnel attended to the seizure of juveniles. The Defendant
+Sauckel’s agency was by-passed and labor furnished directly to the
+armament industry.
+<span class='pageno' title='487' id='Page_487'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In circumvention of the Defendant Sauckel’s agency certain
+measures also took place which Hitler caused by direct orders to
+the local offices of the Armed Forces and of the civil administration;
+this for instance applied to the labor commitment ordered in the
+occupied territories for the fortification of the Crimea (Document
+UK-68).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The enlistment of labor in Holland, which was carried out by
+the Armed Forces against the protest of the labor service offices,
+is another of these cases; this is shown in Document 3003-PS and
+is confirmed by the Defendant Seyss-Inquart.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>An important sector, which is beyond the Defendant Sauckel’s
+responsibility, embraces all the actions undertaken as punitive
+measures against partisans and resistance groups. These are
+independent police measures; I already spoke about their judicial
+evaluation. Whether they were admissible and could be approved
+depends on the circumstances. For example, measures against the
+resistance movement in France, as described in Document UK-78
+(French Government Report), cannot be included under the direct
+responsibility of Defendant Sauckel. Thus the most incriminating
+occurrences enumerated in Count 3, Paragraph VIII of the Indictment
+under “Deportation,” which ended in concentration camps,
+are not within the responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The deportations for political and racial reasons, which are also
+mentioned under VIII (B) of the Indictment, such as the deportation
+of French citizens to concentration camps, do not come within the
+responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel either. The resettlement of
+Slovenes and Yugoslavs described under (B) 2, must also be excluded.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>According to the Indictment (under VIII, (H) 2) only part of the
+approximately 5 million Soviet citizens mentioned are stated to
+have been seized for labor commitment, the remainder being
+removed in other ways to which the regulations of the Defendant
+Sauckel did not apply. This is important not so much on account
+of the number of people involved, but because the alleged bad
+conditions might have applied in that very sector, since there the
+danger of improper treatment was unquestionably greater.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Would that be a convenient time to break off?</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>A recess was taken.</span>]</h3>
+
+<p class='pindent'>DR. SERVATIUS: The prisoners of war are also exempted from
+the field of responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel. Such labor did
+not have to be enlisted but was only directed. This was done by
+means of special labor offices, which operated independently in connection
+with the prisoner-of-war camps and collaborated exclusively
+<span class='pageno' title='488' id='Page_488'></span>
+with the Armed Forces. Their task consisted only of employing
+prisoners of war where they were needed. The Defendant Sauckel
+could only request a transfer of prisoners of war. This is referred
+to in the Prosecution Document 1296-PS, of 27 July 1943, which
+mentions under Heading III the increase in the employment of
+prisoners of war in collaboration with the Army High Command.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The assignment of prisoners of war to plants took place under
+the supervision of the Armed Forces, who at the same time enforced
+observance of the Geneva Convention. Sauckel is in no way connected
+with the death of hundreds of thousands of prisoners of war
+of the Soviet Union in 1941 of whom Himmler speaks in his Posen
+speech (Document 1919-PS) and for whose replacement workers had
+to be brought in.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>By Document USSR-415, the official Soviet report about the
+Lamsdorf Camp, the Defendant Sauckel is connected with the alleged
+ill-treatment of prisoners; but this is done merely because the
+number of personnel in the camp was reported to him as a purely
+routine matter. The charge cannot be maintained. The document,
+moreover, is not chronologically substantiated after the year 1941.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel, although personally not competent,
+intervened in excess of his official duties for the care of the
+prisoners of war, because he had an interest in their work morale.
+He issued general decrees; this Document Sauckel-36 shows that
+he demanded an adequate standard food supply, and Document
+Sauckel-39 shows that he demanded the same working hours as for
+German workers; he also stressed the fact that no disciplinary
+punishment could be inflicted by the plants.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Further discrimination among the accusations raised must be
+made according to the time of the incidents. The Defendant Sauckel
+did not take over his office until 21 March 1942. His measures,
+therefore, could only have had effect some time later. What conditions
+prevailed previous to that can be seen from some documents
+dating from 1941. In Document 1206-PS leading authorities advocated
+feeding the workers on horse and cat meat, and in Document
+USSR-177 the production of bread of very inferior quality is suggested.
+Just a short time before the Defendant Sauckel took office
+Himmler in a sharp decree ordered the confinement of the workers
+behind barbed wire. It is fair to say that an extremely low level
+in the treatment of the foreign workers at that time in the Reich
+had been reached. The conception which prevailed with regard to
+the powers of resistance and the working capacity of the Russians
+is tragic.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>With the advent of the Defendant Sauckel a fundamental change
+took place, which led to a constantly increasing improvement of the
+situation. The credit for having effected a change here is, according
+<span class='pageno' title='489' id='Page_489'></span>
+to some documents I will cite, solely due to the Defendant Sauckel.
+This is shown in particular by Document EC-318, which is a record,
+dated 15 April 1942, of the first meeting between the Defendant
+Sauckel and Reich Minister Seldte and his specialist staff when
+taking office. It is recorded there that it was the Defendant Sauckel
+who made his assumption of office dependent on the condition that
+food supplies for foreigners must equal those for Germans, and that
+the granting of this request was guaranteed by Hitler, Göring, the
+Minister for Food, Darré, and his state secretary, Backe. It is also
+established there that the Defendant Sauckel demanded the removal
+of the barbed wire, and actually succeeded in this; and finally, that
+he immediately took steps against the low wages of the Eastern
+Workers. The execution of his fundamental demands was then also
+immediately followed through with tenacity by the Defendant
+Sauckel against the resistance of all authorities.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The program of the mobilization of labor of 20 April 1942, Document
+016-PS, accordingly proceeds to inveigh against all acts of
+cruelty and chicanery and demands that foreign workers be correctly
+and humanely treated; a hope is even expressed that a propaganda
+effect in Germany’s favor ought to be achieved by the way
+in which labor allocation was carried out. This thought was
+frequently reiterated later. An economical allocation of workers
+was urged in order to counteract the waste indulged in by influential
+agencies.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A year later, on 20 April 1943, the Defendant Sauckel again
+addressed a declaration of the procedure to be followed to all persons
+concerned with labor commitment. This is the repeatedly
+mentioned “Manifesto of Labor Allocation,” Document Number
+Sauckel-81, which was issued as a warning and a call to battle
+addressed to all agencies preparing to challenge the serious responsibility
+of the Defendant Sauckel. Goebbels opposed it by claiming
+that the title was too assuming, while the propaganda aspect went
+beyond the bounds of the matter. Other agencies simply disregarded
+the copies sent to them and did not forward them, whereupon
+Sauckel sent copies directly to the industries concerned. How this
+circular was dealt with by the various recalcitrant agencies is shown
+by its description as a “notorious manifesto,” as it was referred to
+unchallenged in a session of the Central Planning Board on 1 March
+1944; Document R-124, Page 1779.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel was reproached for having been over-zealous.
+I refer to a remark made by General Milch (who was interrogated
+before the Tribunal), in which he mentions the Central
+Planning Board, criticizing the allegedly too lenient treatment of
+loafers, and declaring that if anything was undertaken against them,
+agencies would immediately become interested in Germany which
+<span class='pageno' title='490' id='Page_490'></span>
+would protect the “poor fellow” and intercede for the human rights
+of others. This is Document R-124, Page 1913.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The attitude of Defendant Sauckel was generally known and has
+been confirmed by various documents. Thus all the agencies
+addressed themselves to him in case of complaints and deficiencies,
+not in order to make the Defendant Sauckel responsible for them,
+but to solicit his help, because everybody knew how eagerly he
+advocated improvements.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Thus Document 084-PS, which is a report by Dr. Gutkelch of the
+Central Agency for Eastern Nations of the Rosenberg Ministry,
+dated 30 September 1942, emphasized in various places the influence
+of the Defendant Sauckel and recommends getting into closer touch
+with him. His Codefendant Rosenberg also points to Sauckel’s
+strenuous efforts in Document 194-PS, Page 6, a letter of 14 December
+1942 to Koch, Reich Commissioner for the Ukraine. The Codefendant
+Frank likewise on 21 November 1943 applied to the
+Defendant Sauckel—Document 908-PS—for a basic change in the
+legal position of Poles inside the Reich.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To what extent do real events correspond with that which has
+been stated? The first point to be dealt with is the mobilization,
+which is practically identical with the point of deportation. Then
+follows the examination of the treatment of workers as designated
+by the term “slave labor.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The evidence has refuted the erroneous assumption that the
+Defendant Sauckel carried out the enlistment and mobilization of
+foreign workers on his own responsibility and through his own
+organization. It has been established that the supreme authorities
+in the occupied territories executed the laws regarding compulsory
+work as they had received them on Hitler’s orders. All these
+agencies had their own administrative system and guarded their
+departments against the intrusion of others.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A communication of the Rosenberg Ministry of the East to Koch,
+the Reich Commissioner for the Ukraine, dated 14 December 1942,
+Document 194-PS, Page 7, in which the Codefendant Rosenberg
+particularly refers to the right of sovereignty existing in questions
+of labor allocation, proves that this administrative system had not
+been infringed upon. These supreme authorities had their own labor
+offices which were organized in detail from each ministry down to
+the least important office. In reference I wish to cite Document
+3012-PS, an ordinance of 6 February 1943, by the Supreme Command
+of the Army, dealing with compulsory work in the Eastern
+operational sector, and Document RF-15, an ordinance of 6 October
+1942.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel could merely place requests with these
+agencies for the number of workers he was ordered to bring to
+<span class='pageno' title='491' id='Page_491'></span>
+Germany, and give them the necessary instructions. These were his
+limitations, which he never exceeded. He respected the right of
+execution as opposed to the right of issuing instructions. For these
+tasks deputies were appointed for each territory who, in accordance
+with the ordinance of 30 September 1942, Exhibit USA-510, were
+directly subordinate to the Defendant Sauckel; they did not however
+belong to his agency, but to the territorial authorities. It was
+expressly confirmed by the witness Bail, called by the Codefendant
+Rosenberg, that this applied to the chief deputy in the East, State
+Counsellor Peuckert who belonged to the staff of the Eastern
+Ministry.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This State Counsellor Peuckert was at the same time consultant
+for the Economic Staff East for the rear army area which bordered
+on the territory under civil administration; here too he acted only
+in an accessory capacity as deputy of the Defendant Sauckel. This
+is proved by Document 3012-PS, which is a memorandum dealing
+with a conversation of 10 March 1943 concerning labor allocation, in
+which the position of Peuckert is noted on the attendance list.
+Through this arrangement with regard to Peuckert’s functions,
+created in the interest of the territorial authorities, all personal
+interference by the Defendant Sauckel was made impossible. In
+Document 018-PS, that is, in the letter to the Defendant Sauckel
+dated 21 December 1942, the Codefendant Rosenberg complains
+about the methods of labor mobilization in the East; but this must
+be considered as the complaint of a minister who is unable to assert
+himself against his subordinates and turns toward the presumable
+sources of the difficulties he is encountering.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is true that these difficulties could have been removed immediately
+if the Defendant Sauckel had refrained from insisting on the
+fulfillment of his mission. But this fulfillment was the very task,
+specified in the decree of appointment as having to be effected under
+all circumstances.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel had to fight against all obstacles due to
+weakness or departmental egotism, and had to see to it that local
+agencies did not out of a desire to let things ride fail to supply
+the required manpower, while other offices held it back out of
+selfish interests. “With all means” and “ruthlessly” are recurring
+expressions employed in combating these symptoms.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>General Falkenhausen, the military commander in Belgium and
+northern France, during his hearing erroneously declared in Document
+RF-15 that the Defendant Sauckel forced him to mobilize labor
+and had carried this out by the aid of a special “organization” of
+his own. However, he had to admit that this was incorrect when
+the order signed by himself about the introduction of compulsory
+labor was put before him. This is also confirmed by the statements
+of the witnesses Timm and Stothfang.
+<span class='pageno' title='492' id='Page_492'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In France workers were mobilized by the French administration.
+The superior German office was not the office of the Defendant
+Sauckel, but of the military commander in France, where Sauckel
+had only a deputy. The negotiations which the Defendant Sauckel
+conducted in Paris and which were the subject of the evidence lie
+outside of this activity; they are negotiations of a diplomatic nature
+between the German and French Governments in which Sauckel
+participated. They were held in the German Embassy.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Conditions and circumstances in the other territories were
+analogous. The recruiting commissions, which corresponded to the
+labor mobilization staffs in the rear army areas and the operational
+zones, were also by no means offices of the Defendant Sauckel, as
+the Codefendant Rosenberg assumes. These recruiting commissions
+were vaguely connected with the Defendant Sauckel only insofar as
+they were composed of experts who emanated from the German
+labor offices belonging to Sauckel’s department. They received
+directives only through their superior office, in order to guarantee
+uniform handling of all recruiting regulations. Regulation Number 4
+in Document Number Sauckel-15 is very clear on this point. This
+advance appointment of the deputies as of 30 September 1942, which
+was already issued on 7 May 1942, provides for the sole responsibility
+of the military and civil authorities of the occupied territories.
+The deputies mentioned there as having been assigned the
+same functions, are the deputies with the German missions in
+friendly foreign countries.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This was misunderstood by the Prosecution, so that wrong conclusions
+were arrived at, to the disadvantage of the Defendant
+Sauckel, about the responsibility for recruiting and transport. The
+interpretation of the provision that all technical and administrative
+procedures of labor allocation were exclusively within the competence
+and responsibility of the Defendant Sauckel is also incorrect
+as far as occupied territory is concerned. This stipulation refers
+solely to the functions in the Reich and establishes the competence
+of the Plenipotentiary General for the Allocation of Labor, of the
+district labor offices, and the labor offices; this can be seen from
+Document 016-PS, last paragraph.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel, therefore, is not directly responsible for
+the conscription of manpower. Indirectly, however, responsibility
+can be charged to him in that although he was aware of these
+unsatisfactory conditions and knew that they could not be stopped,
+he nevertheless demanded more workers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It must be added that in the Defendant Rosenberg’s letter of
+21 December 1942, Document 018-PS, the Defendant Sauckel learned
+for the first time of the recruiting methods which were described
+as mass deportation. At the meeting which followed in the beginning
+of January 1943, the Defendant Rosenberg declared that he
+<span class='pageno' title='493' id='Page_493'></span>
+was opposed to this and that he would not tolerate such procedures.
+This is also confirmed by his previous letter of 14 December 1942
+addressed to Koch, Reich Commissioner for the Ukraine, Document
+194-PS, in which he clearly calls the latter’s attention to his obligations
+to proceed legally.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Koch’s memorandum of 16 March 1943, Document Rosenberg-13,
+of which the Defendant Sauckel learned only here at the Trial,
+explains that these incidents are exaggerated individual cases, their
+justification being based on the necessity of carrying out measures
+for the restoration of the prestige of the occupation authority. It is
+expressly declared in this that the recruitment of workers was
+undertaken by legal means and that steps were being taken in the
+event of arbitrary measures, Document Number Rosenberg-13,
+Pages 11 and 12.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was not altogether impossible that it might have been a
+matter of tricky propaganda exaggerations, as Koch specifically
+points out. In wartime such a possibility exists, and the propaganda
+tendency of the Molotov reports (Document USSR-151) goes to
+emphasize this.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel was also supported in this idea by the
+result of an investigation into the details of a “manhunt” which was
+reported to him at Minsk by Field Marshal Kluge; it turned out to
+be a round-up of workers employed by a private firm at the time
+of the retreat.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Katyn case shows how difficult it is to determine the truth
+of such events when they are made use of as effective weapons of
+propaganda. As the witnesses from the Defendant Sauckel’s office
+have confirmed, no other incidents involving such abuses have
+become known. The cases reported are to a certain extent obviously
+repetitions of the same happenings as communicated from various
+sources.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>None of these reports, however, displays any desire to approve
+of such things; they are a sort of house alarm for the purpose of
+remedying and improving conditions.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Now, can one believe the Defendant Sauckel when he declares
+that he did not know about the conditions alleged by the Prosecution?
+What reached him through official channels is insufficient
+as proof of cognizance, and the witnesses confirm that the so-called
+“methods” were unknown. On the other hand we find here documents
+of the authorities of the occupied countries from which it
+appears that the Reich Commissioner in the Ukraine ordered the
+burning down of houses in retaliation for resisting the administration,
+and there are decrees providing for such measures. Reports
+made to the Eastern Ministry regarding such events do not lead to
+penal prosecution but to suspension of the proceedings, such as the
+Raab case (Document 254-PS) and the Müller case (Document 290-PS).
+<span class='pageno' title='494' id='Page_494'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Any doubt must be countered with the following: The measures
+employed were not approved by the highest instances, and were
+only surreptitiously applied by the lower offices who therefore had
+every reason not to let them become known. From the files on the
+preliminary proceedings of the cases of Raab and Müller it definitely
+appears that the existing regulations were unknown at the ministry.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel did travel through the Ukraine, but it
+is unlikely that his attention should have been called to matters
+which might have got the local offices into trouble. The views of
+the Defendant Sauckel were well known, while on the other hand
+there existed a violent quarrel between the offices of Reich Commissioner
+Koch and Reich Minister Rosenberg. When the documents
+from both offices such as have been submitted are read carefully,
+it can be seen from the file notes that in this struggle both sides
+were collecting arguments and that neither wished to commit itself.
+Since the Defendant Sauckel himself had no direct authority, it is
+understandable that actual conditions should have remained unknown
+to him. Still another point of view must be considered:
+various documents mention that a certain pressure would have to
+be applied in the procurement of workers, since the workers were
+to be obtained “under all circumstances.” Does this sanction all
+methods? It remains to be seen what was actually done in pursuance
+of these statements.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The OKH in one case thereupon ordered the increased mobilization
+of workers and permitted collective conscription, while
+prohibiting collective punishment. In this connection see Document
+3012-PS, containing a telephone message from the Economy Staff
+East to General Stapf of 11 March 1943.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The best illustration can be found in that same Document
+3012-PS by a file note concerning a discussion of 10 March 1943.
+Here General Nagel requests clear guiding principles and State
+Counsellor Peuckert asks for “reasonable” recruitment methods to
+be established by the OKH as the authorized agency. Document
+2280-PS is also relevant here, which is the only personal statement
+made in Riga on 3 May 1943 on this question by the Defendant
+Sauckel. There he states that only “all permissible means” are
+allowed.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Document 3010-PS, Economy Inspection South, may also be
+quoted, in which on 17 August 1943 the use of “all suitable means”
+is permitted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Orders are issued which contain severe measures in case of noncompliance
+with the duty to work: deprivation of ration and
+clothing cards. Imprisonment of relatives is threatened, as well as
+the taking of hostages.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What is the position as to the admissibility of such measures?
+<span class='pageno' title='495' id='Page_495'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The deprivation of food cards has today become a generally
+applied means of coercion based on the rationing system, which
+derives from present-day conditions. It is easily carried out and
+does not require any special executive force, while being extremely
+effective. Concerning the imprisonment of relatives, severe violations
+of personal custody can be recorded even today. The Hague
+Convention on Land Warfare offers protection only against collective
+punishment of the population, but it does not protect the members
+of the family who may be considered as sharing the responsibility
+in the case of a refusal to work. The French law of 11 June 1943,
+which was presented as Document RF-80, also provides for such
+imprisonment only in the case of deliberate co-operation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There finally remains the shooting of a prefect, which the Defendant
+Sauckel demanded. Apart from the fact that this statement as
+such is irrelevant from the point of view of criminal law, because
+it was not actually carried out, its legal import is merely a request
+to apply the existing French law. This law has been submitted by
+the Prosecution as Document RF-25, a decree of 31 January 1943 by
+the military commander in France, Article 2 of which provides for
+the death penalty.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Equally misunderstood by the Prosecution is a statement uttered
+by the Defendant Sauckel according to which one should handcuff
+the workers in a polite way (Document RF-86, Page 10, negotiation
+by Sauckel in Paris on 27 August 1943). But as appears from the
+context, the point in question is merely a comparison between the
+clumsy manner of the Police and the obliging manner of the French;
+handcuffing was not thereby especially advocated as a method of
+mobilization: Clean, correct, and Prussian on the one hand while at
+the same time obliging and polite on the other; that is how the work
+was to have been done.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I also refer to the proposal for “shanghaiing” as described in
+Document R-124, Page 1770, which is known to the Tribunal from
+the proceedings. The statement which the Defendant Sauckel has
+made gives an understandable explanation; according to it, this was
+legally a preliminary recruitment intended to induce the workers
+to agree to the real enlistment later on in the official recruitment
+offices.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These various incidents—shooting of a prefect, handcuffing, and
+shanghaiing—may be explained in various ways, but one can reach
+a complete understanding of the subjective side only if one considers
+why these statements were made, and under what conditions.
+The underlying reason for all these statements is the struggle against
+resistance and sabotage which in France assumed ever greater proportions.
+Therefore it is not a question of brutality and cynicism;
+rather were these statements intended to counteract the indecision
+displayed by the authorities.
+<span class='pageno' title='496' id='Page_496'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another consideration which must be appended here is whether
+the Defendant Sauckel had not exhausted the manpower of the
+country by his measures to such an extent that more workers could
+only be obtained by inhuman methods and that the Defendant
+Sauckel must have known this. The important point here is the
+figure for the “quotas.” It has been established that they were high,
+but it has also been established that they were not fixed arbitrarily,
+but only after a careful study by the statistical department. Only a
+small percentage of the population was actually apprehended, and
+the decisive issue was not so much their inability to perform the
+work required as their will to offer resistance. In the occupied
+territories of the East were large reserves of manpower, especially
+among older adolescents, which were not effectively utilized. The
+German troops, their ranks greatly thinned, saw the densely populated
+villages during their retreat, and then felt the impact of the
+enemy thus reinforced shortly afterward.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In France there were likewise many forces which placed themselves
+under the protection of the Maquis or the “blocked factories.”
+This is confirmed not only by the French Government Report, Document
+Number RF-22, but is also apparent from a remark which
+Kehrl, a witness for the Codefendant Speer, made in the Central
+Planning Board on 1 March 1944, Document R-124, Page 66. This
+witness states there that labor was available on an abundant scale
+in France.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another conclusive contribution here is Document 1764-PS,
+Page 6, which is the report by Minister Hemmen of 15 February
+1944, which deals with the “Reconstruction Program” of Marshal
+Pétain, and points out that the population was unscathed by war
+and was increasing by 300,000 young men every year.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If the number of workers mobilized is deemed to be of importance
+in this connection, it must be compared with the total
+population figures, while on the other hand it should be taken into
+consideration that Germany did not demand anything which she
+did not ask of herself to an even higher degree. The Defendant
+Sauckel was forced to the conclusion that the people, instead of
+being unable to work, did not want to do so. In order to influence
+the people the propaganda struggle intensified, and threats of
+punishment were proclaimed by both parties; this first engendered
+in the population of the occupied territories a conflict of feelings
+which was the undoing of many.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel could with good reason refer to the
+results of the counterpropaganda and of the deteriorating war
+situation as necessitating coercion; he could not, however, on the
+basis of the information at his disposal become convinced that the
+exhaustion of the countries was so great that nothing more could
+<span class='pageno' title='497' id='Page_497'></span>
+be extracted from them without the use of inhuman methods. The
+Defendant Sauckel believed he could obtain his object by creating
+special working conditions rather than by using violence. As an
+example I refer to the promise which Sauckel himself gave on
+3 May 1943 in Riga, Document 2228-PS.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Apart from all this there is one more field of labor procurement
+which must be put in a different category. That is the liberation
+of prisoners of war on condition that labor forces be made available
+for Germany by “relève” or “transformation.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The French Government Report RF-22 declares both methods of
+procuring labor forces to be inadmissible. It is pointed out in the
+report that the exchange on the basis of “relève” amounted to the
+enslavement of a roughly threefold number of French workers.
+Against this it must be stated that the replacement workers came
+only for 6 months for voluntary work and in succession. At the
+end of 18 months all workers were free, while the prisoner was
+liberated immediately.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Coercion for the execution of the “relève” did not exist. From
+a legal point of view it was not assailable. Captivity can be terminated
+at any time; release may be made subject to a condition.
+The French report unduly stresses its moral indignation in quoting
+a phrase of the president of a news agency of the United States;
+this phrase speaks of the “abominable choice of either to work for
+the hereditary enemy or to deprive a son of one’s own country of a
+chance of release from captivity.”</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>To refute this, I refer to the healthy sentiment according to
+which in the older Russian literature such a change was applauded
+as a patriotic and magnanimous deed during the Nordic War.
+Neither the King of Sweden nor Peter the Great seems to have
+considered exchange as equal to replacement by a substitute slave.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The “transformation” (“Erleichtertes Statut”) is contained in
+Document Number Sauckel-101. This is the release of a Frenchman
+from captivity if he accepts other work, or under condition that
+an additional French worker should come to Germany according
+to the “relève” regulations. No prisoner of war was forced in this
+manner to change his legal status, but whole camps volunteered
+for it. If a prisoner made use of the possibility offered, he forfeited
+thereby the special legal protection of the Geneva Convention with
+regard to work; but this was done in agreement with his government,
+and thus does not constitute a violation of international law.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The home furlough connected with the change-over was discontinued
+because the men granted these furloughs did not return,
+even in the case of the first convoys. The French Report, RF-22,
+itself states on Page 69 that of the 8,000 men forming one leave
+convoy, 2,000 did not return. The report states that the “unfortunate
+<span class='pageno' title='498' id='Page_498'></span>
+people” were placed before the alternative: “Either you return,
+or your brothers die.” This consideration, however, did not impress
+them. Nor could their promise prevent them from immediately
+joining the Maquis.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The cancellation of these home furloughs does not therefore
+constitute an arbitrary act in slave labor. Perusal of the French
+report can only strengthen that impression.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It follows therefore that no conscription of workers, violating
+the laws of war or carried out in an inhuman manner, was effected
+by the Defendant Sauckel in this field either.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I now come to the question of the treatment of workers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In order to facilitate proper judgment, a clear distinction must
+be made between the different bearers of responsibility. The works
+manager was responsible for general labor conditions in the works,
+while the general conditions of life outside the works were the
+competence of the German Labor Front.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>These spheres of responsibility become clearly apparent through
+the fact that two exponents for them are mentioned in the Indictment,
+namely, Krupp and Dr. Ley. The Defendant Sauckel can be
+held responsible for what happened in these spheres only insofar
+as events were due to his decrees, or where, contrary to his duty,
+he failed to exercise direct supervision. The Defendant Sauckel
+was directly responsible for the wages. On assuming office he found
+a table of wages which he could not modify on his own responsibility;
+to do so he had to apply for permission to his superior
+office, which was the Four Year Plan, and for the consent of the
+competent Reich minister. The legal regulations compiled in the
+chapter on wages of my Document Book 2 show that the basic
+decrees were not issued by the Defendant Sauckel, but by the
+Ministerial Council for the Defense of the Reich (see Documents
+Sauckel-50, 17, and 58) and the Reich Minister of Economics (Document
+Sauckel-51) and the Reich Minister of Finance (Document
+Number Sauckel-52).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel could schedule wages and fix wages for
+piece work only within the general outlines existing for him, and
+in so doing he had to consider the interests of the ministries in
+question. So far as it was at all possible for the Defendant
+Sauckel to do so, he worked for an amelioration; thus a series
+of his decrees show that he granted premiums such as bonuses,
+compensatory payments, and the like [see Document Numbers
+Sauckel-54 and 58(a)].</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel’s activity, however, could on the whole
+only aim at increasing wages by influencing the competent agency.
+This is shown in Document 021-PS of 2 April 1943. There we find
+<span class='pageno' title='499' id='Page_499'></span>
+as appendix a treatise with statistical material bearing on a proposal
+for a basic improvement of wages for Eastern Workers. From
+a study of wage sheets dating from different periods it will also be
+seen that the average wages of Eastern Workers were raised several
+times during the Defendant Sauckel’s term of office.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It was for the Defendant Sauckel to determine the working
+hours, but only within the framework of the superior competence
+of the Reich Minister of Labor Seldte. This is shown by Document
+Number Sauckel-67, where Seldte fixes the working hours for
+Eastern Workers in Paragraph 3 of the Decree of 25 January 1944.
+Generally speaking, the working hours were the same as for the
+German workers, depending upon the output in each factory. This
+is also admitted by the French Government Report, Document
+UK-783; the cases enumerated there, on Page 580, of excessive
+working hours are contrary to the orders of the Defendant Sauckel.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Since they do not specify any year, it cannot be ascertained if
+they deal only with temporary measures or with permanent conditions.
+The same lack of clarity obtains in the French Report
+RF-22, Page 101; there the minimum working time is given as
+72 hours, which was liable to increase to 100 hours. This may refer
+to the work of concentration camp inmates. Working hours were
+then changed by Goebbels, who on the basis of his powers of plenipotentiary
+for the waging of total war introduced the 10-hour day
+for Germans and foreigners alike, although in practice this could
+not be applied generally. Unreasonably long working hours cannot
+be maintained and will lead to setbacks. I should like to add that
+Sauckel was responsible for the fact that these extra hours were
+paid for, or compensated, in the same manner as overtime work.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Special attention has been paid by the Prosecution to the regulation
+of the working hours of female domestic workers from the
+East, of whom, instead of the 400,000-500,000 girls originally
+demanded by Hitler; only 13,000 actually came to Germany. The
+Prosecution has presented the instructions for the employment of
+these female domestic workers as Document USSR-383. There it says
+under Number 9 that they shall not be entitled to take time off.
+The purpose of this was to leave the settlement of their time off to
+each household according to convenience. Any other interpretation
+of the regulation is hardly imaginable, because after all it was
+intended permanently to receive these female domestic workers
+into the families, and to give them the chance to remain in Germany.
+They had been selected as girls who were considered
+particularly dependable, and had all reported voluntarily for
+domestic work. In the light of new experiences the order was later
+modified by a subsequent decree (Document Number Sauckel-26),
+by which all remaining limitations were also canceled.
+<span class='pageno' title='500' id='Page_500'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Determination of working hours for children took place within
+the scope of the German labor protection legislation. This referred
+to children who, contrary to the decrees of the Defendant Sauckel,
+had come to Germany with their parents in an irregular manner.
+Their work can have concerned only rural occupations, since that
+applies equally to German children. In this context it may be
+pointed out that during the war schoolchildren in Germany as from
+10 years of age could be employed for work in accordance with the
+decree of the Reich Youth Leader of 11 April 1942 [Document
+Number Sauckel-67(a)].</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>A general survey by Dr. Blumensaat in the complete Document
+Number Sauckel-89 provides full information about the entire complex
+of wages and working hours as finally established by laws.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>This factor of immediate responsibility alone, however, cannot
+serve the Defendant Sauckel as an excuse, if he knew and tolerated
+those things which, according to the Prosecution’s assertion,
+characterized the transports and life in the camps and factories. It
+was his duty to superintend even where he was not directly
+responsible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The accommodation and feeding of the workers was the responsibility
+of the industries. With regard to the installations of the
+camps for foreigners, the same regulations as for the camps for
+German workers applied by virtue of decrees by the Reich Minister
+of Labor, Seldte (Documents Number Sauckel-42, 43 and 44). It
+is indisputable that the accommodation suffered as a result of difficulties,
+in particular from the effects of air warfare. The deficiencies,
+however, were remedied as far as at all possible. The situation of
+the foreign workers was not different from that of the German
+civilian population.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The food supply suffered from the blockade and transportation
+difficulties. The established rations, contrary to the notorious statements
+on the feeding of the Russians, amounted to 2,540 calories for
+the Soviet prisoners of war, according to the table of 24 November
+1941 in Document USSR-177. A further table has been submitted
+with the affidavit of the witness Hahn as Exhibit Number
+Sauckel-11. According to this rations in the Krupp works amounted
+to 2,156 calories for the ordinary Eastern Worker and 2,615 calories
+for those performing heavy work; supervision insured a proper
+distribution.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Reich Ministry of Food was responsible for the supply of
+food. Grave accusations have been made by the Prosecution with
+regard to both points. These, however, can only apply where the
+existing regulations were not observed. It is quite likely that
+mistakes should have been made in this large sphere of activity
+in the course of years, but the general picture is not composed of
+<span class='pageno' title='501' id='Page_501'></span>
+mistakes, and judgment cannot be based thereon. The actual conditions
+have not been clarified in this procedure to the extent that
+one might contend that deficiencies were so general and obvious
+that the Defendant Sauckel must have known them, and did in fact
+know them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In contrast to the vague statements of the witness Dr. Jäger we
+have the affidavit of the witness Hahn, which refutes the former
+to a large extent. The affidavits of the witnesses Scharmann and
+Dr. Voss (Exhibits Number Sauckel-17 and 18) confirm that no
+serious deficiencies existed in their spheres of activity.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In addition to the obligations on the part of the works managers,
+the German Labor Front had to look after the foreign workers
+(Document Number Sauckel-16). Its tasks included transports and
+the supervision of medical care, as well as general welfare activities.
+The extensive activity which this very large organization developed
+has not been described in these proceedings. The basic principles
+of the German Labor Front can be seen from Document Number
+Sauckel-27, which is the ordinance of the German Labor Front
+regarding the status of foreign workers at their working site. The
+aim is characterized as maintenance of morale by observing conditions
+of contracts, absolutely fair treatment, and comprehensive
+care and attention.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The German Labor Front was also responsible for transports,
+according to Regulation Number 4 (Document Number Sauckel-15),
+wherein Sauckel’s instructions are contained. This task included
+transport as far as the working site. The witnesses Timm, Stothfang,
+and Hildebrandt have testified about this and did not report
+anything about bad conditions. The description in the Molotov
+Report (USSR-51) cannot refer to transports carried out under
+orderly direction, but only to so-called “pirate” convoys. The same
+applies to convoys which, according to the Indictment, were heading
+for the concentration camps. The special attention which the
+Defendant Sauckel from the very beginning accorded to the transport
+problem, is shown particularly by Document 2241-PS, submitted
+by the Prosecution. It contains a decree where detailed directives
+to prevent the utilization of unsuitable trains are given.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>However, mistakes did occur, especially the incident mentioned
+in Document 054-PS in connection with a return transport of
+workers. These had been brought into the Reich before Sauckel’s
+time in a manner contrary to his basic principles. The matter was
+an isolated incident, and the necessary steps were immediately
+taken. The return of sick persons unfit for travel was prohibited,
+and Bad Frankenhausen was placed at their disposal, Document
+084-PS, Page 22. This was followed by the order specifying the
+attendance at such transports of male and female Red Cross nurses
+(Document Number Sauckel-99).
+<span class='pageno' title='502' id='Page_502'></span></p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The carefully and thoroughly organized system of medical care,
+which operated in collaboration with the Association of Panel
+Doctors did not break down in the face of the greatest difficulties;
+rather is it a fact that no epidemics or serious diseases broke out.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The cases presented by the Prosecution from some camps among
+the total of 60 run by Krupp’s can only have arisen out of an
+unusual chain of circumstances. They cannot prove that bad conditions,
+of which these examples might have been typical, prevailed
+generally.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another document, RF-91, has been presented, which contains
+the medical report of Dr. Février of the French Delegation of the
+German Labor Front, which was compiled after the beginning of
+the invasion on 15 June 1944. Besides deficiencies it is intended to
+correct, the report also points out favorable aspects. It speaks with
+particular acknowledgement of leaders of youth camps, of the
+systematic X-ray examinations, and of the support given by district
+administrations, and similar things. A genuine over-all picture of
+conditions could only be obtained by the study of the medical
+reports of the health offices of the German Labor Front existing
+everywhere.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>For the defense of the Defendant Sauckel it may be said here
+that from his remote post he could not obtain a clear picture of
+unsatisfactory details. Any sanctioning of such bad conditions
+would have been in striking contrast to the actions and declarations
+of Sauckel. The Defendant Sauckel did not acquiesce when, for
+instance, one Gauleiter said: “If anybody is going to be cold, then
+first of all let it be the Russians.” He intervened and publicly
+proclaimed his views in his official Handbook on the Allocation of
+Labor (Document Number Sauckel-19). The Defendant Sauckel also
+made efforts to improve the food, although this was outside his
+competence. That has been confirmed by several witnesses, among
+others the witness Goetz (Exhibit Number Sauckel-10). It is also
+shown by the record of the Central Planning Board (Document
+R-124, Page 1783). The Defendant Sauckel did not let matters slide,
+but established a personal staff of his own, whose members traveled
+around the camps and corrected bad conditions on the spot. He
+also endeavored to obtain clothing, and put factories to work to a
+large extent for the purpose of supplying Eastern Workers. All the
+witnesses heard regarding this problem have again and again unanimously
+confirmed that the Defendant Sauckel basically took great
+interest in the welfare of workers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I would also refer to the announcements and speeches of the
+Defendant Sauckel, which always advocate good treatment. I do
+not wish to enumerate the documents in detail, and shall only
+mention in particular the “manifesto” on the allocation of labor,
+Document Number Sauckel-84, in which he refers to his binding
+<span class='pageno' title='503' id='Page_503'></span>
+basic principles, and demands that these be constantly kept in
+mind. I also refer to the speeches to the presidents of the provincial
+labor offices of 24 August 1943 (Document Number Sauckel-86),
+and of 17 January 1944 (Document Number Sauckel-88). The Defendant
+Sauckel finally got even Himmler, Goebbels, and Bormann to
+acknowledge his ideas as correct. That is shown by Document 205-PS
+of 5 May 1943, which is a memorandum regarding the general basic
+principles for the treatment of foreign workers. There the basic
+principles of a regulated mobilization of labor are accepted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>How do the statements of the Prosecution on ill-treatment of
+workers as slaves correspond with this? It will be necessary to
+examine closely whether the cases referred to involve real abuses
+affecting workers in the process of normal mobilization, or abuses
+incidental to the deportation of prisoners and to their work. Next,
+one should investigate exaggerations and distortions such as may
+be due to human weakness and foibles. In my opinion no adequate
+clarification of this subject has so far been obtained, and press
+reports have already begun to appear which are bound to increase
+doubts as to the accepted standard applying to the life of foreign
+workers.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The plan submitted as Exhibit Number Sauckel-3 displays the
+numerous offices for checking and inspection relative to the question
+of laborers. They did not report any particular abuses to the
+offices of the Defendant Sauckel. Perhaps the fact that these offices
+were so numerous constitutes a weakness: It is quite possible that
+each government department kept silent about whatever mistakes
+originated under its own jurisdiction and failed to bring them to
+the attention of the Defendant Sauckel, because as a rule the controlling
+agencies were on a higher level than the Defendant Sauckel.
+This should be considered particularly with regard to relations
+between the most important agency, the German Labor Front, under
+the leadership of Reichsleiter Dr. Ley, and Gauleiter Sauckel.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On closer examination of the document submitted as 1913-PS,
+an agreement on the creation of “central inspection offices for the
+care and welfare of foreign labor,” it appears to have been carefully
+designed as an instrument of defense against the Defendant
+Sauckel. The document was devised by Dr. Ley and signed on
+2 June 1943, then submitted for his signature to the Defendant
+Sauckel who did not approve or publish it until 20 September 1943.
+It is quite possible that Dr. Ley did not wish to invite criticism.
+On the other hand, there is little likelihood that the abuses were
+general and manifested themselves openly. Otherwise they would
+obviously have become known to the Defendant Sauckel through
+his own control agencies.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In addition to his own staff, the Defendant Sauckel on 6 April 1942
+appointed the Gauleiter as “Commissioners for the Mobilization of
+<span class='pageno' title='504' id='Page_504'></span>
+Labor,” impressing upon them as their foremost duty that of supervision
+with regard to the enforcement of his orders. This becomes
+apparent from Document Number Sauckel-9, Figure 5; the same applies
+to Document 633-PS of 14 March 1943. Several Gauleiter were
+examined by the Tribunal as witnesses, and they have confirmed
+the fact that the supervision was carried out as ordered and that
+Sauckel checked it through members of his staff. No abuses were
+reported.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>After due consideration of the matter, whom should one believe?
+Are we concerned here with exaggerated complaints, or do findings
+to the contrary command credibility? There is no testimony by those
+Frenchmen who, according to Document UK-783, Draft III, were
+taken to the real slave centers; there is no testimony by those
+Russians, who, according to Document USSR-51, were sold at 10 or
+15 Reichsmark.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>In any case one fact clearly speaks in favor of the Defendant
+Sauckel, one which has always been confirmed by competent witnesses,
+namely, that the workers were willing and industrious and
+that when the collapse came no uprising occurred in which they
+would have given vent to their natural wrath against the slaveholders.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>I have summarized actual happenings and appraised them juridically.
+All this, however, must appear to be juridical quibbling
+when a higher responsibility is involved. It has been stated here
+that it would not do to let the insignificant works managers take
+the blame, and that the moral responsibility must go to the highest
+Reich Government offices: On their own initiative they ought to
+have introduced corrections on a larger scale to cope with the
+difficulties inherent in the circumstances of that time. This might
+have applied to offices which had the power and the means to bring
+about improvement. The Defendant Sauckel and his small personal
+staff had merely been incorporated in a ministry already in existence,
+and he had no such means at his disposal. His authority
+consisted of a narrowly defined power to give directives on the
+mobilization of labor, and he untiringly made use of this authority.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The works managers in the armament industry formed an
+independent administration and were secure from so-called bureaucrats.
+The duty of self-maintenance results from such a privilege
+of self-administration. Consequently, if something was to be done
+to improve the security of foreign workers, or their situation in
+armaments works, it was up to these establishments and to the
+armaments ministry, under whose supervision they operated, to
+deal with the matter. It was not the duty of the office of the
+Defendant Sauckel to intervene in these matters, since it was under
+the armaments ministry. That is clearly evident from Document
+<span class='pageno' title='505' id='Page_505'></span>
+4006-PS, containing the decree of 22 June 1944, and is also borne
+out by the most intimate personal relations between the armaments
+minister and Hitler, which made him the most influential man in
+the economic sphere. If higher responsibility existed for mistakes
+made in the factories, such responsibility can be placed only at the
+door of those who had knowledge of such conditions and the power
+to correct them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>There is still another legal question to be considered with regard
+to the Indictment; namely, whether the position of the Plenipotentiary
+General for the Allocation of Labor is determined by Article 7
+or Article 8, in other words, whether the Defendant Sauckel was
+an independent government official or whether he acted on orders.
+The requests for labor were placed from time to time on Hitler’s
+special orders, in the form of a general program, and only the
+subsequent distribution was left to Sauckel. This is also confirmed
+by the fact that the Defendant Sauckel always refers to Hitler’s
+“orders and instructions,” as in the manifestos of the Plenipotentiary
+General for the Allocation of Labor (Document Number Sauckel-84,
+in circulars to the Gauleiter, Figure 7, Document Number Sauckel-83
+and others). From this also derives the fact that the Defendant
+Sauckel in every case specifically reports execution of the orders,
+as well as the beginning and end of his official journeys (Document
+556-PS of 10 January 1944 and 28 July 1943).</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another argument against his working independently is that
+according to the nomination decree the Defendant Sauckel was immediately
+subordinate to the Four Year Plan and attached to the
+Reich Ministry for Labor, which had been preserved with its state
+secretaries; only two departments were placed at his disposal. If
+the form of responsibility is to be determined, it can thus only be
+within the limits of Article 8 of the Charter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Herewith I conclude my exposition regarding the special field
+of labor allocation.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Defendant Sauckel is accused on all Counts of the Indictment,
+in addition to labor mobilization; specific acts however are
+not charged against him. A closer characterization of the accusation
+has been effected in the course of the proceedings only with regard
+to the concentration camps. In this connection, however, it has been
+proved by a sworn statement by the witness Falkenhorst (Exhibit
+Number 23) and an affidavit by the witness Dieter Sauckel (Exhibit
+Number 9) that no order for the evacuation of the Buchenwald Camp
+upon the approach of American troops was given. Knowledge and
+approval of conditions at the camp cannot be deduced from two
+visits of the camp before 1939, because the excesses submitted by
+the Prosecution had not yet occurred. Nor did the geographical
+proximity of the camp to the Gauleitung of the Defendant Sauckel
+<span class='pageno' title='506' id='Page_506'></span>
+bring about any close connection with the SS staff, as they had
+their seat in Kassel and Magdeburg. Finally it must be remembered
+that the human convictions of the Defendant Sauckel, which were
+based on his earlier career, were irreconcilable with Himmler’s
+point of view.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>What part can the Defendant Sauckel have played in the conspiracy?
+He was Gauleiter in Thuringia and did not rise above the
+rest of the Gauleiter. His activities and his aims can be deduced
+from his fighting speeches, which have been submitted as Document
+Number Sauckel-95. They consistently show the fight for “liberty
+and bread,” and a desire for real peace.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>During his activity, extending over many years in the Party,
+the Party program was authoritative for the Defendant Sauckel;
+the aims and plans contained therein required neither war nor the
+extermination of the Jews. The practical realization of the program
+alone could disclose the reality. For every convinced Party exponent,
+however, the official explanation of events was authoritative and
+met with no doubts. Up to his nomination as the Plenipotentiary
+General for Allocation of Labor in March 1942, the Defendant Sauckel
+did not belong to the narrow circle of those who had access to
+Hitler’s plans. He had to rely upon the press and the broadcasts
+like everybody else. He had no contact with the leading men. This
+is demonstrated somewhat tragically by his action, so often ridiculed,
+of boarding a submarine as an ordinary seaman for some mission.
+That is no way to participate in conspiracies.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>As a faithful follower of Hitler, the Defendant Sauckel remained
+isolated in the circle of the initiated. It is understandable that the
+extremists should have shunned him owing to his well-known
+opinions. He was not initiated into the secrets of people who aspired
+to be Hitler’s friends and murderers at the same time, nor was he
+kept informed by the group of people who were Hitler’s enemies,
+but who kept their knowledge secret with a novel kind of courage.
+A believer to the end, the Defendant Sauckel cannot to this day
+understand what has happened. Must he, like a heretic, recant his
+error in order to find mercy? He lacks the contact with reality,
+which would make understanding possible.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Does his sentence depend on his having unknowingly served a
+good or a bad cause? Nothing is either good or bad, but thinking
+makes it so. One thing, however, is always and under all circumstances
+good, and that is a good intention. This good intention was
+shown by the Defendant Sauckel. Therefore, I ask that he be
+acquitted.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: I call on Dr. Exner for the Defendant Jodl.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>PROFESSOR DR. FRANZ EXNER (Counsel for Defendant Jodl):
+May it please the Tribunal, in this unique Trial the discovery of the
+<span class='pageno' title='507' id='Page_507'></span>
+truth is faced with difficulties of an exceptional nature. At a time
+when the wounds of the war are still bleeding, when the excitement
+of the events of the last few years is still felt, at a time when the
+archives of one side are still closed, it is asked that a just verdict
+be given with dispassionate neutrality. Material for the Trial
+has been spread out before us covering a quarter of a century of
+world history and events from the four corners of the globe.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>On the grounds of this tremendous amount of material we see
+22 men being accused simultaneously. That makes it immensely
+difficult to gain a clear picture of the guilt and responsibility of
+each individual, for inhumanities of an almost unimaginable vastness
+have come to light here, and there exists a danger that the
+deep shadow which falls upon some of the defendants may also
+darken the others. Some of them, I fear, appear in a different light
+because of the company in which they now sit than they would if
+they were alone in the dock.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has promoted this danger by repeatedly making
+joint accusations, thereby mixing legal and moral reproaches. They
+have said that all the defendants had enriched themselves from the
+occupied territories, that there was not one who did not shout,
+“Perish, Judah!” and so forth. No attempt to prove this in the
+case of any single individual was made, but the statement in itself
+creates an atmosphere hostile toward all of them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Another fact brought about by the Prosecution which renders
+elucidation of the question of individual guilt still more difficult is
+that the Defendants Keitel and Jodl are treated as inseparable
+twins: One common plea against them by the British prosecutor,
+one common trial brief by the French Prosecution; the Russian Prosecution
+indeed spoke very little about the individual defendants
+but preferred to heap reproach after reproach upon all of them.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>All of this is presumably intended to shorten the Trial, but it
+hardly serves to clear up the question of individual responsibility.
+Indeed, the Indictment goes still further. It reaches beyond these
+22 defendants and affects the fate of millions through a prosecution
+of certain organizations, which, taken in conjunction with Law Number
+10, leads to the result that one can be punished for the guilt
+of other persons.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Something that is more important at the moment is a further
+form of summary treatment of the defendants. The Prosecution is
+bringing in the conception of a “conspiracy” in order once more to
+obtain the result that persons may be made individually responsible
+for some wrong that others committed. I must deal with this point
+in greater detail, since it also concerns my client.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>It is actually clear, I think, from the previous speakers’ statements
+that a conspiracy to commit Crimes against Peace and the
+<span class='pageno' title='508' id='Page_508'></span>
+laws of war and humanity did not in fact exist. Therefore, I shall
+demonstrate only that, if such a conspiracy did actually exist, Jodl
+at least did not belong to it.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>The Prosecution has admitted that Jodl’s participation in the
+conspiracy before 1933 could not be proved. In fact, anyone whose
+attitude toward the whole National Socialist movement was so full
+of distrust and who spoke with such skepticism about its seizure of
+power did not conspire to help Hitler take over the reins of Government.
+But the Prosecution seems to think that Jodl joined the
+alleged conspiracy in the period before 1939. In truth, during this
+time, too, nothing essential changed as far as he was concerned.
+True, his attitude toward Hitler was now an entirely loyal one. But
+it was Jodl’s respected Field Marshal Von Hindenburg who had
+called Hitler into the Government, and the German people had confirmed
+this decision with more than 90 percent of its votes. Added
+to this was the fact that in Jodl’s eyes—and not only in his—Hitler’s
+authority was bound to rise by leaps and bounds in view of his
+remarkable successes at home and abroad, which now followed one
+after another in quick succession; yet personally Jodl remained
+without any connection with Hitler. He did not participate in any
+of the big meetings at which Hitler developed his program. He had
+only read extracts of Hitler’s book <span class='it'>Mein Kampf</span>, the bible of
+National Socialism. Jodl remained just an unpolitical man, quite
+in line with his personal inclinations, which were far removed from
+Party politics and in accordance with the traditions of the old
+family of officers from which he sprang. Of liberal leanings, he had
+little sympathy for National Socialism; as an officer he was forbidden
+to belong to the Party, and he had no right to vote or be
+politically active.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>If, as the Prosecution says, the Party held the conspiracy together
+and was the “instrument of cohesion” between the defendants, then
+one asks with wonder what cohesion actually existed between Jodl
+and, let us say, Sauckel, or between Jodl and Streicher. Of all the
+defendants, the only one he knew before the war, outside of the
+officers, was Frick, from one or two official conferences in the
+Ministry of the Interior. He kept clear of the NSDAP, and his
+attitude toward its organizations was even in a certain sense inimical.
+His greatest worry during these years, right up to the end, was
+the danger of Party influence in the Armed Forces.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Jodl did what lay in his power to prevent the SS from being
+puffed up into a subsidiary Wehrmacht, to prevent the transfer of
+the customs frontier guards to Himmler, and he notes triumphantly
+in his diary that after the withdrawal of General Von Fritsch, Hitler
+did not, as had been feared, make General Von Reichenau, who had
+Party ties, Commander-in-Chief of the Army, but the unpolitical
+General Von Brauchitsch, and so forth. If Jodl had conspired for
+<span class='pageno' title='509' id='Page_509'></span>
+National Socialism in any way, his attitude would have been the
+opposite on every one of these points.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Nor was Jodl present at any of the so-called meetings of the
+conspirators, as on 5 November 1937—Hitler’s testament was
+unknown to him—at Obersalzberg in February 1938, and at the
+meetings on 23 May 1939 and 22 August 1939.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>No wonder; for Jodl was after all at that time still much too
+insignificant to be permitted to participate in conferences and
+meetings which were of such decisive importance to the State.
+People do not conspire with lieutenant colonels or colonels of the
+General Staff. They simply tell them what to do, and that settles
+the matter.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>However, the most incontrovertible proof of the fact that Jodl
+can have belonged to no conspiracy to wage aggressive war is his
+absence for 10 months just before the beginning of the war. Jodl
+had left the OKW in October 1938 and was sent to Vienna as
+artillery commander. At that time there was in his mind so little
+probability of war that before leaving Berlin he drafted, on his own
+initiative, a plan of deployment in all directions for security purposes.
+In this he disposed the bulk of the German forces in the
+center of the Reich because he could not see any definite opponent
+against whom a deployment plan might have to be prepared.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Exactly a year before the beginning of the attack, this alleged
+conspirator for aggressive wars drew up a purely defensive General
+Staff plan, and, although he knew definitely that in case of war he
+would have to return to Berlin, this possibility seemed so remote
+that he moved to Vienna, taking along all his furniture.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Besides, since he wished to get away from office work again, he
+arranged to have the mountain division at Reichenhall promised him
+for 1 October 1939. Lastly, as late as July he obtained passage on
+a sea cruise planned to last several weeks, which was to have started
+in September—so sure was he of peaceful developments during
+these 10 months.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Up to the time he was called to Berlin shortly before the outbreak
+of the war, Jodl had no official or private connections with
+the OKW. The only letter he got from them at that time was the
+one which promised him his transfer to Reichenhall on 1 October.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Note that at the most critical time when the alleged conspirators
+were discussing and working out the Polish plan, Jodl was for
+10 months out of all contact with the authoritative persons and knew
+no more of what was happening than one of his second lieutenants.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>When the Führer came to Vienna during the summer, it did not
+even seem worth while to Keitel to introduce Jodl to him, although
+Jodl, as the Supreme Commander’s strategic adviser, was called
+<span class='pageno' title='510' id='Page_510'></span>
+upon in the event of war to carry out the allegedly common aggressive
+plan.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>One can imagine how astonished Jodl was to read in the Indictment
+that he had been a member of the conspiracy to launch the
+war.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Mr. President, I have reached the end of a paragraph, and this
+perhaps might be an opportune moment to recess.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>THE PRESIDENT: Very well.</p>
+
+<h3>[<span class='it'>The Tribunal adjourned until 19 July 1946 at 1000 hours.</span>]</h3>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>TRANSCRIBER NOTES</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Punctuation and spelling have been maintained except where obvious
+printer errors have occurred such as missing periods or commas for
+periods. English and American spellings occur throughout the document;
+however, American spellings are the rule, hence, “Defense” versus
+“Defence”. Unlike Blue Series volumes I and II, this volume includes
+French, German, Polish and Russian names and terms with diacriticals:
+hence Führer, Göring, etc. throughout.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>Although some sentences may appear to have incorrect spellings or verb
+tenses, the original text has been maintained as it represents what the
+tribunal read into the record and reflects the actual translations
+between the German, English, French, and Russian documents presented in the trial.</p>
+
+<p class='pindent'>An attempt has been made to produce this eBook in a format as close as
+possible to the original document presentation and layout.</p>
+
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>[The end of <span class='it'>Trial of the Major War Criminals
+Before the International Military Tribunal Vol. 18</span>,
+by Various.]</p>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75266 ***</div>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75266 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75266)