No trial provides a better
basis for
understanding the nature and causes of evil than do the Nuremberg
trials
from 1945 to 1949. Those who come to the trials expecting to find
sadistic monsters are generally disappointed. What is shocking
about
Nuremberg is the ordinariness of the defendants: men who may be
good
fathers, kind to animals, even unassuming--yet who committed
unspeakable
crimes. Years later, reporting on the trial of Adolf Eichmann,
Hannah
Arendt wrote of "the banality of evil." Like Eichmann, most
Nuremberg
defendants never aspired to be villains. Rather, they
over-identified
with an ideological cause and suffered from a lack of imagination or
empathy:
they couldn't fully appreciate the human consequences of their
career-motivated
decisions.
Twelve trials, involving over a
hundred defendants
and several different courts, took place in Nuremberg from 1945 to
1949.
By far the most attention--not surprisingly, given the figures
involved--has
focused on the first Nuremberg trial of twenty-one major war
criminals.
Several of the eleven subsequent Nuremberg trials, however, involved
conduct
no less troubling--and issues at least as interesting--as the Major War
Criminals Trial. For example, the trial of sixteen German judges
and officials of the Reich Ministry (The
Justice Trial) considered the criminal responsibility of judges who
enforce immoral laws. (The Justice Trial became the inspiration
for
the acclaimed Hollywood movie, Judgment
at Nuremberg.) Other subsequent trials, such as the Doctors
Trial and the Einsatzgruppen
Trial, are especially compelling because of the horrific events
described
by prosecution witnesses. (These three subsequent trials each
receive
separate coverage elsewhere in this website.)
In 1944, when eventual victory over
the Axis powers
seemed likely, President Franklin Roosevelt asked the War Department to
devise a plan for bringing war criminals to justice. Before the
War
Department could come up with a plan, however, Treasury Secretary Henry
Morgenthau sent his own ideas on the subject to the President's
desk.
Morgenthau's eye-for-an-eye proposal suggested summarily shooting many
prominent Nazi leaders at the time of capture and banishing others to
far
off corners of the world. Under the Morgenthau plan, German POWs
would be forced to rebuild Europe. The Treasury Secretary's aim
was
to destroy Germany's remaining industrial base and turn Germany into a
weak, agricultural country.
Secretary of War Henry Stimson saw
things differently
than Morgenthau. The counter-proposal Stimson endorsed, drafted
primarily
by Colonel Murray Bernays of the Special Projects Branch, would try
responsible
Nazi leaders in court. The War Department plan labeled atrocities
and waging a war of aggression as war crimes. Moreover, it
proposed
treating the Nazi regime as a criminal conspiracy.
Roosevelt eventually chose to support
the War
Department's plan. Other Allied leaders had their own ideas,
however.
Churchill reportedly told Stalin that he favored execution of captured
Nazi leaders. Stalin answered, "In the Soviet Union, we never
execute
anyone without a trial." Churchill agreed saying, "Of course, of
course. We should give them a trial first." All three
leaders
issued a statement in Yalta in February, 1945 favoring some sort of
judicial
process for captured enemy leaders.
In April, 1945, two weeks after the
sudden death
of President Roosevelt, Supreme Court Justice Robert
Jackson received Samuel Rosenman at his Washington home.
Rosenman
asked Jackson, on behalf of President Truman, to become the chief
prosecutor
for the United States at a war-crimes trial to be held in Europe soon
after
the war ended. Truman wanted a respected figure, a man of
unquestioned
integrity, and a first-rate public speaker, to represent the United
States.
Justice Jackson, Rosenman said, was that person. Three days
later,
Jackson accepted. On May 2, Harry Truman formally appointed him
chief
prosecutor. But prosecutor of whom, and under what authority?
Many
questions remained unanswered.
Several Nazi leaders would escape
trial and punishment.
Two days before Jackson's appointment, in a bunker twenty feet below
the
Berlin sewer system, Adolf Hitler shot himself. Soon thereafter,
Heinrich Himmler--perhaps the most terrifying figure in the Nazi
regime--took
a cyanide crystal while being examined by a British doctor and died
within
minutes. Also unavailable for trial were Joseph Goebbels (dead)
and
Martin Bormann (missing).
Still, many important Axis leaders had
fell into
Allied hands, either through surrender or capture. Deputy Fuhrer Rudolph
Hess had been held in England since 1941, when he had parachuted
into
the English sky in a solo effort to convince British leaders to make
peace
with the Nazi government. Reischsmarschall Hermann
Goering surrendered to Americans on May 6, 1945. He spent his
first evening in captivity happily drinking and singing with American
officers--officers
who later were reprimanded by General Eisenhower for the special
treatment
they conferred. Hans
Frank, "the Jew Butcher of Cracow," received less hospitable
treatment
from American soldiers in Bavaria, who forced him to run through a
seventy-foot
line of soldiers, getting kicked and punched the whole way. Other
suspected war criminals were rounded up on May 23 by British forces in
Flensburg, site of the last Nazi government. The Flensburg group
included Karl Doenitz (Hitler's successor as fuhrer), Field Marshall Wilhelm
Keitel, Nazi Party philosopher Alfred
Rosenberg, General Alfred
Jodl, and Armaments Minister Albert
Speer. Eventually, twenty-two of these captured major Nazi
figures
would be indicted.
On June 26, Robert Jackson flew to
London to meet
with delegates from the other three Allied powers for a discussion of
what
to do with the captured Nazi leaders. Every nation had its own
criminal
statutes and its own views as to how the trials should proceed.
Jackson
devoting considerable time to explaining why the criminal statutes
relating
to wars of aggression and crimes against humanity that he proposed
drafting
would not be ex post facto laws. Jackson told negotiators
from the other nations, "What we propose is to punish acts which have
been
regarded as criminal since the time of Cain and have been so written in
every civilized code." The delegates also debated whether to proceed
using
the Anglo-American adversarial system with defense lawyers for the
defendants,
or whether instead to use the judge-centered inquisitive system favored
by the French and Soviets.
After ten days of discussion, the
shape of the
proceedings to come became clearer. The trying court would be
called
the International Military Tribunal, and it would consist of one
primary
and one alternate judge from each country. The adversarial system
preferred by the Americans and British would be used. The
indictments
against the defendants would prohibit defenses based on superior
orders,
as well as tu quoque (the "so-did-you" defense). Delegates were
determined not to let the defendants and their German lawyers turn the
trial into one that would expose questionable war conduct by Allied
forces.
Jackson believed that the war crimes
trials should
be held in Germany. Few German cities in 1945, however, had a
standing
courthouse in which a major trial could be held. One of the few
cities
that did was Nuremberg, site of Zeppelin Field and some of Hitler's
most
spectacular rallies. It was also in Nuremberg that Nazi leaders
proclaimed
the infamous Nuremberg Laws, stripping Jews of their property and basic
rights. Jackson liked that connection. The city was 91%
destroyed,
but in addition to the Palace
of Justice, the best hotel in town--the Grand Hotel--was
miraculously
spared and would serve as an operating base for court officers and the
world press. Over the objection of the Soviets (who preferred
Berlin),
Allied representatives decided to conduct the trial in Nuremberg.
On August 6, the representatives
signed the Charter
of the International Military Tribunal, establishing the laws and
procedures
that would govern the Nuremberg trials. Six days later, a cargo
plane
carrying most of major war trial defendants landed in Nuremberg.
Allied military personnel loaded the prisoners into ambulances and took
them to a secure cell block of the Palace of Justice, where they spent
the next fourteen months.
Judges for the IMT met for the first time on October
13. The American
judge was Francis
Biddle, who was appointed to the job by Harry Truman--perhaps out
of
a feeling of guilt after the President dismissed him as Attorney
General.
Robert Jackson pressured Biddle, who desperately wanted the position of
chief judge, to support instead the British judge, Sir Geoffrey
Lawrence.
Jackson thought the selection of a British as president of the IMT
would
ease criticism that the Americans were playing too large a role in the
trials. Votes from the Americans, British, and French elected
Lawrence
chief judge.
With a November 20 opening trial date approaching, Nuremberg
began to
fill with visitors. A prosecutorial staff of over 600 Americans
plus
additional hundreds from the other three powers assembled and began
interviewing
potential witnesses and identifying documents from among the 100,000
captured
for
the prosecution case. German lawyers, some of whom were
themselves
Nazis, arrived to interview their clients and began trial
preparation.
Members of the world press moved into the Grand Hotel and whatever
other
quarters they could find and began writing background features on the
upcoming
trial. Nearly a thousand workers rushed to complete restoration
of
the Palace of Justice.
THE TRIAL
On the opening day of the trial, the twenty-one indicted war
trial defendants
took their seats in the dock at the rear of the sage-green draped and
dark
paneled room. Behind them stood six American sentries with their
backs against the wall. At 10 a.m., the marshal shouted,
"Attention!
All rise. The tribunal will now enter." The judges from the
four countries walked through a door and took their seats at the
bench.
Sir Geoffrey Lawrence rapped his gavel. "This trial, which is now
to begin," said Lawrence, "is unique in the annals of
jurisprudence."
The Major War Figures Trial was underway in Nuremberg.
The trial began with the reading of the
indictments. The indictments concerned four counts. All
defendants were indicted on at least two of the counts; several were
indicted
on all four counts. Count One, "conspiracy to wage aggressive
war,"
addressed crimes committed before the war began. Count Two,
"waging
an aggressive war (or "crimes against peace"), addressed the
undertaking
of war in violation of international treaties and assurances.
Count
Three, "war crimes," addressed more traditional violations of the laws
of war such as the killing or mistreatment of prisoners of war and the
use of outlawed weapons. Count Four, "crimes against humanity,"
addressed
crimes committed against Jews, ethnic minorities, the physically and
mentally
disabled, civilians in occupied countries, and other persons. The
greatest of these crimes against humanity was, of course, the mass
murder
of Jews in concentration camps--the so-called "Final Solution."
For
an entire day, defendants listened as prosecutors read a detailed list
of the crimes they stood accused of committing.
THE PROSECUTION CASE
The next day Robert Jackson delivered his opening
statement for the prosecution. Jackson spoke eloquently for
two
hours. He told the court, "The wrongs which we seek to condemn
and
punish have been so calculated, so malignant, and so devastating that
civilization
cannot tolerate their being ignored because it cannot survive their
being
repeated."
The prosecution case was divided into two main phases.
The first
phase focused on establishing the criminality of various components of
the Nazi regime, while the second sought to establish the guilt of
individual
defendants. The first prosecutorial phase was divided into parts.
The prosecution presented the case that the Austrian
invasion constituted
an aggressive war, then proceeded over the course of two weeks to show
the same for invasions of Czechoslovakia, Poland, Denmark, Norway,
Belgium,
Holland, Luxembourg, Greece, Yugoslavia, and the Soviet Union.
Prosecution
proof on the counts of conspiring to wage and then waging an aggressive
war consisted mainly of documentary evidence.
A second part of the prosecution case concerned the Nazi's
use of slave
labor and concentration camps. Evidence introduced during this
part
of the prosecution case brought home the true horror of the Nazi
regime.
For example, on December 13, 1945, U. S. prosecutor Thomas Todd
introduced
USA Exhibit #253: tanned human tattooed skin from concentration camp
victims,
preserved for Isle Koch, the wife of the Commandant of Buchenwald, who
liked to have the flesh fashioned into lampshades and other household
objects
for her home. Then Todd introduced USA Exhibit #254: the
fist-shaped
shrunken head of an executed Pole, used by Koch as a paperweight.
On December 18, the prosecution began introducing evidence
to establish
the criminality of the Nazi party leadership, the Reich Cabinet, the
SS,
the Gestapo, the SD, the SA, and the German High Command. Some of
the evidence brought cries and gasps from spectators. A British
prosecutor,
seeking to establish the criminality of the SS, read an affidavit from
Dr. Sigmund Rasher, a professor of medicine who performed experiments
on
inmates at Dashau concentration camp. The affidavit described an
experiment conducted to determine what method to use to save German
fliers
pulled out of freezing North Sea waters. Rasher ordered inmates
stripped
naked and then thrown into tanks of freezing water. Chunks of ice
were added, as workers repeatedly thrust thermometers into the rectums
of unconscious inmates to see if they were sufficiently chilled.
Then the inmates were pulled out of the tanks to see which of four
methods
of warming might work best. Experimenters dropped most inmates
into
either tanks of hot water, warm water, or tepid water. One
quarter
of the inmates were placed next to the bodies of naked female
inmates.
(Rapid warming with hot water was determined to be most effective.)
Rasher
stated in his affidavit that most of the inmates used in the experiment
went into convulsions and died.
In January, a series of concentration camp victims testified
about their
experiences. Marie
Claude Vallant-Couturier, a 33-year-old French woman, provided
particularly
powerful testimony about what she saw at Auschwitz in 1942.
Vallant-Couturier
described how a Nazi orchestra played happy tunes as soldiers separated
those destined for slave labor from those that would be gassed.
She
told of a night she was "awakened by horrible cries. The
next
day we learned that the Nazis had run out of gas and the children had
been
hurled into the furnaces alive."
On February 18, 1946, Soviet prosecutors introduced a film
entitled
Documentary Evidence of the German Fascist Invaders. The film,
which
consisted mostly of captured German footage, showed Nazi atrocities
accompanied
by Russian narration. In one scene a boy is shown being shot
because
he refused to give his pet dove to an SS man. In another scene,
naked
women are forced into a ditch, then made to lie down as German
soldiers--smiling
for the camera--shoot them.
The prosecution rested on March 6. After the
thirty-three witnesses
and hundreds of exhibits that had been produced, no one could deny that
crimes against humanity had been committed in Europe.
THE DEFENSE CASE
Hermann Goering took his seat in the witness chair wearing a
gray uniform
and yellow boots. His defense attorney, Otto Stahmer, asked
whether
the Nazi party had come to power through legal means. In a long
answer
delivered without notes, Goering gave his account of the Nazi rise to
power.
He told the court, "Once we came to power, we were determined to hold
on
to it under all circumstances." Goering was unrepentant. He
evaded no questions; offered no apologies. He testified that the
concentration camps were necessary to preserve order: "It was a
question
of removing danger." The leadership principle, which
concentrated
all power in the Fuhrer, was "the same principle on which the Catholic
church and the government of the USSR are both based." Commenting
on Goering's performance in the witness box, Janet Flanner of the New
Yorker described Goering as "a brain without a conscience."
The courtroom was crowded on March 18, when Robert Jackson
began his
long awaited cross-examination
of Goering. Goering at first managed to deflect most of
Jackson's
intended blows, often providing lengthy answers that buttressed points
he made on his direct examination, such as the fact that he had opposed
plans to invade Russia. Only by the third day of
cross-examination
did Jackson begin scoring points. He asked Goering whether he
signed
a series of decrees depriving Jews of the right to own businesses,
ordering
the surrender of their gold and jewelry to the government, barring
claims
for compensation for damage to their property caused by the
government.
Goering, trembling at times, was given little opportunity to do more
than
admit the truth of Jackson's assertions. After describing the
awful
events of Kristallnacht, November 9, 1938, when 815 Jewish
shops
were destroyed and 20,000 Jews arrested, Jackson asked Goering whether
words he was quoted as saying at a meeting of German insurance
officials
(concerned about the loss of non-Jewish property on consignment at the
Jewish shops) was accurate: "I demand that German Jewry shall for their
abominable crimes make a contribution of a billion marks....I would not
like to be a Jew in Germany." Goering admitted that the quote was
accurate. When Jackson finally ended his four-day
cross-examination,
reviews came in mixed. Most observers believed Goering had shown
himself to be a brilliant villain.
Over the course of the next four months, lawyers for each of
the defendants
presented their evidence. In most cases, the defendants themselves took
the stand, trying to put their actions in as positive of a light as
possible.
Many of the defendants claimed to know nothing of the existence of
concentration
camps or midnight killings. Typical was Joachim von
Ribbentrop.
Asked on cross-examination, "Are you saying that you did not know that
concentration camps were being carried out on an enormous scale?",
Ribbentrop
replied, "I knew nothing about that." Prosecutor Maxwell-Fyfe
then
displayed a map showing a number of concentration camps located near
several
of Ribbentrop's many homes. Other defendants used their testimony
to emphasize that they were merely following orders--although the IMT
disallowed
defense of superior orders, the issue was raised anyway in the hope
that
it might affect sentencing.
Sometimes defense evidence actually strengthened the
prosecution's case.
Such was the case on April 15, when the attorney for Gestapo and SD
Chief
Ernst Kaltenbrunner called Colonel
Rudolf Hoess to the stand. Hoess was the commandant of
Auschwitz.
Why he was called as a defense witness remains a mystery.
Speculation
is that it was thought his testimony, revealing his very large role in
the gassing of thousands of inmates, might make Kaltenbrunner's guilt
seem
small in comparison. Hoess's matter-of-fact account of mass
executions
using Zyklon B gas--sometimes 10,000 inmates killed in a single
day--left
many in the courtroom stunned.
A few of the defendants confessed their mistakes and offered
apologies
for their actions. Wilhelm Keitel regretted "orders given for the
conduct of war in the East, which were contrary to accepted usages of
war." Hans
Frank, Nazi Governor of Poland, answered "Yes" when asked whether
he
"ever participated in the annihilation of the Jews." "My
conscience
does not allow me simply to throw the responsibility simply on minor
people....A
thousand years will pass and still Germany's guilt will not have been
erased." Albert
Speer, Minister of Armaments, was the most willing of all
defendants
to accept blame. "This war has brought an inconceivable catastrophe,"
Speer
testified, "Therefore, it is my unquestionable duty to assume my share
of responsibility for the disaster of the German people." After
Speer
finished his testimony the London Daily Telegraph described it as "a
tremendous
indictment which might well stand for the German people and posterity
as
the most important and dramatic event of the trial."
As June ended, the last of the twenty-one defendants, Hans
Fritzsche,
completed his testimony. The defense rested.
SUMMATIONS AND VERDICT
Defense summations had been underway for two days when they
were interrupted
on July 6 for the trial in absentia of Martin Bormann, the notorious
Jew-hater
who served as Hitler's private secretary and who transmitted his most
barbaric
orders. Rumors abounded that Bormann might be in Spain,
Argentina,
or some German hideaway, but the Allies had been unsuccessful in
tracking
him down. Bormann's lawyer, Friedrich Bergold, offered an unusual
defense, but perhaps the only one open to him: he argued that his
client
was dead. (Bormann's remains were finally identified in Berlin in
1972.)
After the Bormann case concluded, summations for the defense
resumed.
Robert Jackson stopped coming to court, using the time instead to draft
his own closing argument--one that he hoped would make a strong moral
statement
to the world. Defense summations continued for over two more weeks,
finally
concluding with the closing argument for Rudolf Hess, on July 25.
The courtroom in the Palace of Justice, which had largely
emptied for
the defense summations, was full again on July 26, 1946, for the much
anticipated closing
argument of Robert Jackson. Jackson took shots at each of the
defendants in turn. His strongest attacks were reserved for
Goering.
In the dock, Goering--with perverse pride--kept a count of references
to
him. Speer and the other repentant defendants got off the
lightest.
Jackson concluded his summation with a passage from Shakespeare:
"[T]hese defendants now ask this Tribunal to say
that they
are not guilty of planning, executing, or conspiring to commit this
long
list of crimes and wrongs. They stand before the record of this Trial
as
bloodstained Gloucester stood by the body of his slain king. He begged
of the widow, as they beg of you: 'Say I slew them not.' And the Queen
replied, 'Then say they were not slain. But dead they are...' If you
were
to say of these men that they are not guilty, it would be as true to
say
that there has been no war, there are no slain, there has been no
crime."
The last stage of the long trial was a defense of the Nazi
organizations,
followed by final statements by each of the defendants. On
Saturday,
August 31, the first of the indicted defendants, Hermann Goering, moved
to the middle of the dock where a guard held before him a microphone
suspended
from a pole. Goering told the court that the trial had been
nothing
more than an exercise of power by the victors of a war: justice, he
said,
had nothing to do with it. Rudolf Hess offered an odd final
statement,
filled with references to visitors with "strange" and "glassy"
eyes.
He ended by saying it had been his "pleasure" to work "under the
greatest
son which my people produced in its thousand-year history." Some
defendants offered apologies. Some wept. Albert Speer
offered
a warning. He spoke of the even more destructive weapons now
being
produced and the need to eliminate war once and for all. "This
trial
must contribute to the prevention of wars in the future," Speer
said.
"May God protect Germany and the culture of the West."
On Tuesday, October 1, the twenty-one defendants filed into
the courtroom
for the last time to receive the verdicts
of the tribunal. Sir Geoffrey Lawrence told the defendants that
they
must remain seated while he announced the verdicts. He began with
Goering: "The defendant, Hermann Goering, was the moving force for
aggressive
war, second only to Adolf Hitler....He directed Himmler and Heydrich to
'bring about a complete solution of the Jewish question.'" There was no
mitigating evidence. Guilty on all four counts. Lawrence
continued
with the verdicts. In all, eighteen defendants were convicted on
one or more count, three (Schact,
Von
Papen, and Fritzsche)
were found not guilty. The three acquitted defendants did not
have
long to enjoy their victory. In a press room surrounded by
reporters,
they received from a German policeman warrants for their arrests.
They were to next be tried in German courts for alleged violations of
German
law.
Sentences were announced in the afternoon for the convicted
defendants.
Again, Lawrence began with Goering:
"The International Military Tribunal sentences you to death by
hanging."
Goering, without expression, turned and left the courtroom. Ten
other
defendants (Ribbentrop,
Keitel,
Rosenberg,
Frank,
Frick,
Kaltenbrunner,
Streicher,
Sauckel,
Jodl,
and Seyss-Inquart)
were also told they would die on a rope. Life sentences were handed
down
to Hess,
Funk,
and Raeder.
Von
Schirach and Speer
received 20-year sentences, Von
Neurath a 15-year sentence, while Doenitz
got a 10-year sentence. The trial had lasted 315 days.
Over the next two weeks, the condemned men met for the last
times with
family members and talked with their lawyers about their last-ditch
appeal
to the Allied Control Council, which had the power to reduce or commute
sentences. On October 9, the Allied Control Council, composed of
one member from each of the four occupying powers, met in London to
discuss
appeals from the IMT. After over three hours of debate, the ACC
voted
to reject all appeals. Four days later, the prisoners were
informed
that there last thin hope had disappeared.
On October 15, the day before the scheduled executions,
Goering sat
at the small desk in his prison cell and wrote a note:
"To the Allied Control Council:
I would have had no objection to being shot. However, I will
not facilitate execution of Germany's Reichsmarschall by hanging! For
the
sake of Germany, I cannot permit this. Moreover, I feel no moral
obligation to submit to my enemies' punishment. For this reason,
I have chosen to die like the great Hannibal."
Then Goering removed a smuggled cyanide pill and put it in his mouth.
At
10:44 p.m., a guard noticed saw Goering bring his arm to his face and
then
began making choking sounds. A doctor was called. He
arrived
just in time to see Goering take his last breath.
A few hours later, at 1:11 a.m. on October 16, Joachim von
Ribbentrop
walked to the gallows constructed in the gymnasium of the Palace of
Justice.
Asked if he had any last words, he said, "I wish peace to the
world."
A black hood was pulled down across his head and the noose was slipped
around his neck. A trapdoor opened. Two minutes later, the
next in line, Field Marshal Keitel, stepped up the gallows
stairs.
By 2:45 a.m., it was all over.
AFTERMATH
Trials of Germans continued in Nuremberg for over two more
years. The
International Military Tribunal was done with its work, however.
All judges for the subsequent
Nuremberg trials would be drawn from the American judiciary.
The Nuremberg trials continue to generate discussion. Questions
are
raised both about the legitimacy of the tribunals and the
appropriateness
of individual verdicts they reached.
More important, perhaps, is the question of whether
Nuremberg mattered.
No one could deny that the trials served to provide thorough
documentation
of Nazi crimes. In over half a century, the images and testimony
that came out of Nuremberg have not lost their capacity to shock.
The trials also helped expose many of the defendants for the criminals
they were, thus denying them a martyrdom in the eyes of the German
public
that they might otherwise have achieved. There are no statues
commemorating
Nazi war heroes. The revelations of Nuremberg may also have
contributed
to building democracy in Germany. The Nuremberg trials did not,
however,
fulfill the grandest dreams of those who advocated them. They
have
not succeeded in ending wars of aggression. They have not put an
end to genocide. Crimes against humanity are with us still.