Reconsidering
the Nuremberg Trials
"It is the victors who write the history."
...Patrick J. Buchanan
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"[The Nuremberg] war-crimes trials were based upon a complete disregard
of sound legal precedents, principles and procedures. The court had no
real jurisdiction over the accused or their offenses; it invented ex post
facto crimes; it permitted the accusers to act as prosecutors, judges,
jury and executioners; and it admitted to the group of prosecutors those
who had been guilty of crimes as numerous and atrocious as those with which
the accused were charged. Hence, it is not surprising that these trials
degraded international jurisprudence as never before in human experience."
Professor Harry Elmer Barnes, Ph.D.
Thompson, and Strutz ed., Doenitz at Nuremberg: A Re-appraisal,(Torrance:
Institute for Historical Review, 1983) p.148.
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"Unfortunately, humanity does not seem to have advanced beyond the motto,
'The winner is always right'."
Lieutenant General Fahri Belen, Turkish Army
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 17.
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"It is not right to bring to trial officers or men who have acted under
orders from higher authority... The most brutal act of the War was the
droppingof the Atom Bombs on Japan... I consider it wrong to try Admirals,
Generals, and Air Marshals for carrying out definite orders from the highest
authority...the Allies were far from guiltless and should have taken that
into fuller consideration."
Admiral of the Fleet, Lord Chatfield, P.C., G.C.B.
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 7.
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"I consider the War Trials as one of the more disgraceful manifestations
of the past war hysteria."
Vice Admiral, Richard H. Cruzen, U.S.N.
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 39.
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"No matter how many books are written or briefs filed, no matter how finely
the lawyers analyzed it, the crime for which the Nazis were tried had never
been formalized as a crime with the definiteness required by our legal
standards, nor outlawed with a death penalty by the international community.
By our standards that crime arose under an ex post facto law. Goering et
al deserved severe punishment. But their guilt did not justify us in substituting
power for principle."
U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas
Kennedy, Profiles in Courage, (New York: Harper & Row, 1964),p.190.
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"I think the Nuremberg trials are a black page in the history of the world...I
discussed the legality of these trials with some of the lawyers and some
of the judges who participated therein. They did not attempt to justify
their action on any legal ground, but rested their position on the fact
that in their opinion, the parties convicted were guilty...This action
is contrary to the fundamental laws under which this country has lived
for many hundreds of years, and I think cannot be justified by any line
of reasoning. I think the Israeli trial of Adolf Eichmann is exactly in
the same category as the Nuremberg trials. As a lawyer, it has always been
my view that a crime must be defined before you can be guilty of committing
it. That has not occurred in either of the trials I refer to herein."
Edgar N. Eisenhower, American Attorney, brother of President
Dwight D.Eisenhower
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p.168.
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"I was from the beginning very unhappy about the Nuremberg trials... the
weak points of such trials are obvious: they are trials of the vanquished
by the victors instead of by an impartial tribunal; futhermore the trials
are only of the crimes committed by the vanquished, and the fact that the
Katyn massacre of Polish officers was never properly investigated casts
doubt on the conduct of such trials."
T.S. Eliot, English poet and author
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 51.
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"My opinion always has been that the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials were acts
of vengeance. War is a political and not a legal act, and if at the termination
of a war, should it be considered that certain of the enemy's leaders are
politically too dangerous to be left at large, then, as Napoleon was, they
should be banished to some island. To bring them to trial under post facto
law, concocted to convict them, is a piece of hideous hypocrisy and humbug."
Major General J.F.C. Fuller, C.B., C.B.E., D.S.O.
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p.43.
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"This kangaroo court at Nuremburg was officially known as the 'InternationalMilitary
Tribunal.' That name is a libel on the military profession. The tribunal
was not a military one in any sense. The only military men among the judges
were the Russians.... At Nuremberg, mankind and our present civilization
were on trial, with men whose own hands were bloody sitting on the judges'
seats. One of the judges came from the country which committedthe Katyn
Forest massacre and produced an array of witnesses to swear atNuremberg
that the Germans had done it."
Rear Admiral, U.S.N. Dan V. Gallery
Thompson, and Strutz ed., pp.XXI-XXII.
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"I am quite clear that any trial of defeated foes by their victors is a
mistake and a precedent which should not be followed among what are commonly
describedas civilised nations."
Dr. George Peabody Gooch, C.H., British historian and author.
Thompson, and Strutz ed.,p.87.
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"It was clear from the outset that a death sentence would be pronounced
against me, as I have always regarded the trial as a purely political act
by the victors, but I wanted to see this trial through for my people's
sake and I did at least expect that I should not be denied a soldier's
death. Before God, my country, and my conscience I feel myself free of
the blame that an enemy tribunal has attached to me."
Reichsmarschall Herman Göring
David Irving, Göring: A Biography, (New York: William Morrow
and Co.,1989) p.506.
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"I may, and do, say that I have always regarded the Nuremberg prosecutions
as a step backward in international law, and a precedent that will prove
embarrassing, if not disastrous, in the future."
Honorable Justice Learned Hand
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 1.
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"I have a very long record of opposition to the holding of these trials,
which began with speeches in the House of Lords during the war and has
continued ever since."
The Rt. Hon. Lord Hankey, P.C., G.C.B., G.C.M.G., G.C.V.O.,
LL.D.
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 50.
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"The designation and definition by the London Charter of the so-called
crimes with which the defendants were charged, after such so-called offenses
were committed, clearly violated the well-established rule against ex post
facto legislation in criminal matters. The generally accepted doctrine
is expressedin the adage: "Nullum Crimen Sine Lege" - a person cannot
be sentencedto punishment for a crime unless he had infringed a law in
force at the time he committed the offense and unless that law prescribed
the penalty. Courts in passing on this proposition had declared that: "It
is to be observed that this maxim is not a limitation of sovereignty, but
is a general principle of justice adhered to by all civilized nations."
In my opinion, there was no legal justification for the trial, conviction
or sentence of the so-called "war criminals" by the Nuremberg Tribunal.
We have set a bad precedent. It should not be followed in the future.
William L. Hart, Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p.xx.
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"The Nuremberg Trials... had been popular throughout the world and particularly
in the United States. Equally popular was the sentence already announced
by the high tribunal: death. But what kind of trial was this? ...The Constitution
was not a collection of loosely given political promises subject to broad
interpretation. It was not a list of pleasing platitudes to be set lightly
aside when expediency required it. It was the foundation of the American
system of law and justice and [Robert Taft] was repelled by the picture
of his country discarding those Constitutional precepts in order to punish
a vanquished enemy."
U.S. President, John F. Kennedy
John Kennedy, Profiles in Courage p.189-190.
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"The war crimes trials were a reversion to the ancient practice of the
savage extermination of a defeated enemy and particularly of its leaders.
The precedent set by these trials will continue to plague their authors."
Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, U.S.N.
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 42.
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"I could never accept the Nuremberg Trials as representing a fair and just
procedure."
Dr. Igor I. Sikorsky
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p.3.
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"About this whole judgment there is the spirit of vengeance, and vengeance
is seldom justice. The hanging of the eleven men convicted will be a blot
on the American record which we shall long regret."
U.S. Senator Robert A. Taft
Kennedy, Profiles in Courage, p.191.
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"I have always regarded the Nuremberg Trials as a travesty upon justice
andthe farce was made even more noisome with Russia partipating as one
of thejudges."
Charles Callan Tansill, Ph.D.
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 47.
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"To me the Nuremberg trials have always been totally inexcusable and a
horrible travesty on justice. This is especially true when such trials
are used to punish the men of the military services who were directing
those services in time of war, and thus giving nothing more than an expression
of the basic purposes of their whole adult life. In the execution of their
wartime duties, these officers naturally carried out, to the letter, the
orders and directions which they received from the head of their government.
If an officer... should ever, for one instant, consider disregard or
disobedienceto his government's orders, all cohesion in the military services
would fail, from that moment, and the military sevices would fail in the
one reason for their existence - the waging of successful war in the interests
of their country."
Rear Admiral Robert A. Theobald, U.S.N.
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p.39.
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"My conclusion is that the entire program of War Crimes Trials, either
by International Courts, the members of which comprise those of the victorious
nations, or by Military Courts of a single victor nation is basically without
legal or moral authority... The fact remains that the victor nations in
WorldWar II, while still at fever heat of hatred for an enemy nation, found
patriots of the enemy nation guilty for doing their patriotic duty. This
is patently unlawful and immoral.
One of the most shameful incidents connected with the War Crimes Trials
prosecutions has to do with the investigations and the preparation of the
cases for trial. The records of trials which our Commission examined disclosed
that a great majority of the official investigators, employed by the United
States Government to secure evidence and to locate defendants, were persons
with a preconceived dislike for these enemy aliens, and their conduct was
such that they resorted to a number of illegal, unfair, and cruel methods
and duress to secure confessions of guilt and to secure accusations by
defendants against other defendants. In fact, in the Malmedy case, the
only evidence before the court, upon which the convictions and sentences
were based, consisted of the statements and testimony of the defendants
themselves. The testimony of one defendant against another was secured
by subterfuge, false promises of immunity, and by mock trials and threats."
Honorable Edward Leroy Van Roden, President Judge
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p. 67.
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"The Tribunal claimed in theory the right -- it certainly had the power
--to declare any act a war-crime. But it interpreted Article 6 of the Charter
creating it, as excluding from its consideration any act committed by the
victorious powers. As a consequence any act proved to have been committedby
the victorious powers could not be declared by the Tribunal a war-crime.
For this reason, the indiscriminate bombing of civilians which had indisputably
been initiated by Great Britain was excluded from consideration as a war
crime by the Tribunal."
F.J.P. Veale, English jurist and author
Thompson, and Strutz ed., p.146.
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