The identity and membership of the groups or
organizations referred to in the foregoing titles are hereinafter in
Appendix B more particularly defined
COUNT ONE-THE COMMON
PLAN OR CONSPIRACY
(Charter, Article 6, especially 6 (a) )
III.
Statement of the Offense
All the defendants, with divers other persons,
during a period of years preceding 8 May 1945, participated as
leaders, organizers, instigators. or accomplices in the formulation
or execution of a common plan or conspiracy to commit, or which
involved the commission of, Crimes against Peace, War Crimes, and
Crimes against Humanity, as defined in the Charter of this Tribunal,
and, in accordance with the provisions of the Charter, are
individually responsible for their own acts and for all acts
committed by any persons in the execution of such plan or conspiracy.
The common plan or conspiracy embraced the commission of Crimes
against Peace, in that the defendants planned, prepared, initiated,
and waged wars of aggression, which were also wars in violation of
international treaties, agreements, or assurances. In the development
and course of the common plan or conspiracy it came to embrace the
commission of War Crimes, in that it contemplated, and the defendants
determined upon and carried out, ruthless wars against countries and
populations, in violation of the rules and customs of war, including
as typical and systematic means by which the wars were prosecuted,
murder, ill-treatment, deportation for slave labor and for other
purposes of civilian populations of occupied territories, murder and
ill-treatment of prisoners of war and of persons on the high seas,
the taking and killing of hostages, the plunder of public and private
property, the indiscriminate destruction of cities, towns, and
villages, and devastation not justified by military necessity. The
common plan or conspiracy contemplated and came to embrace as typical
and systematic means, and the defendants determined upon and
committed, Crimes against Humanity, both within Germany and within
occupied territories, including murder, extermination, enslavement,
deportation, and other inhumane acts committed against civilian
populations before and during the war, and persecutions on political,
racial, or religious grounds, in execution of the plan for preparing
and prosecuting aggressive or illegal wars, many of such acts and
persecutions being violations of the domestic laws of the countries
where perpetrated.