say they had to obey; when confronted with Hitler's
brutal crimes. which are shown to have been within their general
knowledge, they say they disobeyed. The truth is they actively
participated in all these crimes, or sat silent and acquiescent,
witnessing the commission of crimes on a scale larger and more
shocking than the world has ever had the misfortune to know. This
must be said.
Where the facts warrant it, these men should be brought to trial
so that those among them who are guilty of these crimes should not
escape punishment.
Article 26 of the Charter provides that the Judgment of the
Tribunal as to the guilt or innocence of any Defendant shall give the
reasons on which it is based.
The Tribunal will now state those reasons in declaring its
Judgment on such guilt or innocence.
GÖRING
Göring is indicted on all four Counts. The
evidence shows that after Hitler he was the most prominent man in the
Nazi regime. He was Commander-in-Chief of the Luftwaffe,
Plenipotentiary for the Four Year Plan, and had tremendous influence
with Hitler, at least until 1943 when their relationship
deteriorated, ending in his arrest in 1945. He testified that Hitler
kept him informed of all important military and political problems.
Crimes against Peace
From the moment he joined the Party in 1922 and
took command of the street-fighting organization, the SA, Göring
was the adviser, the active agent of Hitler, and one of the prime
leaders of the Nazi movement. As Hitler's political deputy he was
largely instrumental in bringing the National Socialists to power in
1933, and was charged with consolidating this power and expanding
German armed might. He developed the Gestapo, and created the first
concentration camps, relinquishing them to Himmler in 1934, conducted
the Röhm purge in that year, and engineered the sordid
proceedings which resulted in the removal of Von Blomberg and Von
Fritsch from the Army. In 1936 he became Plenipotentiary for the Four
Year Plan, and in theory and in practice was the economic dictator of
the Reich. Shortly after the Pact of Munich, he announced that he
would embark on a five-fold expansion of the Luftwaffe, and speed
rearmament with emphasis on offensive weapons.
Göring was one of the five important leaders present at the
Hossbach Conference of 5 November 1937, and he attended the other
important conferences already discussed in this Judgment. In the
Austrian Anschluss, he was indeed the central figure, the ringleader.