early days of the Nazi regime, were responsible for
Nazi Germany's rapid rise as a military power. But rearmament of
itself is not criminal under the Charter. To be a Crime against Peace
under Article 6 of the Charter it must be shown that Schacht carried
out this rearmament as part of the Nazi plans to wage aggressive
wars.
Schacht has contended that he participated in the rearmament
program only because he wanted to build up a strong and independent
Germany which would carry out a foreign policy which would command
respect on an equal basis with other European countries; that when he
discovered that the Nazis were rearming for aggressive purposes he
attempted to slow down the speed of rearmament; and that after the
dismissal of Von Fritsch and Von Blomberg he participated in plans to
get rid of Hitler, first by deposing him and later by assassination.
Schacht, as early as 1936, began to advocate a limitation of the
rearmament program for financial reasons. Had the policies advocated
by him been put into effect, Germany would not have been prepared for
a general European war. Insistence on his policies led to his
eventual dismissal from all positions of economic significance in
Germany. On the other hand, Schacht, with his intimate knowledge of
German finance, was in a peculiarly good position to understand the
true significance of Hitler's frantic rearmament, and to realize that
the economic policy adopted was consistent only with war as its
object.
Moreover Schacht continued to participate in German economic life
and even, in a minor way, in some of the early Nazi aggressions.
Prior to the occupation of Austria he set a rate of exchange between
the mark and the schilling. After the occupation of Austria he
arranged for the incorporation of the Austrian National Bank into the
Reichsbank and made a violently pro-Nazi speech in which he stated
that the Reichsbank would always be Nazi as long as he was connected
with it, praised Hitler, defended the occupation of Austria, scoffed
at objections to the way it was carried out, and ended with "to
our Führer a triple 'Sieg Heil." He has not contended that
this speech did not represent his state of mind at the time. After
the occupation of the Sudetenland, he arranged for currency
conversion and for the incorporation into the Reichsbank of local
Czech banks of issue. On 29 November 1938 he made a speech in which
he pointed with pride to his economic policy which had created the
high degree of German armament, and added that this armament had made
Germany's foreign policy possible.
Schacht was not involved in the planning of any of the specific
wars of aggression charged in Count Two. His participation in the
occupation of Austria and the Sudetenland (neither of which are
charged as aggressive wars) was on such a limited basis that it does
not amount to participation in the common plan charged in Count