21 Nov. 45
these defendants should succeed, for any reason, in escaping the
condemnation of this Tribunal, or if they obstruct or abort this
trial, those who are American-held prisoners will be delivered up to
our continental Allies. For these defendants, however, we have set up
an International Tribunal and have undertaken the burden of
participating in a complicated effort to give them fair and
dispassionate hearings. That is the best-known protection to any man
with a defense worthy of being heard.
If these men are the first war leaders of a defeated nation to be
prosecuted in the name of the law, they are also the first to be
given a chance to plead for their lives in the name of the law.
Realistically, the Charter of this Tribunal, which gives them a
hearing, is also the source of their only hope. It may be that these
men of troubled conscience, whose only wish is that the world forget
them, do not regard a trial as a favor. But they do have a fair
opportunity to defend themselves--a favor which these men, when in
power, rarely extended to their fellow countrymen. Despite the fact
that public opinion already condemns their acts, we agree that here
they must be given a presumption of innocence, and we accept the
burden of proving criminal acts and the responsibility of these
defendants for their commission.
When I say that we do not ask for convictions unless we prove
crime, I do not mean mere technical or incidental transgression of
international conventions. We charge guilt on planned and intended
conduct that involves moral as well as legal wrong. And we do not
mean conduct that is a natural and human, even if illegal, cutting of
corners, such as many of us might well have committed had we been in
the defendants' positions. It is not because they yielded to the
normal frailties of human beings that we accuse them. It is their
abnormal and inhuman conduct which brings them to this bar.
We will not ask you to convict these men on the testimony of
their foes. There is no count in the Indictment that cannot be proved
by books and records. The Germans were always meticulous record
keepers, and these defendants had their share of the Teutonic passion
for thoroughness in putting things on paper. Nor were they without
vanity. They arranged frequently to be photographed in action. We
will show you their own films. You will see their own conduct and
hear their own voices as these defendants re-enact for you, from the
screen, some of the events in the course of the conspiracy.
We would also make clear that we have no purpose to incriminate
the whole German people. We know that the Nazi Party was not put in
power by a majority of the German vote.