21 Nov. 45
We know it came to power by an evil alliance between the most
extreme of the Nazi revolutionists, the most unrestrained of the
German reactionaries, and the most aggressive of the German
militarists. If the German populace had willingly accepted the Nazi
program, no Storm-troopers would have been needed in the early days
of the Party and there would have been no need for concentration
camps or the Gestapo, both of which institutions were inaugurated as
soon as the Nazis gained control of the German State. Only after
these lawless innovations proved successful at home were they taken
abroad.
The German people should know by now that the people of the
United States hold them in no fear, and in no hate. It is true that
the Germans have taught us the horrors of modern warfare, but the
ruin that lies from the Rhine to the Danube shows that we, like our
Allies, have not been dull pupils. If we are not awed by German
fortitude and proficiency in war, and if we are not persuaded of
their political maturity, we do respect their skill in the arts of
peace, their technical competence, and the sober, industrious, and
self-disciplined character of the masses of the German people. In
1933 we saw the German people recovering prestige in the commercial,
industrial, and artistic world after the set-back of the last war. We
beheld their progress neither with envy nor malice. The Nazi regime
interrupted this advance. The recoil of the Nazi aggression has left
Germany in ruins. The Nazi readiness to pledge the German word
without hesitation and to break it without shame has fastened upon
German diplomacy a reputation for duplicity that will handicap it for
years. Nazi arrogance has made the boast of the "master
race" a taunt that will be thrown at Germans the world over for
generations The Nazi nightmare has given the German name a new and
sinister significance throughout the world which will retard Germany
a century. The German, no less than the non-German world, has
accounts to settle with these defendants.
The fact of the war and the course of the war, which is the
central theme of our case, is history. From September 1st, 1939, when
the German armies crossed the Polish frontier, until September 1942,
when they met epic resistance at Stalingrad, German arms seemed
invincible. Denmark and Norway, the Netherlands and France, Belgium
and Luxembourg, the Balkans and Africa, Poland and the Baltic States,
and parts of Russia, all had been overrun and conquered by swift,
powerful, well-aimed blows. That attack on the peace of the world is
the crime against international society which brings into
international cognizance crimes in its aid and preparation which
otherwise might be only internal concerns.