21 Nov. 45
Among the nations which unite in accusing these defendants the
United States is perhaps in a position to be the most dispassionate,
for, having sustained the least injury, it is perhaps the least
animated by vengeance. Our American cities have not been bombed by
day and by night, by humans, and by robots. It is not our temples
that had been laid in ruins. Our countrymen have not had their homes
destroyed over their heads. The menace of Nazi aggression, except to
those in actual service, has seemed less personal and immediate to us
than to European peoples. But while the United States is not first in
rancor, it is not second in determination that the forces of law and
order be made equal to the task of dealing with such international
lawlessness as I have recited here.
Twice in my lifetime, the United States has sent its young
manhood across the Atlantic, drained its resources, and burdened
itself with debt to help defeat Germany. But the real hope and faith
that has sustained the American people in these great efforts was
that victory for ourselves and our Allies would lay the basis for an
ordered international relationship in Europe and would end the
centuries of strife on this embattled continent.
Twice we have held back in the early stages of European conflict
in the belief that it might be confined to a purely European affair.
In the United States, we have tried to build an economy without
armament, a system of government without militarism, and a society
where men are not regimented for war. This purpose, we know now, can
never be realized if the world periodically is to be embroiled in
war. The United States cannot, generation after generation, throw its
youth or its resources on to the battlefields of Europe to redress
the lack of balance between Germany's strength and that of her
enemies, and to keep the battles from our shores.
The American dream of a peace-and-plenty economy, as well as the
hopes of other nations, can never be fulfilled if those nations are
involved in a war every generation so vast and devastating as to
crush the generation that fights and burden the generation that
follows. But experience has shown that wars are no longer local. All
modern wars become world wars eventually. And none of the big nations
at least can stay out. If we cannot stay out of wars, our only hope
is to prevent wars.
I am too well aware of the weaknesses of juridical action alone
to contend that in itself your decision under this Charter can
prevent future wars. Judicial action always comes after the event.
Wars are started only on the theory and in the confidence that they
can be won. Personal punishment, to be suffered only in the event the
war is lost, will probably not be a sufficient deterrent to