21 Nov. 45
prevent a war where the warmakers feel the chances of defeat to
be negligible.
But the ultimate step in avoiding periodic wars, which are
inevitable in a system of international lawlessness, is to make
statesmen responsible to law. And let me make clear that while this
law is first applied against German aggressors, the law includes, and
if it is to serve a useful purpose it must condemn aggression by any
other nations, including those which sit here now in judgment. We are
able to do away with domestic tyranny and violence and aggression by
those in power against the rights of their own people only when we
make all men answerable to the law. This trial represents mankind's
desperate effort to apply the discipline of the law to statesmen who
have used their powers of state to attack the foundations of the
world's peace and to commit aggressions against the rights of their
neighbors.
The usefulness of this effort to do justice is not to be measured
by considering the law or your judgment in isolation. This trial is
part of the great effort to make the peace more secure. One step in
this direction is the United Nations organization, which may take
joint political action to prevent war if possible, and joint military
action to insure that any nation which starts a war will lose it.
This Charter and this Trial, implementing the Kellogg-Briand Pact,
constitute another step in the same direction-juridical action of a
kind to ensure that those who start a war will pay for it.
personally.
While the defendants and the prosecutors stand before you as
individuals, it is not the triumph of either group alone that is
committed to your judgment Above all personalities there are
anonymous and impersonal forces whose conflict makes up much of human
history. It is yours to throw the strength of the law back of either
the one or the other of these forces for at least another generation.
What are the real forces that are contending before you?
No charity can disguise the fact that the forces which these
defendants represent, the forces that would advantage and delight in
their acquittal, are the darkest and most sinister forces in
society--dictatorship and oppression, malevolence And passion,
militarism and lawlessness. By their fruits we best know them. Their
acts have bathed the world in blood and set civilization back a
century. They have subjected their European neighbors to every
outrage and torture, every spoliation and deprivation that insolence,
cruelty, and greed could inflict. They have brought the German people
to the lowest pitch of wretchedness, from which they can entertain no
hope of early deliverance. They have stirred