26 Nov. 45
I indicated to the Tribunal that after proving the corpus of the
crime in this way I would follow the presentation of this evidence
with a more or less chronological presentation of the case on
aggressive war, producing evidence in greater detail of the relevant
activities of the conspirators from 1933 to 1941.
As the members of the Tribunal may understand, it is easier to
make plans about presentation than to keep them. There have been, by
necessity, some changes in our plans. I indicated on Friday that to a
certain extent the American case under Count One and the British case
under Count Two would interlock. The British Chief Prosecutor, Sir
Hartley Shawcross, is by force of circumstances, required to be in
London this week. He expects to be back next week. The intention now
is that when he returns Monday he will make his opening statement
covering Count Two of the Indictment and such interrelated parts of
Count One of the Indictment as have not by then been presented. So
that what is at the moment planned, if it meets with the Court's
views, is that I shall continue, as far as I may within 2 days of
this week, on the detailed story as to aggressive war; that thereupon
we shall alter the presentation and present some other matters coming
under Count One. Then, following the British Chief Prosecutor's
opening statement on Monday of next week, we shall continue jointly
with the chapters on Poland, Russia, and Japan, as parts of both
Count One and Two. While that may not be strictly logical, it seems
to us the best method with which to proceed under the circumstances.
I turn now to the period of 1933 to 1936, a period characterized
by an orderly, planned sequence of preparations for war. This is the
period covered by Paragraphs 1 and 2 of IV (F) of the Indictment.
This may be found at Page 7 of the printed English text of the
Indictment.
The essential character of this period was the formulation and
execution of the plan to rearm and to reoccupy and fortify the
Rhineland in violation of the Treaty of Versailles and other
treaties, in order to acquire military strength and political
bargaining power to be used against other nations.
Hitler's own eloquence in a secret speech delivered to all
Supreme Commanders on 23 November 1939, at 1200 hours, is sufficient
to characterize this phase of the Nazi conspiracy. This document
comes to hand as a captured document found in the OKW files-OKW is
Ober Kommando der Wehrmacht (the High Command of the Army, Chief of
the High Command of the Armed Forces)-and was captured at Flensburg.
The document is numbered 789-PS in our numbered series of documents.