3
Dec. 45
as
United States Exhibit Number 25, which I read to
the Tribunal in my introductory statement a week
ago today.
"The question for
Germany," the Führer had informed his
military commanders at that meeting, "is
where the greatest possible conquest can be made
at the lowest cost."
At the top
of his agenda stood two countries, Austria and
Czechoslovakia.
On March 12, 1938
Austria was occupied by the German Army, and on
the following day it was annexed to the Reich.
The time had come for a redefinition of German
intentions regarding Czechoslovakia. A little
more than a month later two of the conspirators,
Hitler and Keitel, met to discuss plans for the
envelopment and conquest of the Czechoslovak
State.
Among the selected handful of
documents which I read to the Tribunal in my
introduction a week ago to establish the corpus
of the crime of aggressive war was the account
of this meeting on 21 April 1938. This account
is Item 2 in our Document Number 388-PS, as
United States Exhibit Number 26.
The
Tribunal will recall that Hitler and Keitel
discussed the pretext which Germany might
develop to serve as an excuse for a sudden and
overwhelming attack. They considered the
provocation of a period of diplomatic squabbling
which, growing more serious, would lead to an
excuse for war. In the alternativeand this
alternative they found to be preferablethey
planned to unleash a lightning attack as the
result of an incident of their own creation.
Consideration, as we alleged in the
Indictment and as the document proved, was given
to the assassination of the German Minister at
Prague to create the requisite incident.
The
necessity of propaganda to guide the conduct of
Germans in Czechoslovakia and to intimidate the
Czechs was recognized. Problems of transport and
tactics were discussed, with a view to
overcoming all Czechoslovak resistance within 4
days, thus presenting the world with a fait
accompli and forestalling outside
interventions.
Thus, in mid-April
1938, the designs of the Nazi conspirators to
conquer Czechoslovakia had already reached the
stage of practical planning.
Now all
of that occurred, if the Tribunal please,
against a background of friendly diplomatic
relations. This conspiracy must be viewed
against that background. Although they had, in
the fall of 1937, determined to destroy the
Czechoslovak State, the leaders of the German
Government were bound by a treaty of arbitration
and assurances freely given, to observe the
sovereignty of Czechoslovakia By a formal treaty
signed at Locarno on 16 October 1925