4 Jan. 46
they were unwitting or that they did not participate
fully in many of the crimes which we will bring to the notice of the
Tribunal. The willingness and, indeed, the eagerness of
the German professional officer corps to become partners of the Nazis,
will be fully developed.
Your Lordship, there will be three principal parts to this
presentation. There will be first a description of the composition and
functioning of the General Staff and High Command group as defined in
the Indictment; next, the evidence in support of the charges of
criminality under Counts One and Two of the Indictment; finally, the
evidence in support of the charges under Counts Three and Four.
The members of the Tribunal should have before them three document
books which have been given the designation "CC." The first of
these books is a series of sworn statements or affidavits which are
available to the Tribunal in English, Russian, and French and which have
been available to the defendants in German. The second and third books
are the usual type of document books, separated merely for convenience
of handling. The second book contains documents in the C- and L-series,
and the third book, in the PS- and R-series. For the convenience of the
Tribunal we have had handed up a list of these documents in the order in
which they will be referred to.
The Tribunal should also have one other document, and that is a short
mimeographed statement entitled, "Basic Information on the
Organization of the German Armed Forces." That has also been handed
up in English, Russian, and French and has been made available to the
defendants' Information Center in German.
So I turn first to the description of the group as defined in the
Indictment.
During the first World War there was an organization in the German
Armed Forces known as the Great General Staff. This name, the German
General Staff or Great General Staff, persists in the public mind; but
the Grosse Generalstab no longer exists in fact. There has been no such
single organization, no single German General Staff, since 1918; but
there has, of course, been a group of men responsible for the policy and
the acts of the German Armed Forces, and the fact that these men have no
single collective name does not prevent us from collecting them
together. They cannot escape the consequences of their collective acts
by combining informally instead of formally. The essence of a general
staff or a high command lies, not in the name you give it, but in the
functions it performs; and the men comprised within the group as we have
defined it in the Indictment do constitute a functional group, welded
together by common responsibility, of those officers who had the
principal authority and responsibility under Hitler for the plans and
operations of the German Armed Forces.