4 Jan. 46
expansion of the Armed Forces beyond the limits set by
treaties. The objectives which they had in mind are obvious, and in
these documents and affidavits we see the Nazis and the generals in
agreement upon the basic objective of aggrandizing Germany by force or
threat of force and collaborating to build up the armed might of
Germany, in order to make possible the subsequent acts of aggression. We
turn now to an examination of those particular acts of aggression which
have already been described to the Tribunal in general, with the
particular purpose of noting participation in these criminal acts by the
General Staff and High Command group.
I may say, Your Lordship, that in going over this material, in order to
save time I propose to read from a very few documents. There are large
numbers of documents. Accordingly, when I cite them I think there is
probably no need for the Tribunal to try to find them in the documents
before it. Most of them are documents already in evidence and I propose
to cite them for purposes of recapitulation, without reading very much.
The Tribunal will recall that Mr. Alderman read into the transcript
portions of a document, 386-PS, Exhibit Number USA-25, consisting of
notes by Colonel Hossbach on a conference which was held in the German
Chancellery in Berlin on the 5th of November 1937. Hitler presided at
this conference, which was a small and highly secret one; and the only
other participants were the four principal military leaders and the
Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Defendant Neurath. The four chief
leaders of the Armed Forces Blomberg, who was then Reich Minister
of War, and the commander-in-chief of the three branches of the Armed
Forces: Von Fritsch for the Army, Raeder for the Navy, and Göring
for the Air Force were present. Hitler embarked on a general
discussion of Germany's diplomatic and military policy and stated that
the conquest of Austria and Czechoslovakia was an essential preliminary
"for the improvement of our military and political position"
and "in order to remove any threat from the flanks."
The military and political advantages which were envisaged included the
acquisition of a new source of food, shorter and better frontiers, the
release of troops for other tasks, and the possibility of forming new
divisions from the population of the conquered territories. Blomberg and
Von Fritsch joined in the discussion and Von Fritsch stated that he was
making a study to investigate "the possibilities of carrying out
operations against Czechoslovakia with special consideration for the
conquest of the Czechoslovakian system of fortifications."
The following spring, in March 1938, the German plans with respect to
Austria came to fruition. Mr. Alderman has already read into the record
portions of the diary kept by the Defendant Jodl.