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22 Nov.
45
Afternoon Session
MR. DODD: If Your Honor pleases, if I may go
back for just a very little bit to take up the train of thought where I
left off at the noon recess.
We were discussing the document,
bearing the number D-203, and I had referred particularly to the third
page of that document, and even more particularly to the second
paragraph on that page and I wish to read from a sentence approximately
8 or 10 lines down m that second paragraph, which reads as follows:
"The
question of restoration of the Wehrmacht will not be decided at Geneva
but in Germany, when we have gained internal strength through internal
peace." I wish to refer
again to the same page of the same document, and to the last paragraph
and the last sentence, with reference to the Defendant Göring, who
was present at that same meeting to which this document refers, the
meeting of February 20, 1933 in Berlin. Göring said that the
sacrifices asked for surely would be so much easier for industry to bear
if it realized that the election of March 5th will surely be the last
one for the next 10 years probably even for the next 100 years.
In
a memorandum dated the 22d day of February 1933, and for the information
of the Court, in the document book bearing the number D-204, Gustav
Krupp described this meeting briefly, and in the memorandum wrote that
he had expressed to Hitler the gratitude of the 25 industrialists
present at the meeting on February 20, 1933.
There
are other expressions in that memorandum, which we do not deem to be
particularly pertinent to the allegations of the Indictment with which
we are now concerned. It is also to establish the corroboration of the
affidavit of Puhl that the meeting was held.
I
might point out to the Court that this memorandum, together with the
report of the speech of Hitler, were found by the British and the United
States armies in the personal files of the Defendant Krupp.
I
am aware, if Your Honors please, that the method I am pursuing here is a
little tedious, because I am trying to refer specifically to the
documents, and particularly to the excerpts referred to in my remarks,
and therefore this presentation differs very considerably from that
which has gone before. I trust, however, that you will bear with me,
because this part of the case requires some rather careful and detailed
explanations.
In April of 1933, after Hitler had entrenched
himself in power, Gustav Krupp, as chairman of the Reich Association of
German
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