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negative; he stated that this question could be decided only by
experiment.
In addition there was another question to be decided, as to whether in case of
shipwreck it would be more desirable to endure thirst, or whether marooned
fliers should be advised to drink small quantities of salt water. In 1942-1944
this question was also raised in the United States and England and there, too,
human experiments were carried out. But all these individual questions were
only part of the great issue of how shipwrecked persons could be helped to
escape the agony and danger of dying from thirst. These issues were the basis
for the experiments conducted in 1944. In my opinion it is not admissible to
construe arbitrarily another issue today and to contend on the basis of such
issue, which never existed, that these experiments were not necessary. These
medical issues alone necessitated the experiments. There were other issues too,
to which I want to make short reference.
Until 1944 the world lacked an agent to make sea water drinkable. Such an agent
was an absolute necessity. Nobody denied even then that Wofatit, developed by
the defendant Schaefer, would have been an ideal agent for this purpose. It
was, however, equally clear that this agent could only be manufactured by
withdrawing the necessary raw material, namely silver, from other war-essential
uses.
Furthermore, it was not denied that Berkatit did not require critical raw
materials in the same measure. Another circumstance to be considered was that
Berkatit could have been produced in existing plants, whereas it would have
been necessary to erect new plants for the production of Wofatit. Accordingly,
these technical reasons favored the introduction of Berkatit. It can hardly be
denied that it was necessary for a medical officer conscious of his
responsibilities in war to consider these reasons when reaching a decision.
Incidentally, the expert of the prosecution, Professor Ivy, also stated that
these reasons were definitely worthy of consideration.
Accordingly it had to be clarified, whether Berkatit could not, after all, be
introduced for distribution to persons facing the risk of shipwreck, and the
inquiry into this question was all the more necessary as, according to the
opinion of Professor Eppinger and Professor Heubner, Berkatit apparently
contained vitamins which eliminated the risks incurred by human beings when
drinking sea water. Whether the opinion of the experts, Heubner and Eppinger,
was right or not, could, at that time as today, only be established by
experiment.
Hence if the defendant Dr. Becker-Freyseng, who examined
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