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{{short description|series of military trials at the end of World War II}}
{{short description|Series of military trials at the end of World War II}}
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{{for|the film|Nuremberg Trials (film){{!}}''Nuremberg Trials'' (film)}}
{{redirect|International Military Tribunal|the Tokyo Trial|International Military Tribunal for the Far East}}
{{Featured article}}
{{use dmy dates|date=April 2019}}
{{use dmy dates|date=April 2019}}
{{use shortened footnotes|date=August 2022}}
{{redirect|International Military Tribunal|the Tokyo trials|International Military Tribunal for the Far East|the 1947 Soviet film about the trials|Nuremberg Trials (film)}}
{{Coord|49|27.2603|N|11|02.9103|E|region:DE_type:event|display=title}}
{{Infobox court case
{{Infobox court case
|name = {{noitalic|Nuremberg trials}}
| name = {{noitalic|International Military Tribunal}}
| image = Color photograph of judges' bench at IMT.jpg
|court = International Military Tribunal
| imagesize = 300
|image = File:Color photograph of judges' bench at IMT.jpg
|imagelink =
| imagelink =
|imagealt =
| imagealt =
| caption = Judges' bench during the tribunal at the [[Palace of Justice, Nuremberg|Palace of Justice]] in [[Nuremberg]], [[Allied-occupied Germany]]
|caption = Judges' panel
| start_date = 20 November 1945
|full name =
|date decided = September 30 – October 1, 1946
| date_decided = 1 October 1946
| indictment = [[Conspiracy (law)|Conspiracy]], [[crimes against peace]], [[war crimes]], [[crimes against humanity]], [[mass murder]], [[unethical human experimentation]], [[false imprisonment]], [[hate crimes]]
|citations =
| transcripts =
|ECLI =
| judges = {{indented plainlist|
|transcripts =
* {{nowrap|[[Iona Nikitchenko]] (Soviet Union)}}
|judges = {{flagicon|UK}} [[Court of Appeal judge (England and Wales)|Lord Justice]] [[Colonel (United Kingdom)|Col.]] [[Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey|Sir Geoffrey Lawrence]]<br />(President of the Tribunal) <br />{{flagicon|URS}} [[Major General|MG]] [[Iona Nikitchenko]]<br />
* [[Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey|Geoffrey Lawrence]] (UK)
{{flagicon|URS}} [[Lieutenant colonel|Lt. Col.]] [[Alexander Volchkov (jurist)|Alexander Volchkov]] <br />{{flagicon|UK}} [[Norman Birkett, 1st Baron Birkett|Sir Norman Birkett]]<br />{{flagicon|US|1912}} [[Francis Biddle]]<br />{{flagicon|US|1912}} [[John J. Parker]]<br />{{flagicon|US|1912}} Edward Francis Carter<br />{{flagicon|FRA|1794}} [[Henri Donnedieu de Vabres]]<br />{{flagicon|FRA|1794}} [[Robert Falco]]
* [[Francis Biddle]] (US)
|number of judges = 8
* {{nowrap|[[Henri Donnedieu de Vabres|Donnedieu de Vabres]] (France)}}
|decision by =
}} and deputies
|concurring =
| number of judges =
|dissenting =
| defendant = [[List of defendants at the International Military Tribunal|24 (see list)]]
|concur/dissent =
| witnesses = [[List of witnesses to the International Military Tribunal|37 prosecution, 83 defense]]
|prior actions =
| related actions = {{ubli|[[Subsequent Nuremberg trials]]|[[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]]}}
|appealed from =
| italic title = no
|appealed to =
|subsequent actions = [[#The trial|See below]]; twelve German defendants sentenced to death
|related actions =
|opinions =
|keywords = <!-- {{hlist | }} -->
|italic title = no
}}
}}
The '''Nuremberg trials''' ({{lang-de|Nürnberger Prozesse}}) were a series of [[military tribunal]]s held after [[World War II]] by the [[Allies of World War II|Allied forces]] under [[international law]] and the [[laws of war]]. The trials were most notable for the prosecution of prominent members of the political, military, judicial, and economic leadership of [[Nazi Germany]], who planned, carried out, or otherwise participated in [[the Holocaust]] and other [[war crimes]]. The trials were held in [[Nuremberg]], Germany, and their decisions marked a turning point between classical and contemporary international law.


The '''Nuremberg trials''' were held by the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]] against representatives of the defeated [[Nazi Germany]] for plotting and carrying out invasions of other countries across Europe and [[atrocity crime|atrocities]] against their citizens in [[World War II]].
The first and best known of the trials was that of the major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal (IMT). It was described as "the greatest trial in history" by [[Norman Birkett, 1st Baron Birkett|Sir Norman Birkett]], one of the British judges present throughout.{{sfn|Marrus|1997|p=[https://www.jstor.org/stable/41212687 563]}} Held between 20 November 1945 and 1 October 1946,{{sfn|Harris|2006|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=5h_8dxXEIPsC&pg=PA106&dq=%22november+20+1945%22+%22october+1+1946%22 106]}} the Tribunal was given the task of trying 24 of the most important political and military leaders of the Third Reich. Primarily treated here is the first trial, conducted by the International Military Tribunal. Further trials of lesser war criminals were conducted under Control Council Law No. 10 at the U.S. [[Subsequent Nuremberg trials|Nuremberg Military Tribunal (NMT)]], which included the [[Doctors' trial]] and the [[Judges' Trial]].


Between 1939 and 1945, Nazi Germany invaded many countries across Europe, inflicting 27 million deaths in the [[Soviet Union]] alone. Proposals for how to punish the defeated Nazi leaders ranged from a [[show trial]] (the Soviet Union) to [[summary execution]]s (the United Kingdom). In mid-1945, France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States agreed to convene a joint tribunal in [[Nuremberg]], [[Occupation of Germany|occupied Germany]], with the [[Nuremberg trials#Nuremberg charter|Nuremberg Charter]] as its legal instrument. Between 20 November 1945 and 1 October 1946, the '''International Military Tribunal''' ('''IMT''') tried 22 of the most important surviving leaders of Nazi Germany in the political, military, and economic spheres, as well as six German organizations. The purpose of the trial was not just to convict the defendants but also to assemble irrefutable evidence of Nazi crimes, offer a history lesson to the defeated Germans, and delegitimize the traditional German elite.
The categorization of the crimes and the constitution of the court represented a juridical advance that would be followed afterward by the [[United Nations]] for the development of an international [[jurisprudence]] in matters of [[war crime]]s, [[crimes against humanity]], and [[war of aggression|wars of aggression]], and led to the creation of the [[International Criminal Court]]. For the first time in [[international law]], the Nuremberg indictments also mention [[genocide]] (count three, war crimes: "the extermination of racial and national groups, against the civilian populations of certain occupied territories in order to destroy particular races and classes of people and national, racial, or religious groups, particularly Jews, Poles, and Gypsies and others.")<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/count3.asp|title=The trial of German major war criminals : proceedings of the International Military Tribunal sitting at Nuremberg Germany|website=avalon.law.yale.edu|access-date=2019-02-21}}</ref>

The IMT verdict followed the prosecution in declaring the [[crime of aggression|crime]] of plotting and waging [[aggressive war]] "the supreme international crime" because "it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole".{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=165}} Most of the defendants were also charged with [[war crime]]s and [[crimes against humanity]], and the systematic murder of millions of Jews in [[the Holocaust]] was significant to the trial. [[Subsequent Nuremberg trials|Twelve further trials]] were conducted by the United States against lower-level perpetrators, which focused more on the Holocaust. Controversial at the time for their [[ex post facto law|retroactive criminalization]] of aggression, the trials' innovation of holding individuals responsible for violations of international law is considered "the true beginning of [[international criminal law]]".{{sfn|Sayapin|2014|p=148}}
{{TOC limit|3}}


==Origin==
==Origin==
[[File:Selection on the ramp at Auschwitz-Birkenau, 1944 (Auschwitz Album) 1a.jpg|thumb|Jews arriving at [[Auschwitz concentration camp]], 1944. According to legal historian [[Kirsten Sellars]], the [[death camps]] "formed the moral core of the Allies' case against the Nazi leaders".{{sfn|Sellars|2010|p=1092}}]]
[[File:Evidence in Nuremberg trials.jpg|thumb|United States Army clerks with evidence collected for the Nuremberg trials]]
Between 1939 and 1945, [[Nazi Germany]] [[European theatre of World War II|invaded many European countries]], including [[German invasion of Poland|Poland]], [[German invasion of Denmark (1940)|Denmark]], [[German invasion of Norway|Norway]], [[German invasion of the Netherlands|the Netherlands]], [[German invasion of Belgium (1940)|Belgium]], [[German invasion of Luxembourg|Luxembourg]], [[Fall of France|France]], [[German invasion of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]], [[German invasion of Greece|Greece]], and the [[German invasion of the Soviet Union|Soviet Union]].{{sfn|Sayapin|2014|pp=151–159}} German [[war of aggression|aggression]] was accompanied by immense brutality in occupied areas;{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=27–28}} war losses in the Soviet Union alone [[World War II casualties of the Soviet Union|included 27 million dead]], mostly civilians, which was one seventh of the prewar population.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=56}} The legal reckoning was premised on the extraordinary nature of Nazi criminality, particularly the [[Holocaust uniqueness debate|perceived singularity]] of [[The Holocaust|the systematic murder of millions of Jews]].{{sfn|Sellars|2010|p=1092}}
[[File:War Crimes Executive Committee.jpg|thumb|Meeting of the [[War Crimes Executive Committee]], which decided on the arrangements for the trial]]
A&nbsp;precedent for trying those accused of [[war crime]]s had been set at the end of [[World War I]] in the [[Leipzig War Crimes Trials]] held in May to July 1921 before the ''[[Reichsgericht]]'' (German Supreme Court) in [[Leipzig]], although these had been on a very limited scale and largely regarded as ineffectual. At the beginning of 1940, the Polish government-in-exile asked the British and French governments to condemn the German invasion of their country. The British initially declined to do so; however, in April 1940, a joint declaration was issued by the British, French and Polish. Relatively bland because of Anglo-French reservations, it proclaimed the trio's ''"desire to make a formal and public protest to the conscience of the world against the action of the German government whom they must hold responsible for these crimes which cannot remain unpunished."''{{sfn|Kochavi|1998|pp=[https://archive.org/details/preludetonurembe00koch/page/7 <!-- quote="beginning of 1940". --> 7–8]}}


The first step towards the trials of Nazi war criminals were initiatives taken by the governments-in-exile of countries occupied by Germany, especially [[Polish government-in-exile|Poland]], which as early as December 1939 established agencies aimed at recording crimes committed by Germany in Poland for their later prosecution.{{sfn|Machcewicz|Paczkowski|2021|p=43}} These efforts resulted in a Polish-French-British declaration on April 18, 1940, holding Germany responsible for the crimes, without an explicit promise of their prosecution.{{sfn|Machcewicz|Paczkowski|2021|p=44}} Such a promise was included in a declaration by the occupied countries in November 1941, gathered at a conference organized on Poland's initiative.{{sfn|Machcewicz|Paczkowski|2021|p=43–44}} Another conference, held in January 1942, saw the participation of observers from the USSR, US, China, and the United Kingdom. It adopted [[Punishment for War Crimes|a declaration]] promising to punish both direct perpetrators and their superiors, which later became the basis of the Nuremberg system. The Inter-Allied Commission on the Punishment of War Crimes was also established at that time.{{sfn|Machcewicz|Paczkowski|2021|p=44}} The United States and United Kingdom refused to endorse this proposal, citing the failure of [[War crimes trials after World War I|war crimes prosecutions]] after [[World War I]].{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=22}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=32, 64}}
Three-and-a-half years later, the stated intention to punish the Germans was much more trenchant. On 1 November 1943, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom and the United States published their [[Moscow Declaration|"Declaration on German Atrocities in Occupied Europe"]], which gave a "full warning" that, when the Nazis were defeated, the Allies would "pursue them to the uttermost ends of the earth&nbsp;... in order that justice may be done.&nbsp;... The above declaration is without prejudice to the case of the major war criminals whose offences have no particular geographical location and who will be punished by a joint decision of the Government of the Allies."<ref>[[#CITEREFHeller2011|Heller 2011]], [https://books.google.com/books?id=8ALHAwFfy44C&pg=PA9 page 9]. According to [[#CITEREFMarrus1997|Marrus 1997]], [https://www.jstor.org/stable/41212687 page 563], Roosevelt had already written to Rabbi Stephen Wise, president of the American Jewish Congress, in July 1942, saying: "The American people not only sympathise with all victims of Nazi crimes, but will hold the perpetrators of these crimes to strict accountability in a day of reckoning which will surely come."</ref> This intention by the Allies to dispense justice was reiterated at the [[Yalta Conference]] and at [[Potsdam Conference|Potsdam]] in 1945.{{sfn|Wright|1946|p=74}}


Pressures, primarily from Poland and Czechoslovakia, led the British to take concrete steps in the area of prosecuting German crimes. The London-based [[United Nations War Crimes Commission]]—without Soviet participation—first met in October 1943 and became bogged down in the scope of its mandate, with Belgian jurist [[Marcel de Baer]] and Czech legal scholar [[Bohuslav Ečer]] arguing for a broader definition of [[war crimes]] that would include "the crime of war".{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=64}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=30–31}} On 1 November 1943, the Soviet Union, United Kingdom, and United States issued the [[Moscow Declaration]], warning the Nazi leadership of the signatories' intent to "pursue them to the uttermost ends of the earth...in order that justice may be done".{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=9}} The declaration stated that those high-ranking Nazis who had committed crimes in several countries would be dealt with jointly, while others would be tried where they had committed their crimes.{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=9}}{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 4}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=64}}
British [[War Cabinet]] documents, released on 2 January 2006, showed that as early as December 1944 the Cabinet had discussed their policy for the punishment of the leading Nazis if captured. The [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|British Prime Minister]], [[Winston Churchill]], had then advocated a policy of [[summary execution]] in some circumstances, with the use of an [[Act of Attainder]] to circumvent legal obstacles, being dissuaded from this only by talks with US and Soviet leaders later in the war.<ref name="AD042113">{{cite news |title = Shooting top Nazis? The Nuremberg option wasn't apple pie either |work = [[The Guardian]] |date = 26 October 2012 |url = https://www.theguardian.com/world/blog/2012/oct/26/nazi-shooting-nuremberg-international-justice |accessdate = 21 April 2013 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130911020031/http://www.theguardian.com/world/blog/2012/oct/26/nazi-shooting-nuremberg-international-justice |archive-date = 2013-09-11 |url-status = live }}</ref>


Soviet jurist [[Aron Trainin]] developed the concept of [[crimes against peace]] (waging [[aggressive war]]) which would later be central to the proceedings at Nuremberg.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=8}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=49–50}} Trainin's ideas were reprinted in the West and widely adopted.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=31, 36, 54}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=63}} Of all the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]], the Soviet Union lobbied most intensely for trying the defeated German leaders for aggression in addition to war crimes.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=8}} The Soviet Union wanted to hold a [[show trial|trial with a predetermined outcome]] similar to the 1930s [[Moscow trials]], in order to demonstrate the Nazi leaders' guilt and build a case for [[war reparations]] to rebuild the [[Soviet economy]], which had been devastated by the war.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=4, 107}} The United States insisted on a trial that would be seen as legitimate as a means of reforming Germany and demonstrating the superiority of the Western system.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=3}} The [[United States Department of War]] was drawing up plans for an international tribunal in late 1944 and early 1945. The British government still preferred the [[summary execution]] of Nazi leaders, citing the failure of trials after World War I and qualms about [[ex post facto law|retroactive criminality]].{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=26–27, 31}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=67, 74–75}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=70}} The form that retribution would take was left unresolved at the [[Yalta Conference]] in February 1945.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=40}} On 2 May, at the [[San Francisco Conference]], United States president [[Harry S. Truman]] announced the formation of an international military tribunal.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=45–46}} On 8 May, [[German Instrument of Surrender|Germany surrendered unconditionally]], bringing [[End of World War II in Europe|an end to the war in Europe]].{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=10}}
[[File:Nuremberg Trials retouched.jpg|thumb|The main target of the prosecution was [[Hermann Göring]] (left), considered to be the most important surviving official in [[Nazi Germany]].]]
In late 1943, during the Tripartite Dinner Meeting at the [[Tehran Conference]], the Soviet leader, [[Joseph Stalin]], proposed executing 50,000–100,000 German staff officers. [[US President]] [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] joked that perhaps 49,000 would do. Churchill, believing them to be serious, denounced the idea of "the cold blooded execution of soldiers who fought for their country" and that he would rather be "taken out in the courtyard and shot" himself than partake in any such action.{{sfn|Senarclens|1988|pp=[https://books.google.com/books?id=sbAo3RkWIUsC&pg=PA19 pp. 19–20]}} However, he also stated that war criminals must pay for their crimes and that, in accordance with the [[Moscow Declaration#Statement on Atrocities|Moscow Document]] which he himself had written, they should be tried at the places where the crimes were committed. Churchill was vigorously opposed to executions "for political purposes."<ref name="Churchill: execute Hitler without trial">{{Cite news|last=Crossland|first=John|title=Churchill: execute Hitler without trial|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article784041.ece|accessdate=23 November 2011|newspaper=The Sunday Times|date=1 January 2006|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070311090356/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article784041.ece|archivedate=11 March 2007}}</ref><ref name="teachingamericanhistory">[http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=906 Tehran Conference: Tripartite Dinner Meeting] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060629163430/http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=906 |date=2006-06-29 }}, 29 November 1943, Soviet Embassy, 8:30 PM</ref> According to the minutes of a meeting between Roosevelt and Stalin at Yalta, on 4 February 1945, at the [[Livadia Palace]], President Roosevelt "said that he had been very much struck by the extent of German destruction in [[Crimea]] and therefore he was more bloodthirsty in regard to the Germans than he had been a year ago, and he hoped that Marshal Stalin would again propose a toast to the execution of 50,000 officers of the [[German Army (Wehrmacht)|German Army]]."<ref name="wisc">[http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1945&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=571 United States Department of State] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430143041/http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1945&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=571 |date=2011-04-30 }} Foreign relations of the United States. Conferences at Malta and Yalta, 1945. p. 571.</ref>


==Establishment==
[[Henry Morgenthau Jr.]], [[United States Secretary of the Treasury|US Secretary of the Treasury]], suggested a plan for the total [[denazification]] of Germany;<ref name="marist">{{cite web |url=http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box31/t297a01.html |title=The original memorandum from 1944, signed by Morgenthau |publisher=Fdrlibrary.marist.edu |date=2004-05-27 |accessdate=2013-01-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090429212508/http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box31/t297a01.html |archive-date=2009-04-29 |url-status=live }}</ref> this was known as the [[Morgenthau Plan]]. The plan advocated the forced de-industrialisation of Germany and the summary execution of so-called "arch-criminals", i.e. the major war criminals.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box31/t297a01.html |title=The original Morgenthau memorandum from 1944 |publisher=Fdrlibrary.marist.edu |date=2004-05-27 |accessdate=2013-01-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090429212508/http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/psf/box31/t297a01.html |archive-date=2009-04-29 |url-status=live }}</ref> Roosevelt initially supported this plan, and managed to convince Churchill to support it in a less drastic form. Later, details were leaked generating widespread condemnation by the nation's newspapers{{clarify |reason=Which nation? |date=November 2017}}. Roosevelt, aware of strong public disapproval, abandoned the plan, but did not adopt an alternative position on the matter. The demise of the Morgenthau Plan created the need for an alternative method of dealing with the Nazi leadership. The plan for the "Trial of European War Criminals" was drafted by [[United States Secretary of War|Secretary of War]] [[Henry L. Stimson]] and the [[United States Department of War|War Department]]. Following Roosevelt's death in April 1945, the new president, [[Harry S. Truman]], gave strong approval for a judicial process. After a series of negotiations between Britain, the US, Soviet Union, and France, details of the trial were worked out. The trials were to commence on 20 November 1945, in the [[Bavaria]]n city of Nuremberg.
===Nuremberg charter===
[[File:A.N. Trainin speaks at the War Crimes Executive Committee.jpg|thumb|[[Aron Trainin]] (center, with moustache) speaks at the London Conference.]]
[[File:The Palace of Justice in Nurnberg.jpg|thumb|Aerial view of the Palace of Justice in 1945, with the prison attached behind it]]
[[File:Ruins of Nuremberg after World War II.jpg|thumb|Ruins of [[Nuremberg]], {{Circa|1945}}]]


At the London Conference, held from 26 June to 2 August 1945, representatives of France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States negotiated the form that the trial would take. Until the end of the negotiations, it was not clear that any trial would be held at all.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=84}}
==Creation of the courts==
On 20 April 1942, representatives from the nine countries occupied by Germany met in London to draft the "Inter-Allied Resolution on German War Crimes". At the meetings in [[Tehran Conference|Tehran]] (1943), [[Yalta Conference|Yalta]] (1945), and [[Potsdam Conference|Potsdam]] (1945), the three major wartime powers, the United Kingdom, United States, and the Soviet Union, agreed on the format of punishment for those responsible for war crimes during World War II. France was also awarded a place on the tribunal. The legal basis for the trial was established by the [[London Charter of the International Military Tribunal|London Charter]], which was agreed upon by the four so-called Great Powers on 8 August 1945, {{sfn|Lawrence|1947|p=[https://www.jstor.org/stable/3018884 151]}} and which restricted the trial to "punishment of the major war criminals of the European Axis countries."


The offenses that would be prosecuted were crimes against peace, [[crimes against humanity]], and war crimes.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=85–86}} At the conference, it was debated whether wars of aggression were prohibited in existing [[customary international law]]; regardless, before the charter was adopted there was no law providing for criminal responsibility for aggression.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=87–88}}{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|pp=832–833}} Despite misgivings from other Allies, American negotiator and [[Supreme Court (United States)|Supreme Court]] justice [[Robert H. Jackson]] threatened the United States' withdrawal if aggression was not prosecuted because it had been the rationale for [[Military history of the United States during World War II#Origins|American entry into World War II]].{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=84–85, 88–89}} However, Jackson conceded on defining crimes against peace; the other three Allies were opposed because it would undermine the freedom of action of the [[United Nations Security Council]].{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=98–100}}
Some 200 German war crimes defendants were tried at Nuremberg, and 1,600 others were tried under the traditional channels of military justice. The legal basis for the jurisdiction of the court was that defined by the [[German Instrument of Surrender, 1945|Instrument of Surrender of Germany]]. Political authority for Germany had been transferred to the [[Allied Control Council]] which, having sovereign power over Germany, could choose to punish violations of [[international law]] and the [[laws of war]]. Because the court was limited to violations of the laws of war, it did not have jurisdiction over crimes that took place before the outbreak of war on 1 September 1939.


War crimes already existed in international law as criminal violations of the [[international humanitarian law|laws and customs of war]], but these did not apply to a government's treatment of its own citizens.{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|p=834}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=30, 34}} Legal experts sought a way to try crimes against German citizens, such as the [[The Holocaust in Germany|German Jews]].{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=34}} A Soviet proposal for a charge of "crimes against civilians" was renamed "crimes against humanity" at Jackson's suggestion{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=68, 73}} after previous uses of the term in the [[Aftermath of World War I|post-World War I]] [[Commission of Responsibilities]] and in failed efforts to prosecute the perpetrators of the [[Armenian genocide]].{{sfn|Bassiouni|2011|pp=xxx–xxxi, 94}} The British proposal to define crimes against humanity was largely accepted, with the final wording being "murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation, and other inhumane acts committed against any civilian population".{{sfn|Bassiouni|2011|pp=xxxi, 33}}{{sfn|Musa|2016|p=373}} The final version of the charter limited the tribunal's jurisdiction over crimes against humanity to those committed as part of a war of aggression.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=73}}{{sfn|Acquaviva|2011|pp=884–885}} Both the United States—concerned that its "[[Jim Crow]]" system of [[Racial segregation in the United States|racial segregation]] not be labeled a crime against humanity—and the Soviet Union wanted to avoid giving an international court jurisdiction over a government's treatment of its own citizens.{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|pp=102–103, 114, 120, 135}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=70}}
===Location===
[[File:Four flags hanging from the Palace of Justice.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|left|Four flags hanging from the [[Palace of Justice, Nuremberg|Palace of Justice]], 1945]]
[[Leipzig]] and [[Luxembourg]] were briefly considered as the location for the trial.{{sfn|Overy|2001|pp=19–20}} The Soviet Union had wanted the trials to take place in Berlin, as the capital city of the 'fascist conspirators',{{sfn|Overy|2001|pp=19–20}} but Nuremberg was chosen as the site for two reasons, with the first one having been the decisive factor:<ref name="Catalogue1"/>
# The [[Palace of Justice (Nuremberg)|Palace of Justice]] was spacious and largely undamaged (one of the few buildings that had remained largely intact through extensive Allied bombing of Germany), and a large prison was also part of the complex.
# Nuremberg was considered the ceremonial birthplace of the [[Nazi Party]]. It had hosted the Party's annual [[Nuremberg rallies|propaganda rallies]]{{sfn|Overy|2001|pp=19–20}} and the [[Reichstag (Nazi Germany)|Reichstag]] session that passed the [[Nuremberg Laws]].<ref name="Catalogue1">{{Citation|last=Henkel (ed.)|first=Matthias|title=Memoriam Nuernberger Prozesse, exhibition catalogue (German)|publisher=Museen der Stadt Nuernberg|location=Nuremberg|year=2011}}, 32 pp.</ref> Thus it was considered a fitting place to mark the Party's symbolic demise.


The charter upended the traditional view of [[international law]] by holding individuals, [[state responsibility|rather than states]], responsible for breaches.{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|pp=839–840}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=85–86}} The other three Allies' proposal to limit the definition of the crimes to acts committed by the defeated Axis was rejected by Jackson. Instead, the charter limited the jurisdiction of the court to Germany's actions.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=9–10}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=101}} Article 7 prevented the defendants from claiming [[sovereign immunity]],{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=87}} and the plea of acting under [[superior orders]] was left for the judges to decide.{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=11}} The trial was held under modified [[common law]].{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=85}} The negotiators decided that the tribunal's permanent seat would be in Berlin, while the trial would be held at the [[Palace of Justice, Nuremberg|Palace of Justice]] in [[Nuremberg]].{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=73}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=76}} Located in the [[American occupation zone]], Nuremberg was a symbolic location as the site of [[Nuremberg rallies|Nazi rallies]]. The Palace of Justice was relatively intact but needed to be renovated for the trial due to [[bombing of Nuremberg in World War II|bomb damage]]; it had an attached prison where the defendants could be held.{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=31}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=76}} On 8 August, the Nuremberg Charter was signed in London.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=74}}
As a compromise with the Soviets, it was agreed that while the location of the trial would be Nuremberg, Berlin would be the official home of the Tribunal authorities.<ref name="heydecker-leeb">{{Cite book|title=Der Nürnberger Prozeß|last1=Heydecker|first1=Joe J.|last2=Leeb|first2=Johannes|publisher=Kiepenheuer und Witsch|location=[[Köln]]|language=German|year=1979|page=97}}</ref><ref name="PRO-LCO-2/2980-1">{{Cite book|title=Minutes of 2nd meeting of BWCE and the Representatives of the USA|publisher=[[Lord Chancellor's Office]], [[Public Record Office]]|location=[[Kew]], [[London]]|date=21 June 1945}}</ref><ref name="PRO-LCO-2/2980-2">{{Cite book|title=Rough Notes Meeting with Russians|publisher=[[Lord Chancellor's Office]], [[Public Record Office]]|location=[[Kew]], [[London]]|date=29 June 1945}}</ref> It was also agreed that France would become the permanent seat of the IMT{{sfn|Overy|2001|p=15}} and that the first trial (several were planned) would take place in Nuremberg.<ref name="heydecker-leeb"/><ref name="PRO-LCO-2/2980-2"/>


===Judges and prosecutors===
Most of the accused had previously been detained at [[Camp Ashcan]], a processing station and interrogation center in Luxembourg, and were moved to Nuremberg for the trial.
In early 1946, there were a thousand employees from the four countries' delegations in Nuremberg, of which about two thirds were from the United States.{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|p=21}} Besides legal professionals, there were many social-science researchers, psychologists, translators, and interpreters, and [[graphic designer]]s, the last to make the many charts used during the trial.{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|p=22}} Each state appointed a prosecution team and two judges, one being a deputy without voting rights.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=2, 112}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=100}}
{{clear}}


Jackson was appointed the United States' chief prosecutor, whom historian [[Kim Christian Priemel]] describes as "a versatile politician and a remarkable orator, if not a great legal thinker".{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=71, 90}} The United States prosecution believed that [[Nazism]] was the product of a German deviation from the West (the ''[[Sonderweg]]'' thesis) and sought to correct this deviation with a trial that would serve both retributive and educational purposes.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=3, 6}} As the largest delegation, it would take on the bulk of the prosecutorial effort.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=91}} At Jackson's recommendation, the United States appointed judges [[Francis Biddle]] and [[John J. Parker|John Parker]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=90}} The British chief prosecutor was [[Hartley Shawcross]], [[Attorney General for England and Wales]], assisted by his predecessor [[David Maxwell Fyfe]].{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=53, 73–74}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=88}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=115}} Although the chief British judge, [[Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey|Sir Geoffrey Lawrence]] ([[Lord Justice of Appeal]]), was the nominal president of the tribunal, in practice Biddle exercised more authority.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=90}}
===Participants===
Each of the four countries provided one judge and an alternative, as well as a prosecutor.
[[File:View of judges panel during testimony Nuremberg Trials 1945.jpeg|thumb|Judges sitting in Nuremberg, from left to right: [[Alexander Volchkov (jurist)|Volchkov]], [[Iona Nikitchenko|Nikitchenko]], [[Norman Birkett, 1st Baron Birkett|Birkett]], [[Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey|Sir Geoffrey Lawrence]], [[Francis Biddle|Biddle]], [[John J. Parker|Parker]], [[Henri Donnedieu de Vabres|Donnedieu de Vabres]] and [[Robert Falco|Falco]]]]


The French prosecutor, [[François de Menthon]], had just overseen trials of the leaders of [[Vichy France]];{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=74}} he resigned in January 1946 and was replaced by [[Auguste Champetier de Ribes]].{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 10}} The French judges were [[Henri Donnedieu de Vabres]], a professor of criminal law, and deputy [[Robert Falco]], a judge of the [[Cour de Cassation]] who had represented France at the London Conference.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=75, 89}}{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 10}} The French government tried to appoint staff who were not tainted by collaboration with the Vichy regime; some appointments, including Champetier de Ribes, were of those who had been in the [[French resistance]].{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraphs 11–12}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=87}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=204}} Expecting a show trial, the Soviet Union{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=9}} initially appointed as chief prosecutor [[Iona Nikitchenko]], who had presided over the Moscow trials, but he was made a judge and replaced by [[Roman Rudenko]], a show trial prosecutor{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=9, 78}} chosen for his skill as an orator.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=217}} The Soviet judges and prosecutors were not permitted to make any major decisions without consulting a commission in Moscow led by Soviet politician [[Andrei Vyshinsky]]; the resulting delays hampered the Soviet effort to set the agenda.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=9}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=90}} The influence of the Soviet delegation was also constrained by limited English proficiency, lack of interpreters, and unfamiliarity with diplomacy and international institutions.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=88–89}}
====Judges====
* [[Major General]] [[Iona Nikitchenko]] (Soviet main)
* [[Lieutenant Colonel]] [[Alexander Volchkov (jurist)|Alexander Volchkov]] (Soviet alternate)
* [[Lord Justice of Appeal|Lord Justice]] [[Colonel (United Kingdom)|Colonel]] [[Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey|Sir Geoffrey Lawrence]] (British main), President of the Tribunal
* [[Norman Birkett, 1st Baron Birkett|Sir Norman Birkett]] (British alternate)
* [[Francis Biddle]] (American main)
* [[John J. Parker]] (American alternate)
*Edward Francis Carter (American alternate)
* Professor [[Henri Donnedieu de Vabres]] (French main)
* [[Robert Falco]] (French alternate)


Requests by [[Chaim Weizmann]], the president of the [[World Zionist Organization]], as well as the [[Provisional Government of National Unity]] in Poland, for an active role in the trial justified by their representation of victims of Nazi crimes were rejected.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=117}} The Soviet Union invited prosecutors from its allies, including Poland, [[Third Czechoslovak Republic|Czechoslovakia]], and [[Yugoslavia]]; Denmark and Norway also sent a delegation.{{sfn|Fleming|2022|p=209}} Although the Polish delegation was not empowered to intervene in the proceedings, it submitted evidence and an indictment, succeeding at drawing some attention to crimes committed against Polish Jews and non-Jews.{{sfn|Fleming|2022|pp=209, 220}}
====Chief prosecutors====
* [[Attorney General for England and Wales|Attorney General]] [[Hartley Shawcross, Baron Shawcross|Sir Hartley Shawcross]] (United Kingdom)
* [[Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States|Associate Justice]] [[Robert H. Jackson]] (United States)
* [[Lieutenant-General]] [[Roman Rudenko|Roman Andreyevich Rudenko]] (Soviet Union)
* [[François de Menthon]], later replaced by [[Auguste Champetier de Ribes]] (France)


===Indictment===
Assisting Jackson were the lawyers [[Telford Taylor]],<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1998/05/24/nyregion/telford-taylor-who-prosecuted-top-nazis-nuremberg-war-trials-dead-90.html|title=Telford Taylor, Who Prosecuted Top Nazis At the Nuremberg War Trials, Is Dead at 90|last=Severo|first=Richard|date=1998-05-24|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=2017-02-15|issn=0362-4331|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170216050055/http://www.nytimes.com/1998/05/24/nyregion/telford-taylor-who-prosecuted-top-nazis-nuremberg-war-trials-dead-90.html|archive-date=2017-02-16|url-status=live}}</ref> William S. Kaplan<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3758012.html|title=Lawyer William S. Kaplan, 76, prosecutor at Nuremberg trials|date=25 March 1986|access-date=2015-01-07|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924193301/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3758012.html|archive-date=24 September 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref> and [[Thomas J. Dodd]], and [[Richard Sonnenfeldt]], a [[US Army]] [[interpreter]]. Assisting Shawcross were [[Major]] [[David Maxwell Fyfe, 1st Earl of Kilmuir|Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe]] and Sir [[John Wheeler-Bennett]]. [[Mervyn Griffith-Jones]], who was later to become famous as the chief prosecutor in the ''[[Lady Chatterley's Lover]]'' [[obscenity]] trial, was also on Shawcross's team. Shawcross also recruited a young [[barrister]], [[Anthony Marreco]], who was the son of a friend of his, to help the British team with the heavy workload.
[[File:At a solemn session in Berlin, the representatives of the various nations handed over to the Tribunal their indictments for the Nuremberg Trials.jpg|thumb|Handing over the indictment to the tribunal, 18 October 1945]]


The work of drafting the indictment was divided up by the national delegations. The British worked on aggressive war; the other delegations were assigned the task of covering crimes against humanity and war crimes committed on the [[Western Front (World War II)|Western Front]] (France) and the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] (the Soviet Union). The United States delegation outlined the overall Nazi conspiracy and criminality of Nazi organizations.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=80}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=101}} The British and American delegations decided to work jointly in drafting the charges of conspiracy to wage aggressive war. On 17 September, the various delegations met to discuss the indictment.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=80–81}}
====Defence counsel====
The vast majority of the [[defense attorney]]s were German lawyers.{{sfn|Davidson|1997|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=kN-mc0QxyhYC&pg=PA30 30–1]}} These included Georg Fröschmann, Heinz Fritz ([[Hans Fritzsche]]), [[Otto Kranzbühler]] ([[Karl Dönitz]]), Otto Pannenbecker ([[Wilhelm Frick]]), Alfred Thoma ([[Alfred Rosenberg]]), Kurt Kauffmann ([[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]]), Hans Laternser (general staff and high command), Franz Exner ([[Alfred Jodl]]), Alfred Seidl ([[Hans Frank]]), Otto Stahmer ([[Hermann Göring]]), Walter Ballas (Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach), Hans Flächsner ([[Albert Speer]]), Günther von Rohrscheidt ([[Rudolf Hess]]), Egon Kubuschok ([[Franz von Papen]]), [[Robert Servatius]] ([[Fritz Sauckel]]), Fritz Sauter ([[Joachim von Ribbentrop]]), Walther Funk ([[Baldur von Schirach]]), Hanns Marx ([[Julius Streicher]]), Otto Nelte ([[Wilhelm Keitel]]), and Herbert Kraus/Rudolph Dix (both working for [[Hjalmar Schacht]]). The main counsel were supported by a total of 70 assistants, clerks and lawyers.<ref name="Catalogue3">{{Citation|last=Henkel (ed.)|first=Matthias|title=Memoriam Nuernberger Prozesse, exhibition catalogue (German)|publisher=Museen der Stadt Nuernberg|location=Nuremberg|year=2011}}, 67–69 pp.</ref> The defense witnesses included several men who took part in war crimes themselves during World War II, such as [[Rudolf Höss]]. The men testifying for the defense hoped to receive more lenient sentences.{{Clarify|date=March 2013}} All of the men testifying on behalf of the defense were found guilty on several counts.<ref>Ehrenfreund, Norbert. ''The Nuremberg Legacy''. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. Print.</ref>{{dubious|date=June 2020}}


The charge of [[conspiracy (criminal)|conspiracy]], absent from the charter, held together the wide array of charges and defendants{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=102}} and was used to charge the top Nazi leaders, as well as bureaucrats who had never killed anyone or perhaps even directly ordered killing. It was also an end run on the charter's limits on charging crimes committed before the beginning of World War II.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=111}} Conspiracy charges were central to the cases against propagandists and industrialists: the former were charged with providing the ideological justification for war and other crimes, while the latter were accused of enabling Germany's war effort.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=112–113}} The charge, a brainchild of [[War Department]] lawyer [[Murray C. Bernays]], and perhaps inspired by his previous work prosecuting [[securities fraud]],{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=18, 69, 111}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=69}} was spearheaded by the United States and less popular with the other delegations, particularly France.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=99}}
[[File:Defendants in the dock at nuremberg trials.jpg|thumb|The defendants in the dock, guarded by American Military Police]]


The problem of translating the indictment and evidence into the three official languages of the tribunal—English, French, and Russian—as well as German was severe due to the scale of the task and difficulty of recruiting interpreters, especially in the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=82–83}} Vyshinsky demanded extensive corrections to the charges of crimes against peace, especially regarding the role of the [[German–Soviet pact]] in starting World War II.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=84–86}} Jackson also separated out an overall conspiracy charge from the other three charges, aiming that the American prosecution would cover the overall Nazi conspiracy while the other delegations would flesh out the details of Nazi crimes.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=87}} The division of labor, and the haste with which the indictment was prepared, resulted in duplication, imprecise language, and lack of attribution of specific charges to individual defendants.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=100–101}}
== The trial ==


===Defendants===
The International Military Tribunal was opened on 19 November 1945 in the Palace of Justice in Nuremberg.<ref name="Catalogue2">{{Citation|last=Henkel (ed.)|first=Matthias|title=Memoriam Nuernberger Prozesse, exhibition catalogue (German)|publisher=Museen der Stadt Nuernberg|location=Nuremberg|year=2011}}, 78 pp.</ref><ref name="indictment">Summary of the indictment in ''Department of State Bulletin'', October 21, 1945, p. 595</ref> The first session was presided over by the Soviet judge, Nikitchenko. The prosecution entered indictments against 24 major war criminals and seven organizations – the leadership of the [[Nazism|Nazi]] party, the Reich Cabinet, the [[Schutzstaffel]] (SS), [[Sicherheitsdienst]] (SD), the [[Gestapo]], the [[Sturmabteilung]] (SA) and the "General Staff and High Command", comprising several categories of senior military officers.<ref group="avalon" name="IMT Appendix B group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/countb.asp|title=Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Indictment: Appendix B|access-date=2010-12-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811070622/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/countb.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> These organizations were to be declared "criminal" if found guilty.
{{main|List of defendants at the International Military Tribunal}}
[[File:Defendants in the dock at nuremberg trials.jpg|thumb|The defendants in the dock]]


Some of the most prominent Nazis—[[Adolf Hitler]], [[Heinrich Himmler]], and [[Joseph Goebbels]]—had committed suicide and therefore could not be tried.{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=27}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=81}} The prosecutors wanted to try representative leaders of German politics, economy, and military.{{sfn|Weinke|2006|pp=28–29}} Most of the defendants had surrendered to the United States or United Kingdom.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=81–82}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=74}}
The indictments were for:
# Participation in a [[Conspiracy (crime)|common plan or conspiracy]] for the accomplishment of a [[crime against peace]]
# Planning, initiating and waging [[war of aggression|wars of aggression]] and other crimes against peace
# Participating in [[War crime]]s
# [[Crime against humanity|Crimes against humanity]]
The 24 accused were, with respect to each charge, either [[Indictment|indicted]] but not convicted (I), indicted and found guilty (G), or not charged (—), as listed below by defendant, charge, and eventual outcome:


The defendants, who were largely unrepentant,{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=5}} included former cabinet ministers: [[Franz von Papen]] (who had [[Adolf Hitler's rise to power|brought Hitler to power]]); [[Joachim von Ribbentrop]] ([[Reich Foreign Ministry|foreign minister]]), [[Konstantin von Neurath]] ([[Reich Foreign Ministry|foreign minister]]). [[Wilhelm Frick]] ([[Reich Interior Ministry|interior minister]]), and [[Alfred Rosenberg]] (minister for the occupied eastern territories).{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=81}} Also prosecuted were leaders of the German economy, such as [[Gustav Krupp]] (of the conglomerate [[Krupp AG]]), former [[Reichsbank]] president [[Hjalmar Schacht]], and economic planners [[Albert Speer]] and [[Walther Funk]], along with Speer's subordinate and head of the [[forced labor in Nazi Germany|forced labor program]], [[Fritz Sauckel]].{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=76}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=82, 139}} While the British were skeptical of prosecuting economic leaders, the French had a strong interest in highlighting German economic imperialism.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=82}} The military leaders were [[Hermann Göring]]—the most infamous surviving Nazi and is the main target of the trial{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=81}}—[[Wilhelm Keitel]], [[Alfred Jodl]], [[Erich Raeder]], and [[Karl Dönitz]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=82}} Also on trial were propagandists [[Julius Streicher]] and [[Hans Fritzsche]]; [[Rudolf Hess]], Hitler's deputy who had flown to Britain in 1941; [[Hans Frank]], governor-general of the [[General Governorate]] of Poland; [[Hitler Youth]] leader [[Baldur von Schirach]]; [[Arthur Seyss-Inquart]], [[Reichskommissariat Niederlande|Reich Commissioner for the Netherlands]]; and [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]], the leader of Himmler's [[Reich Main Security Office]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=82, 127}} Observers of the trial found the defendants mediocre and contemptible.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=121–122}}
{|class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! rowspan=2 class="unsortable" |Photos
! rowspan=2 |Name
! colspan=4 |Count
! rowspan=2 |Penalty
! rowspan=2 class="unsortable" |Notes
|-
! 1
! 2
! 3
! 4
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R14128A, Martin Bormann.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Bormann, Martin"|[[Martin Bormann]]
|I||—||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|[[Capital punishment|Death]] (''in absentia'')||Successor to Hess as Nazi Party Secretary. Sentenced to death ''in absentia''.<ref group=avalon name="Bormann judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judborma.asp|title=Bormann judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811032917/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judborma.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> [[Martin Bormann#Discovery of remains|Remains found in Berlin in 1972]] and eventually dated to 2 May 1945 (per [[Martin Bormann#Axmann's account of Bormann's death|Artur Axmann's account]]); thought to have been killed trying to flee Berlin in the last few days of the war.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1976-127-06A, Karl Dönitz - crop.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Dönitz, Karl"|[[Karl Dönitz]]
|I||G||G||—
|data-sort-value=10|10 years
|Leader of the ''[[Kriegsmarine]]'' from 1943, succeeded Raeder. Initiator of the [[U-boat]] campaign. Briefly became [[President of Germany]] following Hitler's death.<ref group=avalon name="donitz group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/juddoeni.asp|title=Dönitz judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110810205110/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/juddoeni.asp|archive-date=2011-08-10|url-status=live}}</ref> Convicted of carrying out [[unrestricted submarine warfare]] in breach of the 1936 [[Second London Naval Treaty]], but was not punished for that charge because [[Chester W. Nimitz#Post war|the United States committed the same breach]].{{refn|name="NT"|President of the ''Reich'' for 23 days after Adolf Hitler's suicide.<ref group="avalon" name="donitz group=avalon" />}}<!-- end of refn --> Released 1 October 1956. Died 24 December 1980. Defense attorney: [[Otto Kranzbühler]]
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1989-011-13, Hans Frank.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Frank, Hans"|[[Hans Frank]]
|I||—||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|Reich Law Leader 1933–45 and Governor-General of the [[General Government]] in occupied Poland 1939–45. Expressed repentance.<ref group=avalon name="Frank judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judfrank.asp|title=Frank judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110520093619/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judfrank.asp|archive-date=2011-05-20|url-status=live}}</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Wilhelm Frick 72-919.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Frick, Wilhelm"|[[Wilhelm Frick]]
|I||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|Hitler's Minister of the Interior 1933–43 and [[List of rulers of the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia|Reich Protector]] of [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia|Bohemia and Moravia]] 1943–45. Co-authored the [[Nuremberg Race Laws]].<ref group=avalon name="Frick judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judfrick.asp|title=Frick judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811033033/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judfrick.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946.
|- valign="top"
||[[File:Hans Fritzsche.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Fritzsche, Hans"|[[Hans Fritzsche]]
|I||-||I|||I
|data-sort-value=0|Acquitted
|Popular radio commentator; head of the news division of the Nazi Propaganda Ministry.<ref group=avalon name="Fritzsche judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judfritz.asp|title=Fritzsche judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811033232/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judfritz.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Released early in 1950.<ref name="Catalogue8">{{Citation|last=Henkel (ed.)|first=Matthias|title=Memoriam Nuernberger Prozesse, exhibition catalogue (German)|publisher=Museen der Stadt Nuernberg|location=Nuremberg|year=2011}}, 46 pp.</ref> Fritzsche had made himself a career within German radio, because his voice was similar to Goebbels's.<ref>William L. Shierer "The Rise and Fall of the third reich", Nuremberg-chapter of part IV</ref> Died 27 September 1953.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Waltherfunk45.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Funk, Walther"|[[Walther Funk]]
|I||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=98|[[Life imprisonment|Life<br />imprisonment]]
|Hitler's Minister of Economics; succeeded Schacht as head of the ''[[Reichsbank]]''. Released because of ill health on 16 May 1957.<ref group=avalon name="Funk judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judfunk.asp|title=Funk judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811032719/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judfunk.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Died 31 May 1960.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Hermann Göring - Röhr.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Göring, Hermann" |{{nowrap|[[Hermann Göring]]}}
|G||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|''[[Reichsmarschall]]'', Commander of the ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' 1935–45, Chief of the 4-Year Plan 1936–45, and original head of the [[Gestapo]] before turning it over to the [[SS]] in April 1934. Originally the second-highest-ranked member of the Nazi Party and Hitler's designated successor, he fell out of favor with Hitler in April 1945. Highest ranking Nazi official to be tried at Nuremberg.{{sfn|Evans|2008|p=509, 724}} Committed suicide the night before his scheduled execution.<ref group=avalon name="Goering judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judgoeri.asp|title=Goering judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811033225/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judgoeri.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref>
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146II-849, Rudolf Heß.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Hess, Rudolf"|[[Rudolf Hess]]
|G||G||I||I
|data-sort-value=98|Life<br />imprisonment
|Hitler's Deputy Führer until he flew to Scotland in 1941 in an attempt to broker peace with the United Kingdom. Had been imprisoned since then. After trial, incarcerated at [[Spandau Prison]], where he committed suicide in 1987.<ref group=avalon name="Hess judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judhess.asp|title=Hess judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151125212603/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judhess.asp|archive-date=2015-11-25|url-status=live}}</ref>
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1971-033-01, Alfred Jodl.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Jodl, Alfred"|[[Alfred Jodl]]
|G||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|''[[Wehrmacht]]'' ''[[Generaloberst]]'', Keitel's subordinate and Chief of the OKW's Operations Division 1938–45. Signed orders for the summary execution of Allied commandos and Soviet commissars <ref group=avalon name="Jodl judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judjodl.asp|title=Jodl judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811032122/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judjodl.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Signed [[German Instrument of Surrender|the instruments of surrender]] on 7 May 1945 in Reims as the representative of [[Karl Dönitz]]. Hanged 16 October 1946. Posthumously rehabilitated in 1953, which was later reversed.
|- valign="top"
| [[File:Ernst Kaltebrunner in Nurnberg.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Kaltenbrunner, Ernst"|[[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]]
|I||—||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|Highest-ranking [[SS]] leader to be tried at Nuremberg. Chief of [[RSHA]] 1943–45, the Nazi organ comprising the intelligence service (SD), Secret State Police (Gestapo) and Criminal Police (Kripo) and having overall command over the ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]''.<ref group=avalon name="Kaltenbrunner judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judkalt.asp|title=Kaltenbrunner judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811025754/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judkalt.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-H30220, Wilhelm Keitel.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Keitel, Wilhelm"|[[Wilhelm Keitel]]
|G||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|Head of [[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht]] (OKW) and de facto defence minister 1938–45. Known for his unquestioning loyalty to Hitler.<ref name="Catalogue6">{{Citation|last=Henkel (ed.)|first=Matthias|title=Memoriam Nuernberger Prozesse, exhibition catalogue (German)|publisher=Museen der Stadt Nuernberg|location=Nuremberg|year=2011}}, 40 pp.</ref> Signed numerous orders calling for soldiers and political prisoners to be executed. Expressed repentance.<ref group=avalon name="Keitel judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judkeite.asp|title=Keitel judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811033258/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judkeite.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 102-12331, Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Krupp, Gustav"|[[Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach]]
|&nbsp; |I||-||I||I
|data-sort-value=1| No decision
|Major industrialist. C.E.O. of [[Krupp|Friedrich Krupp AG]] 1912–45. Medically unfit for trial; he had been partially paralyzed since 1941. Due to an error, Gustav, instead of his son [[Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach|Alfried]] (who ran Krupp for his father during most of the war), was selected for indictment.<ref name="Catalogue7">{{Citation|last=Henkel (ed.)|first=Matthias|title=Memoriam Nuernberger Prozesse, exhibition catalogue (German)|publisher=Museen der Stadt Nuernberg|location=Nuremberg|year=2011}}, 47 pp.</ref> The prosecutors attempted to substitute his son in the indictment, but the judges rejected this due to proximity to trial. However, the charges against him remained on record in the event he should recover (he died in February 1950).<ref name="From Nuremberg to the Hague">{{Cite book|editor=Philippe Sands|last=Clapham|first=Andrew|title=From Nuremberg to the Hague: the future of international criminal justice|chapter=Issues of complexity, complicity and complementarity: from the Nuremberg Trials to the dawn of the International Criminal |year=2003 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0-521-82991-7|quote=The tribunal's eventual decision was that Gustav Krupp could not be tried because of his condition but that 'the charges against him in the Indictment should be retained for trial thereafter if the physical and mental condition of the defendant should permit'.}}</ref> Alfried was tried in a separate Nuremberg trial (the [[Krupp Trial]]) for the use of slave labour, thereby escaping worse charges and possible execution.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-2008-0922-501, Robert Ley.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Ley, Robert"|[[Robert Ley]]
|I||-||I||I
|data-sort-value=1|No decision
|Head of [[Deutsche Arbeitsfront|DAF]], German Labour Front. Committed suicide on 25 October 1945, before the trial began. Indicted but neither acquitted nor found guilty as trial did not proceed.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Konstantin von Neurath crop.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Neurath, Konstantin von"|Baron [[Konstantin von Neurath]]
|G||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=15|15 years
|Minister of Foreign Affairs 1932–38, succeeded by Ribbentrop. Later, [[List of rulers of the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia|Reich Protector]] of [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia|Bohemia and Moravia]] 1939–43. On furlough since 1941, he resigned in 1943 because of a dispute with Hitler. Released (ill health) 6 November 1954<ref group=avalon name="Von Neurath judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judneur.asp|title=Von Neurath judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110810230052/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judneur.asp|archive-date=2011-08-10|url-status=live}}</ref> after suffering a heart attack. Died 14 August 1956.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Vonpapen1.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Papen, Franz von"|[[Franz von Papen]]
|I||I||—||—
|data-sort-value=0|Acquitted
|[[Chancellor|Chancellor of Germany]] in 1932 and Vice-Chancellor under Hitler in 1933–34. Ambassador to Austria 1934–38 and ambassador to [[Turkey]] 1939–44. Although acquitted at Nuremberg, von Papen was reclassified as a war criminal in 1947 by a German de-Nazification court, and sentenced to eight years' hard labour. He was acquitted following appeal after serving two.<ref group=avalon name="Von Papen judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judpapen.asp|title=Von Papen judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811032001/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judpapen.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref>
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Erich Raeder.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Raeder, Erich"|[[Erich Raeder]]
|G||G||G|||—
|data-sort-value=98|Life imprisonment
|Commander In Chief of the ''Kriegsmarine'' from 1928 until his retirement in 1943, succeeded by Dönitz. Released (ill health) 26 September 1955.<ref group=avalon name="Raeder judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judraede.asp|title=Raeder judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811032035/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judraede.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Died 6 November 1960.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:GERibbentrop.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Ribbentrop, Joachim von"|[[Joachim von Ribbentrop]]
|G||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|Ambassador-Plenipotentiary 1935–36. Ambassador to the United Kingdom 1936–38. Minister of Foreign Affairs 1938–45.<ref group=avalon name="Von Ribbentrop judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judribb.asp|title=Von Ribbentrop judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811023430/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judribb.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Expressed repentance.<ref>;"God protect Germany. God have mercy on my soul. My final wish is that Germany should recover her unity and that, for the sake of peace, there should be understanding between East and West. I wish peace to the world. [https://books.google.com/books?id=s8xwDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT532&lpg=PT532&dq=%22Because+he+refused+to+recant+his+Protestant+beliefs%22&source=bl&ots=Ik3eW5VxWp&sig=MubObd5nTnqq_-TbEspG4n7QJaA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwi61bvh_azfAhWOnoMKHV5xDyYQ6AEwAHoECAAQAQ#v=onepage&q=%22My%20last%20wish%20is%20that%20Germany%20realize%20its%22&f=false Last and Near-Last Words of the Famous, Infamous and Those In-Between] By Joseph W. Lewis Jr. M.D., and after saying this he whispered to the chaplain, '''"I'll see you again"'''Andrus, Burton C., ''I Was the Nuremberg Jailor,'' New York: Coward-McCann, 1969, p. 195.</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1969-067-10, Alfred Rosenberg.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Rosenberg, Alfred"|[[Alfred Rosenberg]]
|G||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|[[Master race|Racial theory]] ideologist. Later, Minister of the Eastern Occupied Territories 1941–45.<ref group=avalon name="Rosenberg judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judrosen.asp|title=Rosenberg judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090202164220/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judrosen.asp|archive-date=2009-02-02|url-status=live}}</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Fritz Sauckel2.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Sauckel, Fritz"|[[Fritz Sauckel]]
|I||I||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|''Gauleiter'' of [[Gau Thuringia|Thuringia]] 1927–45. Plenipotentiary of the Nazi slave labor program 1942–45.<ref group=avalon name="Sauckel judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judsauck.asp|title=Sauckel judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110811032957/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judsauck.asp|archive-date=2011-08-11|url-status=live}}</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946. Defense attorney: [[Robert Servatius]]
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 102-12733, Hjalmar Schacht.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Schacht, Hjalmar"|[[Hjalmar Schacht|Dr. Hjalmar Schacht]]
|I||I||—||—
|data-sort-value=0|Acquitted
|Prominent banker and economist. Pre-war president of the ''Reichsbank'' 1923–30 & 1933–38 and Economics Minister 1934–37. Admitted to violating the [[Treaty of Versailles]].<ref group=avalon name="Schacht judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judschac.asp|title=Schacht judgement|access-date=2009-12-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090202094324/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judschac.asp|archive-date=2009-02-02|url-status=live}}</ref> Many at Nuremberg alleged that the British had brought about Schacht's acquittal to safeguard German industrialists and financiers; [[Francis Biddle]] revealed [[Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey|Geoffrey Lawrence]] had argued that Schacht, being a "man of character", was nothing like the other "ruffians" on trial.{{sfn|Bower|1995|p=347}} By 1944, he had been imprisoned in a concentration camp by the Nazis, and he was outraged to be put on trial as a major war criminal.<ref>William L Shierer "the Rise and Fall of the third Reich", part IV, Nuremberg-chapter</ref>
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Presidium of the European Youth Union Baldur von Schirach (cropped).jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Schirach, Baldur von"|[[Baldur von Schirach]]
|I||—||—||G
|data-sort-value=20|20 years
|Head of the [[Hitler Youth|''Hitlerjugend'']] from 1933–40, ''Gauleiter'' of [[Reichsgau Wien|Vienna]] 1940–45. Expressed repentance.<ref group=avalon name="Von Schirach judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judschir.asp|title=Von Schirach judgement|access-date=2009-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160820105008/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judschir.asp|archive-date=2016-08-20|url-status=live}}</ref>
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Arthur Seyss-Inquart (cropped).jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Seyss-Inquart, Arthur"|[[Arthur Seyss-Inquart]]
|I||G||G||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|Instrumental in the ''[[Anschluss]]'' and briefly Austrian Chancellor 1938. Deputy to Frank in Poland 1939–40. Later, ''Reichskommissar'' of the occupied Netherlands 1940–45. Expressed repentance.<ref group=avalon name="Seyss-Inquart judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judseyss.asp|title=Seyss-Inquart judgement|access-date=2009-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090202094332/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judseyss.asp|archive-date=2009-02-02|url-status=live}}</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946.
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Albert-Speer-72-929.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Speer, Albert"|[[Albert Speer]]
|I||I||G||G
|data-sort-value=20|20 years
|Hitler's friend, favorite architect, and Minister of Armaments from 1942 until the end of the war. In this capacity, he was ultimately responsible for the use of slave labourers from the occupied territories in armaments production. Expressed repentance.<ref group=avalon name="Speer judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judspeer.asp|title=Speer judgement|access-date=2009-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090125103304/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judspeer.asp|archive-date=2009-01-25|url-status=live}}</ref>
|- valign="top"
|[[File:Julius Streicher 72-920 crop.jpg|75px]]
|data-sort-value="Streicher, Julius"|[[Julius Streicher]]
|I||—||—||G
|data-sort-value=99|Death
|''Gauleiter'' of [[Gau Franconia|Franconia]] 1922–40, when he was relieved of authority but allowed by Hitler to keep his official title. Publisher of the anti-Semitic weekly newspaper ''[[Der Stürmer]]''.<ref group=avalon name="Streicher judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judstrei.asp|title=Streicher judgement|access-date=2009-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090203124244/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judstrei.asp|archive-date=2009-02-03|url-status=live}}</ref> Hanged 16 October 1946.
|}


Although the list of defendants was finalized on 29 August,{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=29}} as late as October, Jackson demanded the addition of new names, but this was rejected.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=83–84}} Of the 24 men indicted, [[Martin Bormann]] was [[tried in absentia|tried ''in absentia'']], as the Allies were unaware of his death; Krupp was too ill to stand trial; and [[Robert Ley]] had committed suicide before the start of the trial.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=83, 106, 133}} Former Nazis were allowed to serve as counsel{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=91}} and by mid-November all defendants had lawyers. The defendants' lawyers jointly appealed to the court, claiming it did not have jurisdiction against the accused; but this motion was rejected. The defense lawyers saw themselves as acting on behalf of their clients, but also the German nation.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=92–93}} Initially, the Americans had planned to try fourteen organizations and their leaders, but this was narrowed to six: the [[Hitler cabinet|Reich Cabinet]], the Leadership Corps of the [[Nazi Party]], the [[Gestapo]], the [[Nazi SA|SA]], the [[Schutzstaffel|SS]] and the [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]], and the [[Generalstab|General Staff]] and [[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht|High Command]] of the [[Wehrmacht|German military]] (Wehrmacht).{{sfn|Weinke|2006|pp=27–28}}{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|p=841}} The aim was to have these organizations declared criminal, so that their members could be tried expeditiously for membership in a criminal organization.{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|p=841}} Senior American officials believed that convicting organizations was a good way of showing that not just the top German leaders were responsible for crimes, without condemning the entire German people.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=205}}
== Intelligence tests and psychiatric assessments ==
The [[Rorschach test]] was administered to the defendants, along with the [[Thematic Apperception Test]] and a German adaptation of the [[Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale|Wechsler-Bellevue Intelligence Test]].{{sfn|Brunner|2001|p=234}} All were scored as having above average intelligence, several considerably so.<ref>[[#CITEREFGilbert1995|Gilbert 1995]], pp.&nbsp;30–1. Gilbert does not provide Ley's IQ, presumably because Ley committed suicide before the tests were done, though Gilbert is not explicit on this point. [[#CITEREFSereny1995|Sereny 1995]], [https://books.google.com/books?id=_Z3gKDdRgL8C&pg=PA573 p. 573], records that Speer regarded the tests as "idiotic", and so responded to them, and to the Rorschach test in particular, with "total nonsense". Coincidentally, [[#CITEREFBrunner2001|Brunner 2001]], p. 234, argues that, given the circumstances in which they were carried out, the Rorschach tests were "almost useless by present standards; one might also mention a number of other invalidating factors, such as the dated technique by which the records were generated and the use of interpreters in some of the Rorschach interviews. Moreover, in some cases no verbatim notes were taken, whereas other protocols were recorded by a psychologist who seems to have had no previous experience with the Rorschach."</ref>


===Evidence===
[[File:The defendants at Nuremberg Trials.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.15|Defendants listening to translated evidence through headphones]]
[[File:Evidence in Nuremberg trials.jpg|thumb|[[United States Army]] clerks with evidence]]


Over the summer, all of the national delegations struggled to gather evidence for the upcoming trial.{{sfn|Weinke|2006|pp=24–26}} The American and British prosecutors focused on documentary evidence and affidavits rather than testimony from survivors. This strategy increased the credibility of their case, since survivor testimony was considered less reliable and more vulnerable to accusations of bias, but reduced public interest in the proceedings.{{sfn|Sharples|2013|p=39}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=105}} The American prosecution drew on reports of the [[Office of Strategic Services]], an American intelligence agency, and information provided by the [[YIVO Institute for Jewish Research]] and the [[American Jewish Committee]],{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=116–117}} while the French prosecution presented many documents that it had obtained from the [[Center of Contemporary Jewish Documentation]].{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 19}} [[List of witnesses to the International Military Tribunal|The prosecution called 37 witnesses compared to the defense's 83]], not including 19 defendants who testified on their own behalf.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=105}} The prosecution examined 110,000 captured German documents{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|p=22}} and entered 4,600 into evidence,{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=148}} along with {{convert|30|km}} of film and 25,000 photographs.{{sfn|Mouralis|2016|loc= fn 82}}
{|class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! scope="col" style="width:150px;"|Name
! scope="col" style="width:150px;"|I.Q.<ref>[http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/nuremberg/meetthedefendants.html] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121206232142/http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/nuremberg/meetthedefendants.html |date=2012-12-06 }}. Nuremberg Defendants at ukmc. Retrieved 21 November 2012.</ref><ref>See also Gilbert, G. M. Nuremberg Diary (1947), p. 30-31, for additional information.</ref>
|-
|Dönitz, Karl ||138
|-
|Frank, Hans ||130
|-
|Frick, Wilhelm ||124
|-
|Fritzsche, Hans ||130
|-
|Funk, Walther ||124
|-
|Göring, Hermann ||138
|-
|Hess, Rudolf ||120
|-
|Jodl, Alfred ||127
|-
|Kaltenbrunner, Ernst||113
|-
|Keitel, Wilhelm ||129
|-
|Neurath, Konstantin von ||125
|-
|Papen, Franz von ||134
|-|-
|Raeder, Erich||134
|-
|Ribbentrop, Joachim von ||129
|-
|Rosenberg, Alfred ||127
|-
|Sauckel, Fritz ||118
|-
|Schacht, Hjalmar ||143
|-
|Schirach, Baldur von ||130
|-
|Seyss-Inquart, Arthur ||141
|-
|Speer, Albert ||128
|-
|Streicher, Julius ||106
|}


The charter allowed the [[Admissible evidence|admissibility]] of any evidence deemed to have [[Relevance (law)|probative]] value, including [[Deposition (law)|deposition]]s.{{sfn|Douglas|2001|p=30}} Because of the loose evidentiary rules, photographs, charts, maps, and films played an important role in making incredible crimes believable.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=105}} After the American prosecution submitted many documents at the beginning of the trial, the judges insisted that all of the evidence be read into the record, which slowed the trial.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=104}}{{sfn|Douglas|2001|p=18}} The structure of the charges also caused delays as the same evidence ended up being read out multiple times, when it was relevant to both conspiracy and the other charges.{{sfn|Douglas|2001|p=16}}
Throughout the trials, specifically between January and July 1946, the defendants and a number of [[witness]]es were interviewed by American psychiatrist [[Leon Goldensohn]]. His notes detailing the demeanor and comments of the defendants survive; they were edited into book form and published in 2004.{{sfn|Goldensohn|2004}} [[Jean Delay]] was the psychiatric expert for the French delegation in the trial of [[Rudolf Hess]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/v1-28.asp|title=Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Vol. 1: Report of Commission to Examine Defendant Hess|publisher=Lillian Goldman Law Library, Yale Law School|accessdate=11 September 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160820105829/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/v1-28.asp|archive-date=2016-08-20|url-status=live}}</ref>


== Overview of the trial ==
==Course of the trial==
The International Military Tribunal began trial on 20 November 1945,{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=138}} after postponement requests from the Soviet prosecution, who wanted more time to prepare its case, were rejected.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=124}} All defendants [[plea (law)|pleaded]] not guilty.{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|p=23}}{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=40}} Jackson made it clear that the trial's purpose extended beyond convicting the defendants. Prosecutors wanted to assemble irrefutable evidence of Nazi crimes, establish individual responsibility and the crime of aggression in international law, provide a history lesson to the defeated Germans, delegitimize the traditional German elite,{{sfn|Mouralis|2016|loc=paragraph 3}} and allow the Allies to distance themselves from [[appeasement]].{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=159}} Jackson maintained that while the United States did "not seek to convict the whole German people of crime", neither did the trial "serve to absolve the whole German people except 21 men in the dock".{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=133}} Nevertheless, defense lawyers (although not most of the defendants) often argued that the prosecution was trying to promote [[German collective guilt]] and forcefully countered this [[Straw man|strawman]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=133}} According to Priemel, the conspiracy charge "invited apologetic interpretations: narratives of absolute, [[totalitarian]] dictatorship, run by society's lunatic fringe, of which the Germans had been the first victims rather than agents, collaborators, and [[fellow traveller]]s".{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=149}} In contrast, the evidence presented on the Holocaust convinced some observers that [[Contemporary knowledge of the Holocaust|Germans must have been aware of this crime]] while it was ongoing.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=150}}
[[File:Goering on trial (color).jpg|thumb|[[Hermann Göring]] under cross-examination]]
[[File:Nazi Concentration Camps.webm|thumbtime=2|thumb|"Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps" film produced by US armed forces and used as evidence.]]
[[File:1946-10-08 21 Nazi Chiefs Guilty.ogv|thumb|right|October 17, 1946 U.S. newsreel of Nuremberg trials sentencing.]]
* 20 November 1945: The trials begin.
* 21 November 1945: [[Robert H. Jackson]] opens for the prosecution with a speech lasting several hours, leaving an impression on both the court and the public.
* 26 November 1945: The [[Hossbach Memorandum]] (of a conference in which Hitler explained his war plans) is presented.
* 29 November 1945: The film ''Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps'' is screened.<ref>{{Internet Archive film | gov.archives.arc.43452 | Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps}}</ref>
* 30 November 1945: Witness [[Erwin von Lahousen]] testifies that Keitel and von Ribbentrop gave orders for the murder of Poles, Jews, and Russian [[Prisoner of war|prisoners of war]].
* 11 December 1945: The film ''[[The Nazi Plan]]'' is screened, showing long-term planning and preparations for war by the Nazis.
* 3 January 1946: Witness [[Otto Ohlendorf]], former head of ''Einsatzgruppe'' D, admits to the murder of around 90,000 Jews.
* 3 January 1946: Witness [[Dieter Wisliceny]] describes the organisation of [[RSHA]] Department IV-B-4, in charge of the [[Final Solution]].
* 7 January 1946: Witness and former SS-''Obergruppenführer'' [[Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski]] admits to the organized mass murder of Jews and other groups in the Soviet Union.
* 28 January 1946: Witness [[Marie-Claude Vaillant-Couturier]], member of the French Resistance and concentration camp survivor, testifies on the Holocaust, becoming the first Holocaust survivor to do so.
* 11–12 February 1946: Witness and former Field Marshal [[Friedrich Paulus]], who had been secretly brought to Nuremberg from Soviet captivity, testifies on the question of waging a war of aggression.
* 14 February 1946: The Soviet prosecutors try to blame the [[Katyn massacre]] on the Germans.
* 19 February 1946: The Soviet film ''Cruelties of the German-Fascist Intruders'', detailing the atrocities in the [[extermination camp]]s, is screened.
* 27 February 1946: Witness [[Abraham Sutzkever]] testifies on the murder of almost 80,000 Jews in Vilnius by the Germans occupying the city.
* 8 March 1946: The first witness for the defense testifies – former General [[Karl Bodenschatz]].
* 13–22 March 1946: [[Hermann Göring]] takes the stand.
* 15 April 1946: Witness [[Rudolf Höss]], former commandant of Auschwitz, confirms that Kaltenbrunner had never been there, but admits to having carried out mass murder.
* 21 May 1946: Witness [[Ernst von Weizsäcker]] explains the [[German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact]] of 1939, including its secret protocol detailing the division of Eastern Europe between Germany and the Soviet Union.
* 20 June 1946: [[Albert Speer]] takes the stand. He is the only defendant to take personal responsibility for his actions.
* 29 June 1946: The defense for [[Martin Bormann]] testifies.
* 1–2 July 1946: The court hears six witnesses testifying on the Katyn massacre; the Soviets fail to pin the blame for the event on Germany.
* 2 July 1946: Admiral [[Chester W. Nimitz]] provides written testimony regarding attacks on merchant vessels without warning, admitting that Germany was not alone in these attacks, as the US did the same.
* 4 July 1946: Final statements for the defense.
* 26 July 1946: Final statements for the prosecution.
* 30 July 1946: Start of the trial of the "criminal organizations".
* 31 August 1946: Last statements by the defendants.
* 1 September 1946: The court adjourns.
* 30 September–1 October 1946: The sentencing occurs, taking two days, with the individual sentences read out on the afternoon of 1 October.<ref name="Catalogue10">{{Citation |last = Henkel (ed.)|first = Matthias |title = Memoriam Nuernberger Prozesse, exhibition catalogue (German) |publisher = Museen der Stadt Nuernberg|location = Nuremberg |year = 2011 |isbn =}}, 78–84 pp.</ref>


===American and British prosecution===
The accusers were successful in unveiling the background of developments leading to the outbreak of World War II, which cost around 50 million lives in Europe alone,<ref name="google">David W. Del Testa, Florence Lemoine, John Strickland (2003). ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=vSwi2TYabS4C&pg=&dq&hl=en#v=onepage&q=&f=false Government leaders, military rulers, and political activists]''. Greenwood Publishing Group. p.83. {{ISBN|1-57356-153-3}}</ref> as well as the extent of the atrocities committed in the name of the Hitler regime. Twelve of the accused were sentenced to death, seven received prison sentences (ranging from 10 years to life sentence), three were acquitted, and two were not charged.<ref name="countrystudies">"[http://countrystudies.us/germany/45.htm Germany – The Nuremberg Trials] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160406212308/http://countrystudies.us/germany/45.htm |date=2016-04-06 }}". [[Library of Congress Country Studies]].</ref>
[[File:Nazi Concentration Camps.webm|thumbtime=2|thumb|''[[Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps]]'']]
[[File:Proces Neurenberg, Bestanddeelnr 901-2078.jpg|thumb|Presenting information on German aggression, 4 December]]


On 21 November, Jackson gave the opening speech for the prosecution.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=106}} He described the fact that the defeated Nazis received a trial as "one of the most significant tributes that Power has ever paid to Reason".{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=107}} Focusing on aggressive war, which he described as the root of the other crimes, Jackson promoted an [[functionalism and intentionalism|intentionalist]] view of the Nazi state and its overall criminal conspiracy. The speech was favorably received by the prosecution, the tribunal, the audience, historians, and even the defendants.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=107–108}}
== Executions ==
{{Main|Nuremberg executions}}
[[File:Goering-corpse.jpg|thumb|The body of Hermann Göring, Oct. 16, 1946]]
The death sentences were carried out on 16 October 1946 by [[hanging]] using the [[Hanging#Standard drop|standard drop method]] instead of [[Hanging#Long drop|long drop]]. The U.S. Army denied claims that the drop length was too short, which may cause the condemned to die slowly from [[strangulation]] instead of quickly from a broken neck,<ref name="time">[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,803997-2,00.html War Crimes: Night without Dawn.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091102070326/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,803997-2,00.html |date=2009-11-02 }} Time Magazine Monday 28 October 1946</ref> but evidence remains that some of the condemned men choked in agony for 14 to 28 minutes.<ref name="Judgment at Nuremberg">{{cite web|last=Shnayerson|first=Robert|title=Judgment at Nuremberg|url=http://w3.salemstate.edu/~cmauriello/pdf_his102/nuremberg.pdf|work=Smithsonian Magazine|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430042108/http://w3.salemstate.edu/~cmauriello/pdf_his102/nuremberg.pdf|archivedate=30 April 2011|pages=124–141|date=October 1996|quote=The trial removed 11 of the most despicable Nazis from life itself. In the early morning hours of Wednesday, October 16, 1946, ten men died in the courthouse gymnasium in a botched hanging that left some strangled to death for as long as 25 minutes.}}</ref><ref name="All Time, part two">{{cite web|title=The Trial of the Century– and of All Time, part two|url=http://www.law.uga.edu/dwilkes_more/his34_trial2.html|work=Flagpole Magazine|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090302002906/http://www.law.uga.edu/academics/profiles/dwilkes_more/his34_trial2.html|archivedate=2 March 2009|page=6|date=17 July 2002|quote=the experienced Army hangman, Master Sgt. John C. Woods, botched the execution. A number of the hanged Nazis died, not quickly from a broken neck as intended, but agonizingly from slow [[strangulation]]. Ribbentrop and Sauckel each took 14 minutes to choke to death, while Keitel, whose death was the most painful, struggled for 28 minutes at the end of the rope before expiring.}}</ref> The executioner was [[John C. Woods]].<ref>Colonel French L. MacLean, ''The Fifth Field: The Story of the 96 American Soldiers Sentenced to Death and Executed in Europe and North Africa in World War II'' (Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, 2013), {{ISBN|9780764345777}}.</ref> The executions took place in the gymnasium of the court building (demolished in 1983).<ref name="Catalogue9">{{Citation |last = Henkel (ed.)|first = Matthias |title = Memoriam Nuernberger Prozesse, exhibition catalogue (German) |publisher = Museen der Stadt Nuernberg|location = Nuremberg |year = 2011 |isbn =}}, 87 pp.</ref>


Much of the American case focused on the development of the Nazi conspiracy before the outbreak of war.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=111}} The American prosecution became derailed during attempts to provide evidence on the first act of aggression, [[German annexation of Austria|against Austria]].{{sfn|Douglas|2001|pp=20–21}} On 29 November, the prosecution was unprepared to continue presenting on the [[Occupation of Czechoslovakia|invasion of Czechoslovakia]], and instead screened ''[[Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps]]''. The film, compiled from footage of the [[Nazi concentration camps#Death marches and liberation|liberation of Nazi concentration camps]], shocked both the defendants and the judges, who adjourned the trial.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=104–105}} Indiscriminate selection and disorganized presentation of documentary evidence without tying it to specific defendants hampered the American prosecutors' work on the conspiracy to commit crimes against humanity.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=116}} The Americans summoned {{lang|de|[[Einsatzgruppen]]}} commander [[Otto Ohlendorf]], who testified about the murder of 80,000 people by those under his command, and SS general [[Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski]], who admitted that German [[anti-partisan warfare]] was little more than a cover for the mass murder of Jews.{{sfn|Douglas|2001|pp=69–70}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=118–119}}
Although the rumor has long persisted that the bodies were taken to Dachau and burned there, they were actually incinerated in a crematorium in Munich, and the ashes scattered over the river [[Isar]].{{sfn|Overy|2001|p=205}} The French judges suggested that the military condemned (Göring, Keitel and Jodl) be shot by a [[firing squad]], as is standard for military courts-martial, but this was opposed by Biddle and the Soviet judges, who argued that the military officers had violated their military ethos and were not worthy of the more dignified death by shooting.{{Citation needed|date=February 2009}} The prisoners sentenced to incarceration were transferred to [[Spandau Prison]] in 1947.


[[File:Evidence about Ernst Kaltenbrunner's crimes is presented at the International Military Tribunal.jpg|thumb|Evidence about [[Ernst Kaltenbrunner]]'s crimes is presented, 2 January 1946.]]
Of the 12 defendants sentenced to death by hanging, two were not hanged: [[Martin Bormann]] was convicted in absentia (he had, unknown to the Allies, died while trying to escape from Berlin in May 1945), and Hermann Göring committed suicide the night before the execution. The remaining 10 defendants sentenced to death were hanged.


The British prosecution covered the charge of crimes against peace, which was largely redundant to the American conspiracy case.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=102}} On 4 December, Shawcross gave the opening speech, much of which had been written by Cambridge professor [[Hersch Lauterpacht]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=89, 108}}{{sfn|Musa|2016|p=384}} Unlike Jackson, Shawcross attempted to minimize the novelty of the aggression charges, elaborating its precursors in the conventions of [[Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907|Hague]] and [[Geneva Convention|Geneva]], the [[League of Nations Covenant]], the [[Locarno Treaty]], and the [[Kellogg–Briand Pact]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=108}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=121–122}}{{sfn|Musa|2016|pp=380–381}} The British took four days to make their case,{{sfn|Musa|2016|p=382}} with Maxwell Fyfe detailing treaties broken by Germany.{{sfn|Musa|2016|p=383}} In mid-December the Americans switched to presenting the case against the indicted organizations,{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=185}} while in January both the British and Americans presented evidence against individual defendants.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=199–200}} Besides the organizations mentioned in the indictment, American, and British prosecutors also mentioned the complicity of the German [[Reich Foreign Office|Foreign Office]], [[German Army (Wehrmacht)|army]], and [[Kriegsmarine|navy]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=119}}
== Nuremberg principles ==
The definition of what constitutes a war crime is described by the [[Nuremberg principles]], a set of guidelines document which was created as a result of the trial. The medical experiments conducted by German doctors and prosecuted in the so-called [[Doctors' Trial]] led to the creation of the [[Nuremberg Code]] to control future trials involving human subjects, a set of research ethics principles for human experimentation.


===French prosecution===
Of the indicted organizations the following were found not to be criminal:
From 17 January to 7 February 1946, France presented its charges and supporting evidence.{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 15}} In contrast to the other prosecution teams, the French prosecution delved into Germany's development in the nineteenth century, arguing that it had diverged from the West due to [[pan-Germanism]] and imperialism. They argued that Nazi ideology, which derived from these earlier ideas, was the ''[[mens rea]]''—criminal intent—of the crimes on trial.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=110–111}} The French prosecutors, more than their British or American counterparts, emphasized the complicity of many Germans;{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 16}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=111}} they barely mentioned the charge of aggressive war and instead focused on forced labor, economic plunder, and massacres.{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 17}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=115}} Prosecutor [[Edgar Faure]] grouped together various German policies, such as the German annexation of [[Alsace–Lorraine]], under the label of [[Germanization]], which he argued was a crime against humanity.{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 18}} Unlike the British and American prosecution strategies, which focused on using German documents to make their cases, the French prosecutors took the perspective of the victims, submitting postwar police reports.{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraphs 20–21}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=119}} Eleven witnesses, including victims of Nazi persecution, were called; resistance fighter and [[Auschwitz]] survivor [[Marie Claude Vaillant-Couturier]] testified about crimes she had witnessed.{{sfn|Douglas|2001|p=70}}{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraphs 20–21}} The French charges of war crimes were accepted by the tribunal, except for the execution of hostages.{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraphs 17–18}} Due to the narrow definition of crimes against humanity in the charter, the only part of the Germanization charges accepted by the judges was the [[The Holocaust in France|deportation of Jews from France]] and other parts of Western Europe.{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraph 18}}
* ''{{Interlanguage link multi|Reichsregierung|de}}''
* ''"The General Staff and High Command" was found not to comprise a group or organization as defined by Article 9 of the [[London Charter]]'' 14 Members of the High Command were tried as Criminals at [[High Command Trial|the high command trial]] case 12 of the Subsequent Nuremberg Proceedings


===Soviet prosecution===
*''[[Sturmabteilung]]''
[[File:Главный обвинитель от СССР на Нюрнбергском процессе Р.А. Руденко.jpg|thumb|[[Roman Rudenko]] opens the Soviet case.]]
On 8 February, the Soviet prosecution opened its case with a speech by Rudenko that covered all four prosecution charges, highlighting a wide variety of crimes committed by the German occupiers as part of their destructive and unprovoked invasion.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=216–218}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=109}} Rudenko tried to emphasize common ground with the other Allies while rejecting any similarity between Nazi and Soviet rule.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=109}} The next week, the Soviet prosecution produced [[Friedrich Paulus]]—a German [[Generalfeldmarschall|field marshal]] captured after the [[Battle of Stalingrad]]—as a witness and questioned him about the preparations for the invasion of the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=221–222}} Paulus incriminated his former associates, pointing to Keitel, Jodl, and Göring as the defendants most responsible for the war.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=223}}


More so than other delegations, Soviet prosecutors showed the gruesome details of German atrocities, especially the death by starvation of 3 million [[German mistreatment of Soviet prisoners of war|Soviet prisoners of war]] and several hundred thousand [[siege of Leningrad|residents of Leningrad]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=116}} Although Soviet prosecutors dealt most extensively with the [[The Holocaust in the Soviet Union|systematic murder of Jews in eastern Europe]], at times they blurred the fate of Jews with that of other Soviet nationalities.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=116, 118}} Although these aspects had already been covered by the American prosecution, Soviet prosecutors introduced new evidence from [[Extraordinary State Commission]] reports and interrogations of senior enemy officers.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=225}} [[Lev Smirnov]] presented evidence on the [[Lidice massacre]] in Czechoslovakia, adding that the German invaders had [[anti-partisan warfare|destroyed thousands of villages and murdered their inhabitants]] throughout eastern Europe.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=230}} The Soviet prosecution emphasized the racist aspect of policies such as the deportation of millions of civilians to Germany for [[forced labor in Nazi Germany|forced labor]],{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=115}} the murder of children,{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=230–231}} systematic looting of occupied territories, and theft or destruction of [[cultural heritage]].{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=232}} The Soviet prosecution also attempted to fabricate German responsibility for the [[Katyn massacre]], which had in fact been committed by the [[NKVD]]. Although Western prosecutors never publicly rejected the Katyn charge for fear of casting doubt on the entire proceedings, they were skeptical.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=225–226, 335}} The defense presented evidence of Soviet responsibility,{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=247, 329}} and Katyn was not mentioned in the verdict.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=372}}
==Subsidiary and related trials==
The American authorities conducted [[subsequent Nuremberg Trials]] in their occupied zone.


{{external media|video1=[https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn616417 ''Atrocities Committed by the German Fascist Invaders in the USSR''], 57 minutes; shown on 19 February 1946|video2=[https://perspectives.ushmm.org/item/nuremberg-trial-testimony-of-avrom-sutzkever/collection/the-holocaust-and-the-moving-image Testimony of Abraham Sutzkever], 27 February 1946}}
Other trials conducted after the first Nuremberg trial include the following:
* [[Auschwitz trial]]
* [[Belsen trial]]
* [[Belzec trial]] before the 1st [[Munich]] District Court in the mid-1960s, of eight SS men of the [[Belzec extermination camp]]
* [[Chełmno trials]] of the [[Chełmno extermination camp]] personnel, held in Poland and in Germany. The cases were decided almost twenty years apart
* [[Dachau trials]]
* [[Frankfurt Auschwitz trials]]
* [[Majdanek trials]], the longest Nazi war crimes trial in history, spanning over 30 years
* [[Mauthausen-Gusen camp trials]]
* [[Hamburg Ravensbrück trials]]
* [[Sobibór trial]] held in [[Hagen]], Germany, in 1965 against the SS men of the [[Sobibor extermination camp]]
* [[Treblinka trials]] in Düsseldorf, Germany


Inspired by the films shown by the American prosecution, the Soviet Union commissioned three films for the trial: ''The German Fascist Destruction of the Cultural Treasures of the Peoples of the USSR'', ''Atrocities Committed by the German Fascist Invaders in the USSR'', and ''The German Fascist Destruction of Soviet Cities'', using footage from Soviet filmmakers as well as shots from German newsreels.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=180, 202, 233}} The second film included footage of the liberation of [[Majdanek concentration camp|Majdanek]] and the [[liberation of Auschwitz]] and was considered even more disturbing than the American concentration camp film.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=231–232}} Soviet witnesses included several survivors of German crimes, including two civilians who lived through the siege of Leningrad, a peasant whose village was destroyed in anti-partisan warfare, a Red Army doctor who endured several prisoner-of-war camps{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=233, 236–237, 239}} and two Holocaust survivors—[[Samuel Rajzman]], a survivor of [[Treblinka extermination camp]], and poet [[Abraham Sutzkever]], who described the murder of tens of thousands of Jews from [[Vilna]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=119}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=237, 239}} The Soviet prosecution case was generally well received and presented compelling evidence about the suffering of the Soviet people and the Soviet contributions to victory.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=240, 242}}
==American role in the trial==
[[File:Jackson Nuremberg color.jpg|thumb|Chief American prosecutor Robert H. Jackson addresses the Nuremberg court. 20 November 1945.]]
While [[Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey|Sir Geoffrey Lawrence]] of Britain was the judge who was chosen to serve as the president of the court, arguably, the most prominent of the judges at the trial was his American counterpart, [[Francis Biddle]].{{sfn|Persico|2000|p=111}} Prior to the trial, Biddle had been [[United States Attorney General|Attorney General of the United States]] but had been asked to resign by [[Harry S. Truman|Truman]] earlier in 1945.{{sfn|Persico|2000|p=62}}


===Defense===
Some accounts argue that Truman had appointed Biddle as the main American judge for the trial as an apology for asking for his resignation.{{sfn|Persico|2000|p=62}} Ironically, Biddle was known during his time as Attorney General for opposing the idea of prosecuting Nazi leaders for crimes committed before the beginning of the war, even sending out a memorandum on 5 January 1945 on the subject.{{sfn|Smith|1977|p=33}} The note also expressed Biddle's opinion that instead of proceeding with the original plan for prosecuting entire organizations, there should simply be more trials that would prosecute specific offenders.{{sfn|Smith|1977|p=33}}
[[File:Goering on trial (color).jpg|thumb|[[Hermann Göring]] under cross-examination]]
[[File:Soviet-called witness addresses the International Military Tribunal.jpg|thumb|A member of the Soviet delegation addresses the tribunal.]]


From March to July 1946, the defense presented its counterarguments.{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|p=23}} Before the prosecution finished, it was clear that their general case was proven, but it remained to determine the individual guilt of each defendant.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=121}} None of the defendants tried to assert that the Nazis' crimes had not occurred.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=125}} Some defendants denied involvement in certain crimes or implausibly claimed ignorance of them, especially the Final Solution.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=126}}{{sfn|Douglas|2001|p=20}} A few defense lawyers inverted the arguments of the prosecution to assert that the Germans' authoritarian mindset and obedience to the state exonerated them from any personal guilt.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=132}} Most rejected that Germany had deviated from Western civilization, arguing that few Germans could have supported Hitler because Germany was a civilized country.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=132}}
Biddle soon changed his mind, as he approved a modified version of the plan on 21 January 1945, likely due to time constraints, since the trial would be one of the main issues which was to be discussed at Yalta.{{sfn|Smith|1977|p=34}} At trial, the Nuremberg tribunal ruled that any member of an organization convicted of war crimes, such as the SS or Gestapo, who had joined after 1939 would be considered a war criminal.{{sfn|Persico|2000|p=396}} Biddle managed to convince the other judges to make an exemption for any member who was drafted or had no knowledge of the crimes being committed by these organizations.{{sfn|Persico|2000|p=62}}


The defendants tried to blame their crimes on Hitler, who was mentioned 1,200 times during the trial—more than the top five defendants combined. Other absent and dead men, including Himmler, [[Reinhard Heydrich]], [[Adolf Eichmann]], and Bormann, were also blamed.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=127–128}} To counter claims that conservative defendants had enabled the [[Nazi rise to power]], defense lawyers blamed the [[Social Democratic Party of Germany]], trade unions, and other countries that maintained diplomatic relations with Germany.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=130–131}} In contrast, most defendants avoided incriminating each other.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=135}} Most defendants argued their own insignificance within the Nazi system,{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=133–134}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=287}} but Göring took the opposite approach, expecting to be executed but vindicated in the eyes of the German people.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=133–134}}
Justice [[Robert H. Jackson]] played an important role in not only the trial itself, but also in the creation of the International Military Tribunal, as he led the American delegation to London that, in the summer of 1945, argued in favour of prosecuting the Nazi leadership as a criminal conspiracy.{{sfn|Neave|1978|p=24}} According to [[Airey Neave#Wartime service|Airey Neave]], Jackson was also the one behind the prosecution's decision to include membership in any of the six criminal organizations in the indictments at the trial, though the IMT rejected this on the grounds that it was wholly without precedent in either international law or the domestic laws of any of the Allies.{{sfn|Neave|1978|pp=339–40}} Jackson also attempted to have Alfried Krupp be tried in place of his father, Gustav, and even suggested that Alfried volunteer to be tried in his father's place.{{sfn|Neave|1978|p=297}} Both proposals were rejected by the IMT, particularly by Lawrence and Biddle, and some sources indicate that this resulted in Jackson being viewed unfavourably by the latter.{{sfn|Neave|1978|p=297}}


The charter did not recognize a [[tu quoque defense|''tu quoque'' defense]]—asking for exoneration on the grounds that the Allies had committed the same crimes with which the defendants were charged.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=131}} Although defense lawyers repeatedly equated the [[Nuremberg Laws]] to legislation found in other countries, Nazi concentration camps to Allied detention facilities, and the deportation of Jews to the [[expulsion of Germans]], the judges rejected their arguments.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=131}} {{ill|Alfred Seidl|de}} repeatedly tried to disclose the secret protocols of the German–Soviet pact; although he was eventually successful, it was legally irrelevant and the judges rejected his attempt to bring up the [[Treaty of Versailles]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=131}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=148}} Six defendants were charged with the [[German invasion of Norway]], and their lawyers argued that this invasion was undertaken to prevent a [[Plan R 4|British invasion of that country]]; a cover-up prevented the defense from capitalizing on this argument.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=148}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=149–150}} Fleet Admiral [[Chester Nimitz]] testified that the [[United States Navy]] had also used [[unrestricted submarine warfare]] against [[Empire of Japan|Japan]] [[Allied submarines in the Pacific War|in the Pacific]]; Dönitz's counsel successfully argued that this meant that it could not be a crime.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=131–132}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=178}} The judges barred most evidence on Allied misdeeds from being heard in court.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=144}}
Thomas Dodd was a prosecutor for the United States. There was an immense amount of evidence backing the prosecutors' case, especially since meticulous records of the Nazis' actions had been kept. There were records taken in by the prosecutors that had signatures from specific Nazis signing for everything from stationery supplies to [[Zyklon B gas]], which was used to kill the inmates of the deathcamps. Thomas Dodd showed a series of pictures to the courtroom after reading through the documents of crimes committed by the defendants. The showing consisted of pictures displaying the atrocities performed by the defendants. The pictures had been gathered when the inmates were liberated from the concentration camps.<ref>Roland, Paul. The Nuremberg Trials. London: Arcturus Publishing Limited, 2012. Print.</ref>


Many defense lawyers complained about various aspects of the trial procedure and attempted to discredit the entire proceedings.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=126}} In order to appease them, the defendants were allowed a free hand with their witnesses and a great deal of irrelevant testimony was heard.{{sfn|Douglas|2001|p=15}} The defendants' witnesses sometimes managed to exculpate them, but other witnesses—including [[Rudolf Höss]], the former commandant of Auschwitz, and [[Hans Bernd Gisevius]], a member of the [[German resistance to Nazism|German resistance]]—bolstered the prosecution's case.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=129–130}} Over the course of the trial, Western judges allowed the defendants additional leeway to denounce the Soviet Union, which was ultimately revealed to be a co-conspirator in the outbreak of World War II.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=10}} In the context of the brewing [[Cold War]]—for example, in 1946 [[Winston Churchill]] delivered the [[Iron Curtain speech]]{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=148}}—the trial became a means of condemning not only Germany but also the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=14}}
{{Interlanguage link multi|Henry F. Gerecke|de}}, a Lutheran pastor, and [[Sixtus O'Connor]], a Roman Catholic priest, were sent to minister to the Nazi defendants.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/08/24/henry-gerecke-nazis-minister_n_5701515.html|title=The Strange Story Of The American Pastor Who Ministered To Nazis|first=Kimberly Winston Religion News|last=Service|date=24 August 2014|access-date=2015-04-01|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402113603/http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/08/24/henry-gerecke-nazis-minister_n_5701515.html|archive-date=2015-04-02|url-status=live}}</ref> Photographs of the trial were taken by a team of about a dozen US Army still photographers, under the direction of chief photographer [[Ray D'Addario]].<ref>{{Cite news|title=Raymond D'Addario, Photographer of Nazis, Dies at 90|last=Hevesi|first=Dennis|date=February 16, 2011|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/17/us/17daddario.html|archive-date=March 4, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190304153331/https://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/17/us/17daddario.html}}
* {{cite web|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060709182508/http://www.fredonia.edu/org/jacksonsymposium/photographer.asp|url-status=dead|url=http://www.fredonia.edu/org/jacksonsymposium/photographer.asp|title=Nuremberg: The Chief Photographer's Story|publisher=Jackson Symposium, SUNY Fredonia|year=2005|archive-date=July 9, 2006}}</ref>


==Legacy==
===Closing===
On 31 August, closing arguments were presented.{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|pp=23–24}} Over the course of the trial, crimes against humanity and especially against Jews (who were mentioned as victims of Nazi atrocities far more than any other group) came to upstage the aggressive war charge.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=171}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=119, 150}} In contrast to the opening prosecution statements, all eight closing statements highlighted the Holocaust; and the French and British prosecutors made this the main charge, as opposed to that of aggression. All prosecutors except the Americans mentioned the concept of [[genocide]], which had been recently invented by the Polish-Jewish jurist [[Raphael Lemkin]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=62, 120}} British prosecutor Shawcross quoted from witness testimony about a murdered Jewish family from [[Dubno]], Ukraine.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=120}} During the closing statements, most defendants disappointed the judges by their lies and denial. Speer managed to give the impression of apologizing without assuming personal guilt or naming any victims other than the German people.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=138, 141}} On 2 September, the court recessed; and the judges retreated into seclusion to decide the verdict and sentences, which had been under discussion since June. The verdict was drafted by British deputy judge [[Norman Birkett]]. All eight judges participated in the deliberations, but the deputies could not cast a vote.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=370, 372}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=160–161}}
[[File:S95CrucifixCourtroomNuremberg.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.15|Courtroom 600 in June 2016 showing contemporary configuration]]


==Verdict==
The Tribunal is celebrated for establishing that "crimes against international law are committed by men, not by abstract entities, and only by punishing individuals who commit such crimes can the provisions of international law be enforced."{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=8ALHAwFfy44C&pg=PA3 3]}} The creation of the IMT was followed by trials of lesser Nazi officials and the trials of Nazi doctors, who performed experiments on people in prison camps. It served as the model for the [[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]] which tried Japanese officials for crimes against peace and crimes against humanity. It also served as the model{{citation needed|date=February 2013}} for the [[Eichmann trial]] and for present-day courts at The Hague, for trying crimes committed during the Balkan wars of the early 1990s, and at Arusha, for trying the people responsible for the [[Rwandan genocide|genocide in Rwanda]].
The International Military Tribunal agreed with the prosecution that aggression was the gravest charge against the accused, stating in its judgment that because "war is essentially an evil thing", "to initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole".{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=165}}{{sfn|Sayapin|2014|p=150}} The work of the judges was made more difficult due to the broadness of the crimes listed in the Nuremberg Charter.{{sfn|Musa|2016|p=375}} The judges did not attempt to define the crime of aggression{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=161}} and did not mention the retroactivity of the charges in the verdict.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=142}} Despite the lingering doubts of some of the judges,{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=371}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=142–143}} the official interpretation of the IMT held that all of the charges had a solid basis in customary international law and that the trial was procedurally fair.{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|pp=840–841}} The judges were aware that both the Allies and the Axis had planned or committed acts of aggression, writing the verdict carefully to avoid discrediting either the Allied governments or the tribunal.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|pp=164–165}}


The judges ruled that there had been a premeditated conspiracy to commit crimes against peace, whose goals were "the disruption of the European order" and "the creation of a [[Greater Germany]] beyond [[Territorial evolution of Germany#World War I|the frontiers of 1914]]".{{sfn|Sayapin|2014|p=150}} Contrary to Jackson's argument that the conspiracy began with the founding of the Nazi Party in 1920, the verdict dated the planning of aggression to the 1937 [[Hossbach Memorandum]].{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=372}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=109, 144}} The conspiracy charge caused significant dissent on the bench; Donnedieu de Vabres wanted to scrap it. Through a compromise proposed by the British judges, the charge of conspiracy was narrowed to a conspiracy to wage aggressive war.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=144}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=371–372, 387}}{{sfn|Musa|2016|p=378}} Only eight defendants were convicted on that charge; all of whom were also found guilty of crimes against peace.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=387}} All 22 defendants were charged with crimes against peace, and 12 were convicted.{{sfn|Sayapin|2014|pp=150–151}} The war crimes and crimes against humanity charges held up the best, with only two defendants charged on those grounds being acquitted.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=386}} The judges determined that crimes against humanity concerning German Jews before 1939 were not under the court's jurisdiction because the prosecution had not proven a connection to aggressive war.{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|p=25}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=383}}
The Nuremberg trials had a great influence on the development of [[international criminal law]]. The Conclusions of the Nuremberg trials served as models for:
* [[The Genocide Convention]], 1948.
* The [[Universal Declaration of Human Rights]], 1948.
* The [[Nuremberg Principles]], 1950.
* [[The Convention on the Abolition of the Statute of Limitations on War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity]], 1968.
* The [[Geneva Convention]] on the Laws and Customs of War, 1949; its supplementary protocols, 1977.


[[File:1946-10-08 21 Nazi Chiefs Guilty.ogv|thumb|right|Newsreel of the sentencing]]
The [[International Law Commission]], acting on the request of the [[United Nations General Assembly]], produced in 1950 the report ''Principles of International Law Recognized in the Charter of the Nürnberg Tribunal and in the Judgement of the Tribunal'' (Yearbook of the International Law Commission, 1950, vol. II<ref name="Yearbook 1950">{{cite web |url=http://legal.un.org/ilc/publications/yearbooks/1950.htm |title=Yearbook of the International Law Commission, 1950 |publisher=legal.un.org |accessdate=2013-10-21 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141016203552/http://legal.un.org/ilc/publications/yearbooks/1950.htm |archivedate=2014-10-16 }}</ref>). See [[Nuremberg Principles]].


Four organizations were ruled to be criminal: the Leadership Corps of the Nazi Party, the SS, the Gestapo, and the SD, although some lower ranks and subgroups were excluded.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=383–384}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=147}} The verdict only allowed for individual criminal responsibility if willing membership and knowledge of the criminal purpose could be proved, complicating [[denazification]] efforts.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=143–144}} The SA, the Reich Cabinet, and the General Staff and High Command were not ruled to be criminal organizations.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=383–384}} Although the Wehrmacht leadership was not considered an organization within the meaning of the charter,{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=383–384}}{{sfn|Brüggemann|2018|p=405}} misrepresentation of the verdict as an exoneration was one of the foundations of the [[clean Wehrmacht myth]].{{sfn|Brüggemann|2018|pp=405–406, 447–448}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=147–148}} The trial had nevertheless resulted in the coverage of [[war crimes of the Wehrmacht|its systematic criminality]] in the German press.{{sfn|Echternkamp|2020|pp=163–164}}
The influence of the tribunal can also be seen in the proposals for a permanent international criminal court, and the drafting of international criminal codes, later prepared by the International Law Commission.


Sentences were debated at length by the judges. Twelve of the defendants were sentenced to death (Göring, Ribbentrop, Keitel, Kaltenbrunner, Rosenberg, Frank, Frick, Streicher, Sauckel, Jodl, Seyss-Inquart, and Bormann).{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=145}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=387}} On 16 October, [[Nuremberg executions|ten were hanged]], with Göring killing himself the day before. Seven defendants (Hess, Funk, Raeder, Dönitz, Schirach, Speer, and Neurath) were sent to [[Spandau Prison]] to serve their sentences.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=387, 390–391}} All three acquittals (Papen, Schacht, and Fritzsche) were based on a deadlock between the judges; these acquittals surprised observers. Despite being accused of the same crimes, Sauckel was sentenced to death, while Speer was given a prison sentence because the judges considered that he could reform.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=146}} Nikichenko released a dissent approved by Moscow that rejected all the acquittals, called for a death sentence for Hess, and convicted all the organizations.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=147}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=380}}
Tourists can visit courtroom 600 on days when no trial is on. A permanent exhibition has been dedicated to the trials.<ref name="Nuremberg museum visitor information">{{cite web|url=http://www.memorium-nuremberg.de/exhibition/visitor-information.html|title=Visitor Information – Memorium Nuremberg Trials|access-date=2015-11-30|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151127151541/http://www.memorium-nuremberg.de/exhibition/visitor-information.html|archive-date=2015-11-27|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Subsequent Nuremberg trials==
===Establishment of a permanent International Criminal Court===
{{main|Subsequent Nuremberg trials}}
The Nuremberg trials initiated a movement for the prompt establishment of a permanent international criminal court, eventually leading over fifty years later to the adoption of the Statute of the [[International Criminal Court]]. This movement was brought about because during the trials, there were conflicting court methods between the German court system and the U.S. court system. The crime of conspiracy was unheard of in the civil law systems of the Continent. Therefore, the German defense found it unfair to charge the defendants with conspiracy to commit crimes, while the judges from common-law countries were used to doing so.<ref>{{Citation | last = Ehrenfreund | first = Norbert | title = The Nuremberg Legacy | place = New York | publisher = Palgrave Macmillan | year = 2007}}.</ref>{{Page needed | date = February 2017 }}
[[File:Telford Taylor delivers the prosecution's opening statement during the Ministries Trial.jpg|thumb|[[Telford Taylor]] opens for the prosecution in the [[Ministries trial]], 6 January 1948.]]
[[File:Monowitz prisoners unload cement from trains for IG Farben.jpg|thumb|[[Monowitz]] prisoners unload cement from trains for [[IG Farben]], presented as evidence at the [[IG Farben trial]].]]


Initially, it was planned to hold a second international tribunal for German industrialists, but this was never held because of differences between the Allies.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=353, 400}} [[Subsequent Nuremberg trials|Twelve military trials]] were convened solely by the United States in the same courtroom that had hosted the International Military Tribunal.{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=1}} Pursuant to [[Law No. 10]] adopted by the [[Allied Control Council]], United States forces arrested almost 100,000 Germans as war criminals.{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=11–12}} The [[Office of Chief Counsel for War Crimes]] identified 2,500 major war criminals, of whom 177 were tried. Many of the worst offenders were not prosecuted, for logistical or financial reasons.{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=370}}
{{Quote | It [IMT] was the first successful international criminal court, and has since played a pivotal role in the development of international criminal law and international institutions.{{Sfn | Fichtelberg | 2009 | p = 5}}}}


One set of trials focused on the actions of German professionals: the [[Doctors' trial]] focused on [[Nazi human experimentation|human experimentation]] and [[Euthanasia in Nazi Germany|euthanasia murders]], the [[Judges' trial]] on the [[Law of Nazi Germany|role of the judiciary in Nazi crimes]], and the [[Ministries trial]] on the culpability of bureaucrats of German government ministries, especially the [[Reich Foreign Office|Foreign Office]].{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=273, 308}}{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=85, 89}} [[Private sector participation in Nazi crimes|Also on trial were industrialists]]—in the [[Flick trial]], the [[IG Farben trial]], and the [[Krupp trial]]—for using forced labor, looting property from Nazi victims, and funding SS atrocities.{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=3, 4, 92–94, 100–101}} Members of the SS were tried in the [[Pohl trial]], which focused on members of the [[SS Main Economic and Administrative Office]] that oversaw SS economic activity, including the [[Nazi concentration camps]];{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=90}} the [[RuSHA trial]] of [[Nazi racial policies]]; and the [[Einsatzgruppen trial|''Einsatzgruppen'' trial]], in which members of the [[Einsatzgruppen|mobile killing squads]] were tried for the murder of more than one million people behind the Eastern Front.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=294–296, 298}} [[Luftwaffe]] general [[Erhard Milch]] [[Milch trial|was tried]] for using slave labor and deporting civilians. In the [[Hostages case]], several generals were tried for executing thousands of hostages and prisoners of war, looting, using forced labor, and deporting civilians in the [[Balkans]]. Other generals were tried in the [[High Command Trial]] for plotting wars of aggression, issuing [[Criminal orders (Nazi Germany)|criminal orders]], deporting civilians, using slave labor, and looting in the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=247, 310, 315}}{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=87, 96, 104}}
==Criticism==
{{Quote box
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|source =&nbsp;—[[Joachim von Ribbentrop]]<br />20 November 1945
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These trials emphasized the crimes committed during the Holocaust.{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=1, 4}} The trials heard 1,300 witnesses, entered more than 30,000 documents into evidence, and generated 132,855 pages of transcripts, with the judgments totaling 3,828 pages.{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=4}} Of 177 defendants, 142 were convicted and 25 sentenced to death;{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=1–2}} the severity of sentencing was related to the defendant's proximity to mass murder.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=306}} Legal historian [[Kevin Jon Heller]] argues that the trials' greatest achievement was "their inestimable contribution to the form and substance of international criminal law", which had been left underdeveloped by the IMT.{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=400–401}}
Critics of the Nuremberg trials argued that the charges against the defendants were only defined as "crimes" after they were committed and that therefore the trial was invalid, and thus seen as a form of "[[victor's justice]]".{{sfn |Zolo|2009}}<ref name="lecturesarchive">''See, e.g.,'' statement of Professor Nicholls of St. Antony's College, Oxford, that "[t]he Nuremberg trials have not had a very good press. They are often depicted as a form of victor's justice in which people were tried for crimes which did not exist in law when they committed them, such as conspiring to start a war." [http://www.sant.ox.ac.uk/events/lecturesarchive/nicholls.html Prof. Anthony Nicholls, University of Oxford] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090101003056/http://www.sant.ox.ac.uk/events/lecturesarchive/nicholls.html |date=2009-01-01 }}</ref>


==Contemporary reactions==
As Michael Biddiss observed in a 1995 edition of ''[[History Today]]'', "the Nuremberg Trial continues to haunt us.&nbsp;... It is a question also of the weaknesses and strengths of the proceedings themselves."{{sfn|Biddiss|1995}}<ref name="bbc">''See, e.g.,'' [https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/war_crimes_trials_01.shtml BBC Article for BBC by Prof. Richard Overy] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090216001551/http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/war_crimes_trials_01.shtml |date=2009-02-16 }} ("[T]hat the war crimes trials... were expressions of a legally dubious 'victors' justice' was [a point raised by]... senior [Allied] legal experts who doubted the legality of the whole process... There was no precedent. No other civilian government had ever been put on trial by the authorities of other states ... What the Allied powers had in mind was a tribunal that would make the waging of aggressive war, the violation of sovereignty and the perpetration of what came to be known in 1945 as 'crimes against humanity' internationally recognized offences. Unfortunately, these had not previously been defined as crimes in international law, which left the Allies in the legally dubious position of having to execute retrospective justice&nbsp;– to punish actions that were not regarded as crimes at the time they were committed.")</ref><ref name="allacademic">''See'' Paper of Jonathan Graubart, San Diego State University, Political Science Department, published online [http://www.allacademic.com//meta/p_mla_apa_research_citation/2/5/1/1/4/pages251148/p251148-1.php Graubart Article] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430153120/http://www.allacademic.com//meta/p_mla_apa_research_citation/2/5/1/1/4/pages251148/p251148-1.php|date=2011-04-30}}, referring to the ''ex post facto'' nature of the charges.</ref>
[[File:Press at the International Military Tribunal.jpg|thumb|Press at the International Military Tribunal]]
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1990-032-29A, Nürnberger Prozess, Zeitungsleser.jpg|thumb|Germans read ''[[Süddeutsche Zeitung]]'' reporting the verdict, 1 October 1946]]


In all, 249 journalists were accredited to cover the IMT{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|p=22}} and 61,854 visitor tickets were issued.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=148}} In France, the sentence for Rudolf Hess and acquittal of organizations were met with outrage from the media and especially from organizations for deportees and resistance fighters, as they were perceived as too lenient.{{sfn|Gemählich|2019|loc=paragraphs 27, 34}} In the United Kingdom, although a variety of responses were reported, it was difficult to sustain interest in a long trial.{{sfn|Sharples|2013|pp=46–47}} Where the prosecution was disappointed by some of the verdicts, the defense could take satisfaction.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=146–147}}
[[Quincy Wright]], writing eighteen months after the conclusion of the IMT, explained the opposition to the Tribunal thus:{{Quotation|The assumptions underlying the Charter of the United Nations, the Statute of the International Court of Justice, and the Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal are far removed from the [[Legal positivism|positivistic]] assumptions which greatly influenced the thought of international jurists in the nineteenth century. Consequently, the activities of those institutions have frequently been vigorously criticized by positivistic jurists&nbsp;... [who] have asked: How can principles enunciated by the Nuremberg Tribunal, to take it as an example, be of legal value until most of the states have agreed to a tribunal with [[jurisdiction]] to enforce those principles? How could the Nuremberg Tribunal have obtained jurisdiction to find Germany guilty of aggression, when Germany had not consented to the Tribunal? How could the law, first explicitly accepted in the Nuremberg Charter of 1945, have bound the defendants in the trial when they committed the acts for which they were indicted years earlier?{{sfn|Wright|1948|pp=405–7}}
}}Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court [[Harlan Fiske Stone]] called the Nuremberg trials a fraud.{{sfn|Mason|1968|p=716}} "(Chief U.S. prosecutor) [[Robert H. Jackson|Jackson]] is away conducting his high-grade [[lynching]] party in Nuremberg, ... I don't mind what he does to the Nazis, but I hate to see the pretense that he is running a court and proceeding according to [[common law]]. This is a little too sanctimonious a fraud to meet my old-fashioned ideas", Stone wrote.{{sfn|Mason|1968|p=716}}


Many Germans at the time of the trials focused on finding food and shelter.{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=149}}{{sfn|Safferling|2020|p=42}} Despite this, a majority read press reports about the trial.{{sfn|Echternkamp|2020|p=167}} In a 1946 poll, 78 percent of Germans assessed the trial as fair, but four years later that had fallen to 38 percent, with 30 percent considering it unfair.{{sfn|Safferling|2020|p=42}}{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=99}} As time went on, more Germans considered the trials illegitimate [[victor's justice]] and an imposition of collective guilt, which they rejected—instead considering themselves victims of the war.{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=100}}{{sfn|Echternkamp|2020|pp=172–173}} As the Cold War began, the rapidly changing political environment began to affect the effectiveness of the trials.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=353–354}} The educational purpose of the Nuremberg Military Tribunals was a failure, in part because of the resistance to war crimes trials in German society, but also because of the United States Army's refusal to publish the trial record in German for fear it would undermine the fight against communism.{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=372–373}}
Jackson, in a letter discussing the weaknesses of the trial, in October 1945 told U.S. President [[Harry S. Truman]] that the Allies themselves "have done or are doing some of the very things we are prosecuting the Germans for. The French are so violating the [[Geneva Convention]] in the treatment of prisoners of war that our command is taking back prisoners sent to them. We are prosecuting plunder and our Allies are practising it. We say [[aggressive war]] is a crime and [[Soviet Union|one of our allies]] asserts sovereignty over the [[Baltic States]] based on no title except conquest."{{sfn|Luban|1994|pp=[https://books.google.com/books?id=NvBiDFPApOkC&pg=PA360 360–361]}}<ref name="The Legacy of Nuremberg">{{cite web|title=The Legacy of Nuremberg|url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/nuremberg/peopleevents/e_warcrimes.html|publisher=[[PBS Online]]/WGBH|accessdate=23 November 2011|date=1 March 2006|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110929015356/http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/nuremberg/peopleevents/e_warcrimes.html|archive-date=2011-09-29|url-status=live}}</ref>


The German churches, both Catholic and Protestant, were vocal proponents of amnesty.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=356–357}} The pardon of convicted war criminals also had cross-party support in [[West Germany]], which was established in 1949.{{sfn|Weinke|2006|pp=105–107}} The Americans satisfied these wishes to bind West Germany to the [[Western Bloc]],{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=105}} beginning early releases of Nuremberg Military Tribunal convicts in 1949.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=365}} In 1951, [[Allied High Commission|High Commissioner]] [[John J. McCloy]] overturned most of the sentences{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=366}}{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=351}} and the last three prisoners, all convicted at the ''Einsatzgruppen'' trial, were released in 1958.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=367}}{{sfn|Heller|2011|pp=366–367}} The German public took the early releases as confirmation of what they saw as the illegitimacy of the trials.{{sfn|Heller|2011|p=360}} The IMT defendants required Soviet permission for release; Speer was not successful in obtaining early release, and Hess remained in prison until his death in 1987.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=368}} By the late 1950s, the West German consensus on release began to erode, due to greater openness in [[political culture]] and new revelations of Nazi criminality, including the first trials of Nazi perpetrators in West German courts.{{sfn|Weinke|2006|pp=111–112}}
Associate Supreme Court Justice [[William O. Douglas]] charged that the Allies were guilty of "substituting power for principle" at Nuremberg. "I thought at the time and still think that the Nuremberg trials were unprincipled," he wrote. "Law was created ''[[ex post facto]]'' to suit the passion and clamor of the time."<ref name="reappraisal">'Dönitz at Nuremberg: A Reappraisal', H. K. Thompson, Jr., and Henry Strutz, (Torrance, Calif.: 1983)</ref>


==Legacy==
U.S. Deputy Chief Counsel [[Abraham Pomerantz]] resigned in protest at the low caliber of the judges assigned to try the industrial war criminals, such as those at [[I.G. Farben]].<ref name="Treason's Peace">{{cite book |title=Treason's Peace |url=https://archive.org/details/treasonspeaceger00ambrrich |first=Howard Watson |last=Ambruster |publisher=Beechhurst Press |year=1947}}</ref>
[[File:Benjamin Ferencz - Chief Prosecutor in 1947 Einsatzgruppen Trial - In Courtroom 600 Where Nuremberg Trials Were Held - Palace of Justice - Nuremberg-Nurnberg - Germany - 01.jpg|thumb|[[Ben Ferencz|Benjamin Ferencz]], chief prosecutor of the [[Einsatzgruppen trial|''Einsatzgruppen'' trial]], in the [[Palace of Justice, Nuremberg|Palace of Justice]] courtroom, 2012|upright]]
The International Military Tribunal, and its charter, "marked the true beginning of [[international criminal law]]".{{sfn|Sayapin|2014|p=148}} The trial has met a mixed reception ranging from glorification to condemnation.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=vi}} The reaction was initially predominantly negative, but has become more positive over time.{{sfn|Sellars|2010|p=1091}}


The selective prosecution exclusively of the defeated Axis and hypocrisy of all four Allied powers has garnered the most persistent criticism. Such actions as the German–Soviet pact,{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=172}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=148, 343, 402}} the [[expulsion of Germans|expulsion of millions of Germans from central and eastern Europe]],{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|pp=833–834}} deportation of civilians for forced labor,{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|pp=205, 348}} and violent suppression of anti-colonial uprisings would have been deemed illegal according to the definitions of international crimes in the Nuremberg charter.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=343}} Another controversy resulted from trying defendants for acts that were not criminal at the time,{{sfn|Sellars|2010|p=1089}} particularly crimes against peace.{{sfn|Sellars|2010|p=1089}}{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|p=834}} Equally novel but less controversial were crimes against humanity, the conspiracy charge, and criminal penalties on individuals for breaches of international law.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=137}} Besides these criticisms, the trials have been taken to task for the distortion that comes from fitting historical events into legal categories.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|pp=402, 417}}
[[Robert A. Taft]], a US Senate Majority Leader from [[Ohio]] and son of [[William Howard Taft]], criticized the [[Nuremberg Trials]] for trying [[Nazism|Nazi]] [[war crimes|war criminals]] under ''[[ex post facto]]'' laws, which resulted in his failure to [[Republican Party (United States) presidential primaries, 1948|secure the Republican nomination for President]] in 1948.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kennedy |first1=John Fitzgerald |last2=Sorensen |first2=Ted |title=Profiles in Courage |date=1955 |publisher=[[Harper & Brothers]] |isbn=978-0-06-095544-1|title-link=Profiles in Courage }}</ref>


The [[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]] (Tokyo Trial) borrowed many of its ideas from the IMT, including all four charges, and was intended by the [[Truman Administration]] to shore up the IMT's legal legacy.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=172}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=412}} On 11 December 1946, the [[United Nations General Assembly]] unanimously passed a resolution affirming "the principles of international law recognized by the Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal and the judgment of the Tribunal".{{sfn|Tomuschat|2006|p=837}} In 1950, the [[International Law Commission]] drafted the [[Nuremberg principles]] to codify international criminal law, although the Cold War prevented the adoption of these principles until the 1990s.{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=175}}{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=117}} The 1948 [[Genocide Convention]] was much more restricted than Lemkin's original concept and its effectiveness was further limited by Cold War politics.{{sfn|Weinke|2006|p=117}}{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=411}} In the 1990s, a revival of international criminal law included the establishment of [[ad hoc international criminal tribunals|''ad hoc'' international criminal tribunals]] for [[International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]] (ICTY) and [[International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda|Rwanda]] (ICTR), which were widely viewed as part of the legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials. A permanent [[International Criminal Court]] (ICC), proposed in 1953, was established in 2002.{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=7}}{{sfn|Mouralis|2019|p=207}}{{sfn|Sellars|2013|p=290}}
A number of Germans who agreed with the idea of punishment for war crimes admitted trepidation concerning the trials. A contemporary German jurist said:


The trials were the first use of [[simultaneous interpretation]], which stimulated technical advances in translation methods.{{sfn|Acquaviva|2011|p=896}}{{sfn|Hirsch|2020|p=114}} The Palace of Justice houses a museum on the trial and the courtroom became a tourist attraction, drawing 13,138 visitors in 2005.{{sfn|Sharples|2013|p=31}} The IMT is one of the most well-studied trials in history, and it has also been the subject of an abundance of books and scholarly publications, along with motion pictures such as ''[[Judgment at Nuremberg]]'' (1961) and ''[[The Memory of Justice]]'' (1976).{{sfn|Priemel|2016|p=16}}{{sfn|Sharples|2013|pp=31–32}}
{{quote|That the defendants at Nuremberg were held responsible, condemned and punished, will seem to most of us initially as a kind of historical justice. However, no one who takes the question of guilt seriously, above all no responsibly thoughtful jurist, will be content with this sensibility nor should they be allowed to be. Justice is not served when the guilty parties are punished in any old way, even if this seems appropriate with regard to their measure of guilt. Justice is only served when the guilty are punished in a way that carefully and conscientiously considers their criminal errors according to the provisions of valid law under the jurisdiction of a legally appointed judge.<ref name="cambridge">'The Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial, 1963–1965: Genocide, History, and the Limits of the Law' by Devin O. Pendas, Boston College, Massachusetts. ({{ISBN|978-0-521-12798-1}})[http://www.cambridge.org/aus/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521127981&ss=exc]</ref>}}
{{-}}

The validity of the court has been questioned on a number of grounds:
{{unordered list
| The trials were conducted under their own [[rules of evidence]]. The Charter of the International Military Tribunal permitted the use of normally inadmissible "evidence". Article 19 specified that "The Tribunal shall not be bound by technical rules of evidence&nbsp;... and shall admit any evidence which it deems to have [[Relevance (law)|probative]] value". Article 21 of the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal (IMT) Charter stipulated:
{{quote|The Tribunal shall not require proof of facts of common knowledge but shall take [[judicial notice]] thereof. It shall also take judicial notice of official governmental documents and reports of the United [Allied] Nations, including acts and documents of the committees set up in the various allied countries for the investigation of war crimes, and the records and findings of military and other Tribunals of any of the United [Allied] Nations.}}
| The defendants were not allowed to appeal or affect the selection of judges.
{{unordered list|[[A. L. Goodhart]], Professor at [[Oxford University|Oxford]], opposed the view that, because the judges were appointed by the victors, the Tribunal was not impartial and could not be regarded as a court in the true sense. He wrote:{{quote|Attractive as this argument may sound in theory, it ignores the fact that it runs counter to the administration of law in every country. If it were true then no spy could be given a legal trial, because his case is always heard by judges representing the enemy country. Yet no one has ever argued that in such cases it was necessary to call on neutral judges. The prisoner has the right to demand that his judges shall be fair, but not that they shall be neutral. As [[Robert Wright, Baron Wright|Lord Wright]] has pointed out, the same principle is applicable to ordinary criminal law because 'a burglar cannot complain that he is being tried by a jury of honest citizens'."<ref name="nuremberg7">A. L. Goodhart, "The Legality of the Nuremberg Trials", ''Juridical Review'', April 1946.</ref>}}}}
| One of the charges, brought against Keitel, Jodl and Ribbentrop, included conspiracy to commit aggression against Poland in 1939. The Secret Protocols of the [[German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact]] of 23 August 1939 proposed the partition of Poland between the Germans and the Soviets (which was subsequently executed in September 1939); however, Soviet leaders were not tried for being part of the same conspiracy.<ref name="encyclopedia">Bauer, Eddy ''The Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War II'' Volume 22 New York: Marshall Cavendish Corporation 1972 page 3071.</ref> Moreover, Allied Powers Britain and Soviet Union were not tried for preparing and conducting the [[Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran]] (1941) and the [[Winter War]] (1939–1940), respectively.
| In 1915, the Allied Powers, Britain, France and Russia, jointly issued a statement explicitly charging, for the first time, another government (the [[Sublime Porte]]) of committing "a [[crime against humanity]]". However, it was not until the phrase was further developed in the ''London Charter'' that it had a specific meaning. As the London Charter definition of what constituted a crime against humanity was unknown when many of the crimes were committed, it could be argued to be a retroactive law, in violation of the principles of prohibition of [[ex post facto law]]s and the general principle of penal law ''[[nullum crimen, nulla poena sine praevia lege poenali]]''.<ref group=avalon name="Motion adopted by all defense counsel group=avalon">{{cite web|title=Motion adopted by all defense counsel|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/v1-30.asp|work=The Avalon Project: Nuremberg Trial Proceedings volume 1|publisher=Lillian Goldman Law Library|accessdate=23 November 2011|date=19 November 1945|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111201161457/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/v1-30.asp|archive-date=2011-12-01|url-status=live}}</ref>
|
|Though the [[ICTY]] later held it to be "flawed in principle",<ref name="Lee 2004"/> the ''[[tu quoque]]'' argument, adduced by German defendants, was admitted as a valid defense during the trials, and the admirals Dönitz and Raeder were not punished for waging unrestricted submarine warfare.<ref name="Lee 2004">{{Cite journal |url= http://chinesejil.oxfordjournals.org/content/3/1/87.short |first1= Sienho |last1= Yee |title= The Tu Quoque Argument as a Defence to International Crimes, Prosecution or Punishment |date= 1 January 2004 |journal= Chinese Journal of International Law |volume= 3 |issue= 1 |pages= 87–134 |issn= 1746-9937 |publisher= Oxford University Press in association with the Chinese Society of International Law, Beijing, and Wuhan University Institute of International Law, Wuhan, China |quote= ...&nbsp;in the light of the similar conduct of the British Admiralty and the United States Navy, the tribunal did not impose any punishment on the Admirals for these violations; they were punished for other violations only [p. 103] ... the ''tu quoque'' argument received recognition at the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg [p. 117] ... the [ICTY] Trial Chamber argued that 'the ''tu quoque'' argument is flawed in principle ... [p. 119] |access-date= 2014-08-24 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150904005754/http://chinesejil.oxfordjournals.org/content/3/1/87.short |archive-date= 2015-09-04 |url-status= live |doi= 10.1093/oxfordjournals.cjilaw.a000519 }}</ref>
| The chief Soviet prosecutor submitted false documentation in an attempt to indict defendants for the [[Katyn massacre|murder of thousands of Polish officers in the Katyn forest]] near Smolensk. However, the other Allied prosecutors refused to support the indictment and German lawyers promised to mount an embarrassing defense. No one was charged or found guilty at Nuremberg for the [[Katyn Massacre|Katyn Forest massacre]].<ref name="German Clobbers">{{cite web |url=http://www.nizkor.org/ftp.cgi/places/germany/nuremberg/ftp.py?places/germany/nuremberg/tusa/katyn-hearing |title=German Defense Team Clobbers Soviet Claims |publisher=Nizkor.org |date=1995-08-26 |accessdate=2009-04-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090309074012/http://www.nizkor.org/ftp.cgi/places/germany/nuremberg/ftp.py?places%2Fgermany%2Fnuremberg%2Ftusa%2Fkatyn-hearing |archive-date=9 March 2009 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 1990, the Soviet government acknowledged that the Katyn massacre was carried out, not by the Germans, but by the Soviet secret police.<ref name="bbc161204">[[BBC News]] story: Russia to release massacre files, 16 December 2004 [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4102967.stm online] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081216045423/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4102967.stm |date=2008-12-16 }}</ref>
| [[Freda Utley]], in her 1949 book ''The High Cost of Vengeance'',<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fredautley.com/nuremberg.htm |title=The Nuremberg Judgments |publisher=Fredautley.com |accessdate=2013-01-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130120185029/http://www.fredautley.com/nuremberg.htm |archive-date=2013-01-20 |url-status=live }}</ref> charged the court with, amongst other things, double standards. She pointed to the Allied use of [[Forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union|civilian forced labor]], and deliberate starvation of civilians<ref name="austincollege">[http://artemis.austincollege.edu/acad/history/htooley/WiggersOccFoo.pdf Richard Dominic Wiggers, ''The United States and the Refusal to Feed German Civilians after World War II'']{{dead link|date=January 2013}}</ref>{{sfn|Davidson|1999|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=kEAFk4lce4kC&pg=PA85 85]. US military personnel and their wives were under strict orders to destroy or otherwise render inedible their own leftover surplus so as to ensure it could not be eaten by German civilians}} in the occupied territories. She also noted that General Rudenko, the chief Soviet prosecutor became commandant of [[Sachsenhausen concentration camp]] after the trials. After the [[fall of East Germany]] the bodies of 12,500 Soviet-era victims were uncovered at the camp, mainly "children, adolescents and elderly people".<ref name="nytimes">"[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE6D61131F937A1575AC0A964958260&sec=&spon=&scp=13&sq=Sachsenhausen&st=cse Germans Find Mass Graves at an Ex-Soviet Camp] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090223232613/http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE6D61131F937A1575AC0A964958260&sec=&spon=&scp=13&sq=Sachsenhausen&st=cse |date=2009-02-23 }}". ''The New York Times'', 24 September 1992</ref>
| Luise, the wife of [[Alfred Jodl]], attached herself to her husband's defense team. Subsequently, interviewed by [[Gitta Sereny]], researching her biography of [[Albert Speer]], Luise alleged that in many instances the [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] prosecution made charges against Jodl based on documents that they refused to share with the defense. Jodl nevertheless proved some of the charges made against him were untrue, such as the charge that he helped Hitler gain control of Germany in 1933. He was in one instance aided by a [[GI (term)|GI]] clerk who chose to give Luise a document showing that the execution of a group of British commandos in [[Norway]] had been legitimate. The GI warned Luise that if she did not copy it immediately she would never see it again.{{sfn|Sereny|1995|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=_Z3gKDdRgL8C&pg=PA578 578]}}
| The main Soviet judge, [[Iona Nikitchenko]], presided over some of the most notorious of [[Joseph Stalin]]'s [[show trial]]s during the [[Great Purge]]s of 1936 to 1938, where he, among other things, sentenced [[Lev Kamenev|Kamenev]] and [[Grigory Zinoviev|Zinoviev]].<ref name="yandex">[http://slovari.yandex.ru/dict/krugosvet/article/9/96/1009560.htm Encyclopedia Krugosvet]{{Dead link|date=July 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} {{in lang|ru}}</ref> According to the declassified Soviet archives, 681,692 people arrested for "counter-revolutionary and state crimes" were shot in 1937 and 1938 alone–an average of over 900 executions a day.<ref name="google9">Abbott Gleason (2009). ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=JyN0hlKcfTcC&pg=PA373&dq&hl=en#v=onepage&q=&f=false A Companion to Russian History]''. Wiley-Blackwell. p.373. {{ISBN|1-4051-3560-3}}</ref>
| The Tribunal itself strongly disputed that the [[London Charter of the International Military Tribunal|London Charter]] was ''ex post facto'' law, pointing to existing international agreements signed by Germany that made aggressive war and certain wartime actions unlawful, such as the [[Kellogg-Briand Pact]], the [[Covenant of the League of Nations]], and the [[Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907]].<ref group=avalon name="IMT Judgement group=avalon">{{cite web|title=International Military Tribunal, Judgment of the International Military Tribunal (1946) |url=http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/imt/proc/judlawch.htm |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150107092036/http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/imt/proc/judlawch.htm |archivedate=7 January 2015}}</ref> In an editorial at the time ''[[The Economist]]'', a British weekly newspaper, criticised the hypocrisy of both Britain and France for supporting the expulsion of the Soviet Union from the [[League of Nations]] over its unprovoked attack against Finland in 1939 and for six years later cooperating with the USSR as a respected equal at Nuremberg. It also criticised the allies for their own double standard at the Nuremberg Trials: "nor should the Western world console itself that the Russians alone stand condemned at the bar of the Allies' own justice.&nbsp;... Among crimes against humanity stands the offence of the indiscriminate bombing of civilian populations. Can the Americans who dropped the atom bomb and the British who destroyed the cities of western Germany plead 'not guilty' on this count? Crimes against humanity also include the mass expulsion of populations. Can the Anglo-Saxon leaders who at Potsdam condoned the expulsion of millions of Germans from their homes hold themselves completely innocent?&nbsp;... The nations sitting in judgement have so clearly proclaimed themselves exempt from the law which they have administered."<ref name="nuremberg10">'The Nuremberg Judgment' editorial, ''The Economist'' (London), 5 October 1946, p. 532.; see also: J. McMillan, ''Five Men at Nuremberg'', pp. 67, 173–174, 380, 414 f.</ref>}}

===Legitimacy===
[[File:David Maxwell Fyfe and another.jpg|thumb|[[David Maxwell Fyfe, 1st Earl of Kilmuir|Sir David Maxwell Fyfe]] (at lectern, left) and an unknown [[prosecutor]]]]
One criticism that was made of the IMT was that some treaties were not binding on the Axis powers because they were not signatories. This was addressed in the judgment relating to war crimes and crimes against humanity,<ref group=avalon name="yale group=avalon">{{cite web|url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judlawre.asp|title=The trial of German major war criminals : proceedings of the International Military Tribunal sitting at Nuremberg, Germany|access-date=2016-10-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140817224406/http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judlawre.asp|archive-date=2014-08-17|url-status=live}}</ref> which contains an expansion of customary law: "[[Hague Convention of 1907|the [Hague] Convention]] expressly stated that it was an attempt 'to revise the general laws and customs of war,' which it thus recognised to be then existing, but by 1939 these rules laid down in the Convention were recognised by all civilised nations, and were regarded as being declaratory of the laws and customs of war which are referred to in Article 6 (b) of the [London] Charter."

==Introduction of extempore simultaneous interpretation==
{{Unreferenced section|date=July 2017}}
[[File:Interpreters section.jpg|thumb|Interpreters' section at the trial]]
The Nuremberg Trials employed four [[official languages]]: [[English language|English]], [[French language|French]], [[German language|German]] and [[Russian language|Russian]]. In order to address the complex linguistic issues that clouded over the proceedings, [[Language interpretation|interpretation]] and translation departments had to be established. However, it was feared that [[Language interpretation#Consecutive|consecutive interpretation]] would slow down the proceedings significantly. What is therefore unique in both the Nuremberg tribunals and history of the interpretation profession was the introduction of an entirely new technique, [[Simultaneous Interpretation|extempore simultaneous interpretation]]. This technique of interpretation requires the interpreter to listen to a speaker in a source (or passive) language and orally translate that speech into another language in real time, that is, simultaneously, through headsets and microphones. Interpreters were split into four sections, one for each official language, with three interpreters per section working from the other three languages into the fourth (their mother tongue). For instance, the English booth consisted of three interpreters, one working from German into English, one working from French, and one from Russian, etc. Defendants who did not speak any of the four official languages were provided with consecutive court interpreters. Some of the languages heard over the course of the proceedings included [[Yiddish]], [[Hungarian language|Hungarian]], [[Czech language|Czech]], [[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]], and [[Polish language|Polish]].

The equipment used to establish this system was provided by [[IBM]], and included an elaborate setup of cables which were hooked up to headsets and single earphones directly from the four interpreting booths (often referred to as "the aquarium"). Four channels existed for each working language, as well as a root channel for the proceedings without interpretation. Switching of channels was controlled by a setup at each table in which the listener merely had to turn a dial in order to switch between languages. People tripping over the floor-laid cables often led to the headsets getting disconnected, with several hours at a time sometimes being taken in order to repair the problem and continue on with the trials.

Interpreters were recruited and examined by the respective countries in which the official languages were spoken: the United States, United Kingdom, France, the Soviet Union, Germany, [[Switzerland]], and [[Austria]], as well as in special cases [[Belgium]] and the [[Netherlands]]. Many were former [[translators]], army personnel, and [[linguists]], some were experienced consecutive interpreters,<ref>{{Cite book|title=The origins of simultaneous interpretation : the Nuremberg Trial|last=Francesca.|first=Gaiba|date=1998|publisher=Ottawa University Press|isbn=0776604570|location=Ottawa [Ont.]|pages=40–50|oclc=144080321}}</ref> others were ordinary individuals and even recent secondary school-graduates who led international lives in multilingual environments. It was, and still is believed{{citation needed|date=November 2017}}, that the qualities that made the best interpreters were not just a perfect understanding of two or more languages, but more importantly a broad sense of culture, encyclopedic knowledge, inquisitiveness, as well as a naturally calm disposition.

[[File:German War Crimes Trials. Nuernberg & Dachau - NARA - 292602 (cropped).jpg|thumb|left|Interpreting Device]]
With the simultaneous technique being extremely new, interpreters practically trained themselves, but many could not handle the pressure or the psychological strain. Many often had to be replaced, many returned to the translation department, and many left. Serious doubts were given as to whether interpretation provided a fair trial for the defendants, particularly because of fears of mistranslation and errors made on transcripts. The translation department had to also deal with the overwhelming problem of being understaffed and overburdened with an influx of documents that could not be kept up with. More often than not, interpreters were stuck in a session without having proper documents in front of them and were relied upon to do sight translation or double translation of texts, causing further problems and extensive criticism. Other problems that arose included complaints from lawyers and other legal professionals with regard to [[Interrogation|questioning]] and [[cross-examination]]. Legal professionals were most often appalled at the slower speed at which they had to conduct their task because of the extended time required for interpreters to render an interpretation properly. Additionally, a number of interpreters protested the idea of using vulgar language, especially if it referred to [[Jews]] or the conditions of the [[Nazi concentration camps]]. Bilingual/trilingual members who attended the trials picked up quickly on this aspect of character and were equally quick to file complaints.

Yet, despite the extensive trial and error, without the interpretation system the trials would not have been possible and in turn revolutionized the way multilingual issues were addressed in tribunals and conferences. A number of the interpreters following the trials were immediately recruited into the newly formed [[United Nations]], while others returned to their ordinary lives, pursued other careers, or worked freelance. Outside the boundaries of the trials, many interpreters continued their positions on weekends interpreting for dinners, private meetings between judges, and excursions between delegates. Others worked as investigators or editors, or aided the translation department when they could, often using it as an opportunity to sharpen their skills and to correct poor interpretations on transcripts before they were available for public record.

For further reference, a book titled ''The Origins of Simultaneous Interpretation: The Nuremberg Trial'', written by interpreter Francesca Gaiba, was published by the [[University of Ottawa Press]] in 1998.

Today, all major international organizations, as well as any conference or government that uses more than one [[official language]], uses extempore simultaneous interpretation. Notable bodies include the [[Parliament of Kosovo]] with three official languages, the [[Parliament of Canada]] with two official languages, the Parliament of South Africa with eleven official languages, the [[European Union]] with twenty-four official languages, and the [[United Nations]] with six official working languages.

==See also==
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1990-032-29A, Nürnberger Prozess, Zeitungsleser.jpg|thumb|Germans read newspaper about the trial]]
* [[Nuremberg Trials bibliography]]
* [[Command responsibility]]
* [[Dora Trial]]
* ''[[Eichmann in Jerusalem]]''
* [[Einsatzgruppen Trial]]
* [[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]]
* ''[[Judgment at Nuremberg]]'' (1961 film)
* ''[[Nuremberg (2000 film)]]''
* [[List of Axis personnel indicted for war crimes]]
* ''[[Nuremberg Diary]]'', an account of observations and discussions with the defendants by an American psychiatrist
* [[Research Materials: Max Planck Society Archive]]
* [[Superior orders]]
* [[Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal]]
* [[Transitional justice]]


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist|19em}}


===Notes===
==Sources==
{{further|Nuremberg Trials bibliography}}
{{Reflist|30em}}
{{Refbegin|indent=yes|30em}}

* {{cite journal |last1=Acquaviva |first1=Guido |title=At the Origins of Crimes Against Humanity: Clues to a Proper Understanding of the ''Nullum Crimen'' Principle in the Nuremberg Judgment |journal=[[Journal of International Criminal Justice]] |date=2011 |volume=9 |issue=4 |pages=881–903 |doi=10.1093/jicj/mqr010|doi-access=free }}
===Citations===
* {{cite book |last1=Bassiouni |first1=M. Cherif |author1-link=M. Cherif Bassiouni |title=Crimes against Humanity: Historical Evolution and Contemporary Application |date=2011 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |isbn=978-1-139-49893-7 |language=en}}

* {{cite book |last1=Brüggemann |first1=Jens |title=Männer von Ehre?: die Wehrmachtgeneralität im Nürnberger Prozess 1945/46 : zur Entstehung einer Legende |trans-title=Men of honor?: the Wehrmacht generals in the Nuremberg trial 1945/46: the emergence of a legend |date=2018 |publisher=[[Ferdinand Schöningh]] |isbn=978-3-506-79259-4 |language=de}}
====Avalon Project====
* {{cite book |last1=Douglas |first1=Lawrence |authorlink=Lawrence Douglas |title=The Memory of Judgment: Making Law and History in the Trials of the Holocaust |date=2001 |publisher=[[Yale University Press]] |isbn=978-0-300-10984-9 |language=en}}
These citations refer to documents at {{cite web |url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/subject_menus/imt.asp |title=The International Military Tribunal for Germany |work=[[Avalon Project|The Avalon Project: Documents in Law, History, and Diplomacy]] |publisher=[[Yale Law School]] [[Lillian Goldman Law Library]]}}
* {{cite book |last1=Echternkamp |first1=Jörg|authorlink=Jörg Echternkamp |title=Postwar Soldiers: Historical Controversies and West German Democratization, 1945–1955 |date=2020 |publisher=[[Berghahn Books]] |isbn=978-1-78920-558-9 |language=en}}

* {{cite book |last1=Fleming |first1=Michael |author1-link=Michael Fleming (historian) |title=In the Shadow of the Holocaust: Poland, the United Nations War Crimes Commission, and the Search for Justice |date=2022 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-009-11660-2 |language=en}}
{{Reflist|group="avalon"|30em}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Gemählich |first1=Matthias |title=« Notre combat pour la paix » : la France et le procès de Nuremberg (1945–1946) |trans-title="Our fight for peace": France and the Nuremberg trial (1945–1946) |journal=Revue d'Allemagne et des pays de langue allemande |date=2019 |volume=51 |issue=2 |pages=507–525 |doi=10.4000/allemagne.2053 |s2cid=<!-- --> |url=https://journals.openedition.org/allemagne/2053 |language=fr |issn=0035-0974|doi-access=free }}

* {{cite book |last= Heller |first= Kevin Jon|authorlink=Kevin Jon Heller |year= 2011 |title= The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International Criminal Law |publisher= [[Oxford University Press]] |isbn= 978-0-19-923233-8 }}
===Bibliography===
* {{cite book |last1=Hirsch |first1=Francine |authorlink=Francine Hirsch |title=Soviet Judgment at Nuremberg: A New History of the International Military Tribunal after World War II |date=2020 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-937795-4 |language=en}}
{{Refbegin|30em}}
* {{Cite book |last=Machcewicz |first=Paweł |author-link=Paweł Machcewicz |title=Wina, kara, polityka. Rozliczenia ze zbrodniami II Wojny Światowej |last2=Paczkowski |first2=Andrzej |author-link2=Andrzej Paczkowski |date=2021 |publisher=[[Znak (publisher)|Znak]] |isbn=9788324079605 |location=[[Kraków]] |language=pl |trans-title=Guilt, Punishment, Politics: Dealing with the Crimes of World War II}}
* {{cite journal |last= Biddiss |first= Michael |year= 1995 |title= Victors' Justice? The Nuremberg Tribunal |url= http://faculty.polytechnic.org/gfeldmeth/victorsjustice.pdf |journal= [[History Today]] |volume= 45 |issue= 5 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Mouralis |first1=Guillaume |authorlink=:fr:Guillaume Mouralis |title=Le procès de Nuremberg: retour sur soixante-dix ans de recherche|trans-title=The Nuremberg trial: a look back at seventy years of research|language=fr |journal=Critique Internationale |date=2016 |volume=73 |issue=4 |page=159 |doi=10.3917/crii.073.0159|url=https://www.cairn.info/revue-critique-internationale-2016-4-page-159.htm}}
* {{cite book |last= Bower |first= Tom |authorlink= Tom Bower |year= 1995 |origyear= 1981 |title= Blind Eye to Murder: Britain, America and the Purging of Nazi Germany—A Pledge Betrayed |edition= 2nd revised |location= London [[Little, Brown and Company|Little, Brown]] |isbn= 978-0-316-87668-1 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last1=Mouralis |first1=Guillaume |title=Le moment Nuremberg: Le procès international, les lawyers et la question raciale|trans-title=The Nuremberg moment: The international trial, the lawyers and the racial question |date=2019 |publisher=[[Presses de Sciences Po]] |isbn=978-2-7246-2422-9 |language=fr}}
* {{Cite journal |last = Brunner |first = José |title = "Oh those crazy cards again": a history of the debate on the Nazi Rorschachs, 1946–2001 |journal = [[Political Psychology (journal)|Political Psychology]] |volume = 22 |issue = 2 |pages = 233–261 |doi = 10.1111/0162-895X.00237 |jstor = 3791925 |date = September 2001 |ref = harv }} {{subscription required |date=October 2012}}
* {{cite book |last= Cooper |first= Robert W. |year= 2011 |origyear= 1947 |title= The Nuremberg Trial |location= London |publisher= [[Faber & Faber]] |isbn= 978-0-571-27273-0 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last1=Musa |first1=Shavana |title=British Influences on International Law, 1915–2015|chapter=The British and the Nuremberg Trial |date=2016 |publisher=[[Brill Nijhoff]] |isbn=978-90-04-28417-3 |language=en|pages=367–386}}
* {{cite book |last= Davidson |first= Eugene |year= 1997 |origyear= 1966 |title= The Trial of the Germans: An Account of the Twenty-Two Defendants Before the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg |location= Columbia,&nbsp;MO |publisher= [[University of Missouri Press]] |isbn= 978-0-8262-1139-2 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last1=Priemel |first1=Kim Christian |author1-link=Kim Christian Priemel |title=The Betrayal: The Nuremberg Trials and German Divergence |date=2016 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-256374-3 |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Safferling |first1=Christoph J. M.|authorlink=:de:Christoph Safferling |title=The Nuremberg War Crimes Trial and its Policy Consequences Today |date=2020 |publisher=[[Nomos publishing house|Nomos]] |isbn=978-3-8487-3688-1 |pages=41–54 |chapter-url=https://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/9783845280400-41/german-participation-in-the-nuremberg-trials-and-its-implications-for-today?l=de |chapter=German Participation in the Nuremberg Trials and Its Implications for Today|doi=10.5771/9783845280400-41|s2cid=<!-- -->}}
* {{cite book |last= Davidson |first= Eugene |year= 1999 |origyear= 1959 |title= The Death and Life of Germany |location= Columbia,&nbsp;MO |publisher= University of Missouri Press |isbn= 978-0-8262-1249-8 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= Evans |first= Richard J. |authorlink= Richard J. Evans |year= 2008 |title= The Third Reich at War |location= London |publisher= [[Penguin Group|Allen Lane]] |isbn= 978-0-7139-9742-2 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sayapin |first1=Sergey |title=The Crime of Aggression in International Criminal Law: Historical Development, Comparative Analysis and Present State |date=2014 |publisher=[[T.M.C. Asser Press]] |isbn=978-90-6704-927-6 |language=en}}
* {{cite journal|last=Fichtelberg|first=Aaron|title=Fair Trials and International Courts: A critical evaluation of the Nuremberg legacy|journal=Criminal Justice Ethics|volume=28|number=1|date=2009|pages=5–24|issn=0731-129X|doi=10.1080/07311290902831268|ref=harv|doi-access=free}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Sellars |first1=Kirsten |title=Imperfect Justice at Nuremberg and Tokyo |journal=[[European Journal of International Law]] |date=2010 |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=1085–1102 |doi=10.1093/ejil/chq070|doi-access=free }}
* {{cite book |last= Gilbert |first= Gustave M. |authorlink= Gustave Gilbert |year= 1995 |origyear= 1947 |title= Nuremberg Diary |location= Cambridge,&nbsp;MA |publisher= [[Da Capo Press]] |isbn= 978-0-306-80661-2 |ref= harv|title-link= Nuremberg Diary }}
* {{cite book |last1=Sellars |first1=Kirsten |title='Crimes Against Peace' and International Law |date=2013 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-02884-5 |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sharples |first1=Caroline |title=Britain and the Holocaust: Remembering and Representing War and Genocide |date=2013 |publisher=[[Palgrave Macmillan UK]] |isbn=978-1-137-35077-0 |pages=31–50 |language=en |chapter=Holocaust on Trial: Mass Observation and British Media Responses to the Nuremberg Tribunal, 1945–1946}}
* {{cite book |last= Goldensohn |first= Leon N. |authorlink= Leon Goldensohn |year= 2004 |title= The Nuremberg Interviews: Conversations with the Defendants and Witnesses |location= New York,&nbsp;NY |publisher= [[Alfred A. Knopf]] |isbn= 978-0-375-41469-5 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Tomuschat |first1=Christian |title=The Legacy of Nuremberg |journal=Journal of International Criminal Justice |date=2006 |volume=4 |issue=4 |pages=830–844 |doi=10.1093/jicj/mql051|doi-access=free }}
* {{cite book |last= Harris |first= Whitney R. |year= 2006 |chapter= Tyranny on Trial—Trial of Major German War Criminals at Nuremberg, 1945–1946 |editor1-last= Herbert R. Reginbogin |editor2-last= Christoph J. M. Safferling |title= The Nuremberg Trials: International Criminal Law Since 1945 / Die Nürnberger Prozesse: Völkerstrafrecht seit 1945 |location= Berlin |publisher= [[Walter de Gruyter]] |pages= 106–114 |isbn= 978-3-11-094484-6 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= Heller |first= Kevin Jon |year= 2011 |title= The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International Criminal Law |location= Oxford |publisher= [[Oxford University Press]] |isbn= 978-0-19-923233-8 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last1=Weinke |first1=Annette |title=Die Nürnberger Prozesse |trans-title=The Nuremberg trials |date=2006 |publisher=[[C.H.Beck]] |isbn=978-3-406-53604-5 |language=de}}
* {{cite book |last= Kochavi |first= Arieh J. |year= 1998 |title= Prelude to Nuremberg: Allied War Crimes Policy and the Question of Punishment |location= Chapel Hill,&nbsp;NC |publisher= [[University of North Carolina Press]] |isbn= 978-0-8078-2433-7 |ref= harv |url= https://archive.org/details/preludetonurembe00koch }}
* {{cite journal |last= Lawrence |first= Geoffrey |authorlink= Geoffrey Lawrence, 1st Baron Oaksey |year= 1947 |title= The Nuremberg Trial |journal= [[International Affairs (journal)|International Affairs]] |volume= 23 |issue= 2 |pages= 151–159|doi = 10.2307/3018884 |jstor= 3018884 |ref= harv}}{{subscription required |date=October 2012}}
* {{cite book |last= Luban |first= David |year= 1994 |title= Legal Modernism: Law, Meaning, and Violence |location= Ann Arbor,&nbsp;MI |publisher= [[University of Michigan Press]] |isbn= 978-0-472-10380-5 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= MacLean |first= French L. |title= ''The Fifth Field: The Story of the 96 American Soldiers Sentenced to Death and Executed in Europe and North Africa in World War II'' |location= Atglen, PA |publisher= Schiffer Publishing |year=2013}}
* {{cite journal |last= Marrus |first= Michael R. |authorlink= Michael Marrus |year= 1997 |title= The Nuremberg Trial: Fifty Years After |journal= [[The American Scholar (magazine)|The American Scholar]] |volume= 66 |issue= 4 |pages= 563–570|jstor= 41212687 |ref= harv}}{{subscription required |date=October 2012}}
* Marrus, Michael R. "Three Roads From Nuremberg", [[Tablet (magazine)|''Tablet'' magazine]], Nov. 20, 2015.
* {{cite book |last= Mason |first= Alpheus Thomas |year= 1968 |origyear= 1956 |title= Harlan Fiske Stone: Pillar of the Law |url= https://archive.org/details/harlanfiskestone0000maso |url-access= registration |location= Hamden,&nbsp;CT |publisher= Archon Books |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |editor-last= Mettraux |editor-first= Guénaël |year= 2008 |title= Perspectives on the Nuremberg Trial |location= Oxford |publisher= [[Oxford University Press]] |isbn= 978-0-19-923233-8 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= Neave |first= Airey |authorlink= Airey Neave |year= 1978 |title= Nuremberg: A Personal Record of the Trial of the Major Nazi War Criminals |location= |publisher= Grafton Books |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= Overy |first= Richard |authorlink= Richard Overy |year= 2001 |title= Interrogations: The Nazi Elite in Allied Hands |location= London |publisher= [[Penguin Group|Allen Lane]] |isbn= 978-0-7139-9350-9 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= Owen |first= James |authorlink= James Owen (British author) |year= 2006 |title= Nuremberg: Evil on Trial |location = London |publisher= [[Headline]] |isbn= 9780755315444 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= Parish |first= Matthew |year= 2011 |title= Mirages of International Justice: The Elusive Pursuit of a Transnational Legal Order |publisher= [[Edward Elgar Publishing]] |isbn= 9780857931184 |ref= Parish2011}}
* {{cite book |last= Persico |first= Joseph E. |authorlink= Joseph E. Persico |year= 2000 |origyear= 1994 |title= Nuremberg: Infamy on Trial |location= London |publisher= [[Penguin Books]] |isbn= 978-0-14-029815-4 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= Senarclens |first= Pierre de |year= 1988 |title= Yalta |location= New Brunswick,&nbsp;NJ |publisher= [[Transaction Publishers]] |isbn= 978-0-88738-152-2 |ref= harv}}
* {{citation |last= Sereny |first= Gitta |authorlink= Gitta Sereny |year= 1995 |title= Albert Speer: His Battle with Truth |location= London |publisher= [[Macmillan Publishers|Macmillan]] |isbn= 978-0-333-64519-2 |ref= harv}}
* {{cite book |last= Smith |first= Bradley F. |year= 1977 |title= Reaching Judgment at Nuremberg |url= https://archive.org/details/reachingjudgment00smit |url-access= registration |publisher= [[Basic Books]] |ref= harv}}
* {{cite journal |last= Wright |first= Quincy |authorlink= Quincy Wright |date= July 1946 |title= The Nuremberg Trial |journal= [[Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science]] |volume= 246 |pages= 72–80 |jstor= 1025134 |ref= harv |doi=10.1177/000271624624600113 }}{{subscription required |date=October 2012}}
* {{cite journal |last= Wright |first= Quincy |date= April 1948 |title= Legal Positivism and the Nuremberg Judgment |journal= [[American Journal of International Law]] |volume= 42 |issue= 2 |pages= 405–414 |doi = 10.2307/2193683 |jstor= 2193683 |ref= harv}}{{subscription required |date=October 2012}}
* {{cite book |last= Zolo |first= Danilo |year= 2009 |title= Victors' Justice: From Nuremberg to Baghdad |url= https://archive.org/details/victorsjusticefr00zolo |location= New York & London |publisher= [[Verso Books]] |isbn= 978-1-84467-317-9 |ref= harv }}
{{Refend}}
{{Refend}}

==Further reading==

* {{cite book |last=Conot|first= Robert E.|title= Justice at Nuremberg|location= New York|publisher= Harper & Row|year= 1983|isbn =006015117X}}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Priemel |editor-first=Kim C. |editor2-first=Alexa |editor2-last=Stiller |title=Reassessing the Nuremberg Military Tribunals: Transitional Justice, Trial Narratives, and Historiography |publisher=Berghahn Books |year=2012 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=znQ72M_MuU0C |isbn=978-0-85745-532-1}}
* Herbert R. Reginbogin, Christoph J. M. Safferling: ''The Nuremberg Trials: International Criminal Law Since 1945''. De Gruyter 2006, {{ISBN|978-3-11-094484-6}}.


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://www.ictj.org/our-work/transitional-justice-issues/criminal-justice International Center for Transitional Justice, Criminal Justice page]
{{Commons category|Nuremberg Trials}}
{{Commons category|Nuremberg Trials}}
* [https://avalon.law.yale.edu/subject_menus/imt.asp Transcript] and other documents from the [[Avalon Project]] by [[Yale Law School]] [[Lillian Goldman Law Library]]
{{Wikisource portal|Nuremberg}}
* [https://catalog.archives.gov/id/35957 Nuremberg: Army Television – Release Version] {{--}} A documentary produced in 1950, available online in the [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]] Catalog
* [https://www.c-span.org/video/?400657-1/nazi-concentration-prison-camps Documentary shown at the Nuremberg trial in November 1945 exhibiting the horrors of the concentration camps]
::Consists of footage from German films documenting Nazi personalities and activities interwoven with film shot during the trials {{--}} including testimony and statements from defendants, prosecuting attorneys, judges, and witnesses. It also contains flashbacks of a variety of Nazi crimes against humanity.
* [http://www.yadvashem.org/holocaust/about/end-of-war-aftermath/nuremberg-trials?WT.mc_id=wiki The Nuremberg Trials] on the [[Yad Vashem]] website
* [[Bibliography of the Holocaust#Primary sources|Bibliography of the Holocaust § Primary Sources]]
* [https://www.loc.gov/rr/frd/Military_Law/NT_major-war-criminals.html Official records of the Nuremberg trials (The Blue series) in 42 volumes from the records of the Library of congress]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120614212436/http://library.lawschool.cornell.edu/WhatWeHave/SpecialCollections/Donovan/index.cfm Donovan Nuremberg Trials Collection] Cornell Law Library
* [http://nuremberg.law.harvard.edu/?DI=1&text=overview Nuremberg Trials Project: A digital document collection] Harvard Law School Library
* [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/subject_menus/judcont.asp The Avalon Project]
* [http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/imt/proc/imtconst.htm Charter of the International Military Tribunal] (Nuremberg trials)
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20101125101211/http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/nuremberg/subsequenttrials.html The Subsequent Nuremberg Trials]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20130912122915/http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/focus/warcrimetrials/ Special focus on The trials – USHMM]
* [http://www.jurist.org/forum/2006/10/tree-fell-in-forest-nuremberg.php A Tree Fell in the Forest: The Nuremberg Judgments 60 Years On], [[JURIST]]
* [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/mar/20/nuremberg-trials-hermann-goring Bringing a Nazi to justice: how I cross-examined 'fat boy' Göring], [[guardian.co.uk]]
* [http://www.fredautley.com/nuremberg.htm ''The Nuremberg Judgments''], Chapter 6 from ''[http://www.fredautley.com/pdffiles/book01.pdf The High Cost of Vengeance]'', by [[Freda Utley]], [[Henry Regnery|Henry Regnery Company]], Chicago, (1948). Made available by "The Freda Utley Foundation"
* [http://www.law.wisc.edu/gls/documents/francine_nuremberg.pdf Francine Hirsch, The Soviets at Nuremberg: International Law, Propaganda, and the Making of the Postwar Order]{{dead link|date=July 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
* [http://oculus.nlm.nih.gov/tribunal408 International Military Tribunal, Nuremberg trials transcripts and documentary evidence of German medical experiments in the commission of war crimes and crimes against humanity 1946–1947], United States National Library of Medicine
* [http://findingaids.library.northwestern.edu/catalog/inu-ead-spec-archon-505 "Nuremberg Trial Collection"] The Northwestern University Special Collections archival collection amassed by Charles J. Gallagher, a court reporter at the trials.
* {{Librivox author |id=11898}}


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Latest revision as of 21:36, 8 January 2025

International Military Tribunal
Judges' bench during the tribunal at the Palace of Justice in Nuremberg, Allied-occupied Germany
IndictmentConspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes, crimes against humanity, mass murder, unethical human experimentation, false imprisonment, hate crimes
Started20 November 1945
Decided1 October 1946
Defendants24 (see list)
Witnesses37 prosecution, 83 defense
Case history
Related actions
Court membership
Judges sitting and deputies

The Nuremberg trials were held by the Allies against representatives of the defeated Nazi Germany for plotting and carrying out invasions of other countries across Europe and atrocities against their citizens in World War II.

Between 1939 and 1945, Nazi Germany invaded many countries across Europe, inflicting 27 million deaths in the Soviet Union alone. Proposals for how to punish the defeated Nazi leaders ranged from a show trial (the Soviet Union) to summary executions (the United Kingdom). In mid-1945, France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States agreed to convene a joint tribunal in Nuremberg, occupied Germany, with the Nuremberg Charter as its legal instrument. Between 20 November 1945 and 1 October 1946, the International Military Tribunal (IMT) tried 22 of the most important surviving leaders of Nazi Germany in the political, military, and economic spheres, as well as six German organizations. The purpose of the trial was not just to convict the defendants but also to assemble irrefutable evidence of Nazi crimes, offer a history lesson to the defeated Germans, and delegitimize the traditional German elite.

The IMT verdict followed the prosecution in declaring the crime of plotting and waging aggressive war "the supreme international crime" because "it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole".[1] Most of the defendants were also charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity, and the systematic murder of millions of Jews in the Holocaust was significant to the trial. Twelve further trials were conducted by the United States against lower-level perpetrators, which focused more on the Holocaust. Controversial at the time for their retroactive criminalization of aggression, the trials' innovation of holding individuals responsible for violations of international law is considered "the true beginning of international criminal law".[2]

Origin

[edit]
Jews arriving at Auschwitz concentration camp, 1944. According to legal historian Kirsten Sellars, the death camps "formed the moral core of the Allies' case against the Nazi leaders".[3]

Between 1939 and 1945, Nazi Germany invaded many European countries, including Poland, Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, Yugoslavia, Greece, and the Soviet Union.[4] German aggression was accompanied by immense brutality in occupied areas;[5] war losses in the Soviet Union alone included 27 million dead, mostly civilians, which was one seventh of the prewar population.[6] The legal reckoning was premised on the extraordinary nature of Nazi criminality, particularly the perceived singularity of the systematic murder of millions of Jews.[3]

The first step towards the trials of Nazi war criminals were initiatives taken by the governments-in-exile of countries occupied by Germany, especially Poland, which as early as December 1939 established agencies aimed at recording crimes committed by Germany in Poland for their later prosecution.[7] These efforts resulted in a Polish-French-British declaration on April 18, 1940, holding Germany responsible for the crimes, without an explicit promise of their prosecution.[8] Such a promise was included in a declaration by the occupied countries in November 1941, gathered at a conference organized on Poland's initiative.[9] Another conference, held in January 1942, saw the participation of observers from the USSR, US, China, and the United Kingdom. It adopted a declaration promising to punish both direct perpetrators and their superiors, which later became the basis of the Nuremberg system. The Inter-Allied Commission on the Punishment of War Crimes was also established at that time.[8] The United States and United Kingdom refused to endorse this proposal, citing the failure of war crimes prosecutions after World War I.[10][11]

Pressures, primarily from Poland and Czechoslovakia, led the British to take concrete steps in the area of prosecuting German crimes. The London-based United Nations War Crimes Commission—without Soviet participation—first met in October 1943 and became bogged down in the scope of its mandate, with Belgian jurist Marcel de Baer and Czech legal scholar Bohuslav Ečer arguing for a broader definition of war crimes that would include "the crime of war".[12][13] On 1 November 1943, the Soviet Union, United Kingdom, and United States issued the Moscow Declaration, warning the Nazi leadership of the signatories' intent to "pursue them to the uttermost ends of the earth...in order that justice may be done".[14] The declaration stated that those high-ranking Nazis who had committed crimes in several countries would be dealt with jointly, while others would be tried where they had committed their crimes.[14][15][12]

Soviet jurist Aron Trainin developed the concept of crimes against peace (waging aggressive war) which would later be central to the proceedings at Nuremberg.[16][17] Trainin's ideas were reprinted in the West and widely adopted.[18][19] Of all the Allies, the Soviet Union lobbied most intensely for trying the defeated German leaders for aggression in addition to war crimes.[16] The Soviet Union wanted to hold a trial with a predetermined outcome similar to the 1930s Moscow trials, in order to demonstrate the Nazi leaders' guilt and build a case for war reparations to rebuild the Soviet economy, which had been devastated by the war.[20] The United States insisted on a trial that would be seen as legitimate as a means of reforming Germany and demonstrating the superiority of the Western system.[21] The United States Department of War was drawing up plans for an international tribunal in late 1944 and early 1945. The British government still preferred the summary execution of Nazi leaders, citing the failure of trials after World War I and qualms about retroactive criminality.[22][23][24] The form that retribution would take was left unresolved at the Yalta Conference in February 1945.[25] On 2 May, at the San Francisco Conference, United States president Harry S. Truman announced the formation of an international military tribunal.[26] On 8 May, Germany surrendered unconditionally, bringing an end to the war in Europe.[27]

Establishment

[edit]

Nuremberg charter

[edit]
Aron Trainin (center, with moustache) speaks at the London Conference.
Aerial view of the Palace of Justice in 1945, with the prison attached behind it
Ruins of Nuremberg, c. 1945

At the London Conference, held from 26 June to 2 August 1945, representatives of France, the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States negotiated the form that the trial would take. Until the end of the negotiations, it was not clear that any trial would be held at all.[28]

The offenses that would be prosecuted were crimes against peace, crimes against humanity, and war crimes.[29] At the conference, it was debated whether wars of aggression were prohibited in existing customary international law; regardless, before the charter was adopted there was no law providing for criminal responsibility for aggression.[30][31] Despite misgivings from other Allies, American negotiator and Supreme Court justice Robert H. Jackson threatened the United States' withdrawal if aggression was not prosecuted because it had been the rationale for American entry into World War II.[32] However, Jackson conceded on defining crimes against peace; the other three Allies were opposed because it would undermine the freedom of action of the United Nations Security Council.[33]

War crimes already existed in international law as criminal violations of the laws and customs of war, but these did not apply to a government's treatment of its own citizens.[34][35] Legal experts sought a way to try crimes against German citizens, such as the German Jews.[36] A Soviet proposal for a charge of "crimes against civilians" was renamed "crimes against humanity" at Jackson's suggestion[37] after previous uses of the term in the post-World War I Commission of Responsibilities and in failed efforts to prosecute the perpetrators of the Armenian genocide.[38] The British proposal to define crimes against humanity was largely accepted, with the final wording being "murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation, and other inhumane acts committed against any civilian population".[39][40] The final version of the charter limited the tribunal's jurisdiction over crimes against humanity to those committed as part of a war of aggression.[41][42] Both the United States—concerned that its "Jim Crow" system of racial segregation not be labeled a crime against humanity—and the Soviet Union wanted to avoid giving an international court jurisdiction over a government's treatment of its own citizens.[43][44]

The charter upended the traditional view of international law by holding individuals, rather than states, responsible for breaches.[45][29] The other three Allies' proposal to limit the definition of the crimes to acts committed by the defeated Axis was rejected by Jackson. Instead, the charter limited the jurisdiction of the court to Germany's actions.[46][47] Article 7 prevented the defendants from claiming sovereign immunity,[48] and the plea of acting under superior orders was left for the judges to decide.[49] The trial was held under modified common law.[50] The negotiators decided that the tribunal's permanent seat would be in Berlin, while the trial would be held at the Palace of Justice in Nuremberg.[41][51] Located in the American occupation zone, Nuremberg was a symbolic location as the site of Nazi rallies. The Palace of Justice was relatively intact but needed to be renovated for the trial due to bomb damage; it had an attached prison where the defendants could be held.[52][51] On 8 August, the Nuremberg Charter was signed in London.[53]

Judges and prosecutors

[edit]

In early 1946, there were a thousand employees from the four countries' delegations in Nuremberg, of which about two thirds were from the United States.[54] Besides legal professionals, there were many social-science researchers, psychologists, translators, and interpreters, and graphic designers, the last to make the many charts used during the trial.[55] Each state appointed a prosecution team and two judges, one being a deputy without voting rights.[56][57]

Jackson was appointed the United States' chief prosecutor, whom historian Kim Christian Priemel describes as "a versatile politician and a remarkable orator, if not a great legal thinker".[58] The United States prosecution believed that Nazism was the product of a German deviation from the West (the Sonderweg thesis) and sought to correct this deviation with a trial that would serve both retributive and educational purposes.[59] As the largest delegation, it would take on the bulk of the prosecutorial effort.[60] At Jackson's recommendation, the United States appointed judges Francis Biddle and John Parker.[61] The British chief prosecutor was Hartley Shawcross, Attorney General for England and Wales, assisted by his predecessor David Maxwell Fyfe.[62][63][64] Although the chief British judge, Sir Geoffrey Lawrence (Lord Justice of Appeal), was the nominal president of the tribunal, in practice Biddle exercised more authority.[61]

The French prosecutor, François de Menthon, had just overseen trials of the leaders of Vichy France;[53] he resigned in January 1946 and was replaced by Auguste Champetier de Ribes.[65] The French judges were Henri Donnedieu de Vabres, a professor of criminal law, and deputy Robert Falco, a judge of the Cour de Cassation who had represented France at the London Conference.[66][65] The French government tried to appoint staff who were not tainted by collaboration with the Vichy regime; some appointments, including Champetier de Ribes, were of those who had been in the French resistance.[67][68][69] Expecting a show trial, the Soviet Union[70] initially appointed as chief prosecutor Iona Nikitchenko, who had presided over the Moscow trials, but he was made a judge and replaced by Roman Rudenko, a show trial prosecutor[71] chosen for his skill as an orator.[72] The Soviet judges and prosecutors were not permitted to make any major decisions without consulting a commission in Moscow led by Soviet politician Andrei Vyshinsky; the resulting delays hampered the Soviet effort to set the agenda.[70][61] The influence of the Soviet delegation was also constrained by limited English proficiency, lack of interpreters, and unfamiliarity with diplomacy and international institutions.[73]

Requests by Chaim Weizmann, the president of the World Zionist Organization, as well as the Provisional Government of National Unity in Poland, for an active role in the trial justified by their representation of victims of Nazi crimes were rejected.[74] The Soviet Union invited prosecutors from its allies, including Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia; Denmark and Norway also sent a delegation.[75] Although the Polish delegation was not empowered to intervene in the proceedings, it submitted evidence and an indictment, succeeding at drawing some attention to crimes committed against Polish Jews and non-Jews.[76]

Indictment

[edit]
Handing over the indictment to the tribunal, 18 October 1945

The work of drafting the indictment was divided up by the national delegations. The British worked on aggressive war; the other delegations were assigned the task of covering crimes against humanity and war crimes committed on the Western Front (France) and the Eastern Front (the Soviet Union). The United States delegation outlined the overall Nazi conspiracy and criminality of Nazi organizations.[77][78] The British and American delegations decided to work jointly in drafting the charges of conspiracy to wage aggressive war. On 17 September, the various delegations met to discuss the indictment.[79]

The charge of conspiracy, absent from the charter, held together the wide array of charges and defendants[80] and was used to charge the top Nazi leaders, as well as bureaucrats who had never killed anyone or perhaps even directly ordered killing. It was also an end run on the charter's limits on charging crimes committed before the beginning of World War II.[81] Conspiracy charges were central to the cases against propagandists and industrialists: the former were charged with providing the ideological justification for war and other crimes, while the latter were accused of enabling Germany's war effort.[82] The charge, a brainchild of War Department lawyer Murray C. Bernays, and perhaps inspired by his previous work prosecuting securities fraud,[83][84] was spearheaded by the United States and less popular with the other delegations, particularly France.[85]

The problem of translating the indictment and evidence into the three official languages of the tribunal—English, French, and Russian—as well as German was severe due to the scale of the task and difficulty of recruiting interpreters, especially in the Soviet Union.[86] Vyshinsky demanded extensive corrections to the charges of crimes against peace, especially regarding the role of the German–Soviet pact in starting World War II.[87] Jackson also separated out an overall conspiracy charge from the other three charges, aiming that the American prosecution would cover the overall Nazi conspiracy while the other delegations would flesh out the details of Nazi crimes.[88] The division of labor, and the haste with which the indictment was prepared, resulted in duplication, imprecise language, and lack of attribution of specific charges to individual defendants.[89]

Defendants

[edit]
The defendants in the dock

Some of the most prominent Nazis—Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, and Joseph Goebbels—had committed suicide and therefore could not be tried.[90][91] The prosecutors wanted to try representative leaders of German politics, economy, and military.[92] Most of the defendants had surrendered to the United States or United Kingdom.[93][53]

The defendants, who were largely unrepentant,[94] included former cabinet ministers: Franz von Papen (who had brought Hitler to power); Joachim von Ribbentrop (foreign minister), Konstantin von Neurath (foreign minister). Wilhelm Frick (interior minister), and Alfred Rosenberg (minister for the occupied eastern territories).[91] Also prosecuted were leaders of the German economy, such as Gustav Krupp (of the conglomerate Krupp AG), former Reichsbank president Hjalmar Schacht, and economic planners Albert Speer and Walther Funk, along with Speer's subordinate and head of the forced labor program, Fritz Sauckel.[95][96] While the British were skeptical of prosecuting economic leaders, the French had a strong interest in highlighting German economic imperialism.[97] The military leaders were Hermann Göring—the most infamous surviving Nazi and is the main target of the trial[91]Wilhelm Keitel, Alfred Jodl, Erich Raeder, and Karl Dönitz.[97] Also on trial were propagandists Julius Streicher and Hans Fritzsche; Rudolf Hess, Hitler's deputy who had flown to Britain in 1941; Hans Frank, governor-general of the General Governorate of Poland; Hitler Youth leader Baldur von Schirach; Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Reich Commissioner for the Netherlands; and Ernst Kaltenbrunner, the leader of Himmler's Reich Main Security Office.[98] Observers of the trial found the defendants mediocre and contemptible.[99]

Although the list of defendants was finalized on 29 August,[100] as late as October, Jackson demanded the addition of new names, but this was rejected.[101] Of the 24 men indicted, Martin Bormann was tried in absentia, as the Allies were unaware of his death; Krupp was too ill to stand trial; and Robert Ley had committed suicide before the start of the trial.[102] Former Nazis were allowed to serve as counsel[60] and by mid-November all defendants had lawyers. The defendants' lawyers jointly appealed to the court, claiming it did not have jurisdiction against the accused; but this motion was rejected. The defense lawyers saw themselves as acting on behalf of their clients, but also the German nation.[103] Initially, the Americans had planned to try fourteen organizations and their leaders, but this was narrowed to six: the Reich Cabinet, the Leadership Corps of the Nazi Party, the Gestapo, the SA, the SS and the SD, and the General Staff and High Command of the German military (Wehrmacht).[104][105] The aim was to have these organizations declared criminal, so that their members could be tried expeditiously for membership in a criminal organization.[105] Senior American officials believed that convicting organizations was a good way of showing that not just the top German leaders were responsible for crimes, without condemning the entire German people.[106]

Evidence

[edit]
United States Army clerks with evidence

Over the summer, all of the national delegations struggled to gather evidence for the upcoming trial.[107] The American and British prosecutors focused on documentary evidence and affidavits rather than testimony from survivors. This strategy increased the credibility of their case, since survivor testimony was considered less reliable and more vulnerable to accusations of bias, but reduced public interest in the proceedings.[108][109] The American prosecution drew on reports of the Office of Strategic Services, an American intelligence agency, and information provided by the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research and the American Jewish Committee,[110] while the French prosecution presented many documents that it had obtained from the Center of Contemporary Jewish Documentation.[111] The prosecution called 37 witnesses compared to the defense's 83, not including 19 defendants who testified on their own behalf.[109] The prosecution examined 110,000 captured German documents[55] and entered 4,600 into evidence,[112] along with 30 kilometres (19 mi) of film and 25,000 photographs.[113]

The charter allowed the admissibility of any evidence deemed to have probative value, including depositions.[114] Because of the loose evidentiary rules, photographs, charts, maps, and films played an important role in making incredible crimes believable.[109] After the American prosecution submitted many documents at the beginning of the trial, the judges insisted that all of the evidence be read into the record, which slowed the trial.[115][116] The structure of the charges also caused delays as the same evidence ended up being read out multiple times, when it was relevant to both conspiracy and the other charges.[117]

Course of the trial

[edit]

The International Military Tribunal began trial on 20 November 1945,[118] after postponement requests from the Soviet prosecution, who wanted more time to prepare its case, were rejected.[119] All defendants pleaded not guilty.[120][121] Jackson made it clear that the trial's purpose extended beyond convicting the defendants. Prosecutors wanted to assemble irrefutable evidence of Nazi crimes, establish individual responsibility and the crime of aggression in international law, provide a history lesson to the defeated Germans, delegitimize the traditional German elite,[122] and allow the Allies to distance themselves from appeasement.[123] Jackson maintained that while the United States did "not seek to convict the whole German people of crime", neither did the trial "serve to absolve the whole German people except 21 men in the dock".[124] Nevertheless, defense lawyers (although not most of the defendants) often argued that the prosecution was trying to promote German collective guilt and forcefully countered this strawman.[124] According to Priemel, the conspiracy charge "invited apologetic interpretations: narratives of absolute, totalitarian dictatorship, run by society's lunatic fringe, of which the Germans had been the first victims rather than agents, collaborators, and fellow travellers".[125] In contrast, the evidence presented on the Holocaust convinced some observers that Germans must have been aware of this crime while it was ongoing.[126]

American and British prosecution

[edit]
Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps
Presenting information on German aggression, 4 December

On 21 November, Jackson gave the opening speech for the prosecution.[127] He described the fact that the defeated Nazis received a trial as "one of the most significant tributes that Power has ever paid to Reason".[128] Focusing on aggressive war, which he described as the root of the other crimes, Jackson promoted an intentionalist view of the Nazi state and its overall criminal conspiracy. The speech was favorably received by the prosecution, the tribunal, the audience, historians, and even the defendants.[129]

Much of the American case focused on the development of the Nazi conspiracy before the outbreak of war.[81] The American prosecution became derailed during attempts to provide evidence on the first act of aggression, against Austria.[130] On 29 November, the prosecution was unprepared to continue presenting on the invasion of Czechoslovakia, and instead screened Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps. The film, compiled from footage of the liberation of Nazi concentration camps, shocked both the defendants and the judges, who adjourned the trial.[131] Indiscriminate selection and disorganized presentation of documentary evidence without tying it to specific defendants hampered the American prosecutors' work on the conspiracy to commit crimes against humanity.[132] The Americans summoned Einsatzgruppen commander Otto Ohlendorf, who testified about the murder of 80,000 people by those under his command, and SS general Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski, who admitted that German anti-partisan warfare was little more than a cover for the mass murder of Jews.[133][134]

Evidence about Ernst Kaltenbrunner's crimes is presented, 2 January 1946.

The British prosecution covered the charge of crimes against peace, which was largely redundant to the American conspiracy case.[80] On 4 December, Shawcross gave the opening speech, much of which had been written by Cambridge professor Hersch Lauterpacht.[135][136] Unlike Jackson, Shawcross attempted to minimize the novelty of the aggression charges, elaborating its precursors in the conventions of Hague and Geneva, the League of Nations Covenant, the Locarno Treaty, and the Kellogg–Briand Pact.[137][138][139] The British took four days to make their case,[140] with Maxwell Fyfe detailing treaties broken by Germany.[141] In mid-December the Americans switched to presenting the case against the indicted organizations,[142] while in January both the British and Americans presented evidence against individual defendants.[143] Besides the organizations mentioned in the indictment, American, and British prosecutors also mentioned the complicity of the German Foreign Office, army, and navy.[144]

French prosecution

[edit]

From 17 January to 7 February 1946, France presented its charges and supporting evidence.[145] In contrast to the other prosecution teams, the French prosecution delved into Germany's development in the nineteenth century, arguing that it had diverged from the West due to pan-Germanism and imperialism. They argued that Nazi ideology, which derived from these earlier ideas, was the mens rea—criminal intent—of the crimes on trial.[146] The French prosecutors, more than their British or American counterparts, emphasized the complicity of many Germans;[147][81] they barely mentioned the charge of aggressive war and instead focused on forced labor, economic plunder, and massacres.[148][149] Prosecutor Edgar Faure grouped together various German policies, such as the German annexation of Alsace–Lorraine, under the label of Germanization, which he argued was a crime against humanity.[150] Unlike the British and American prosecution strategies, which focused on using German documents to make their cases, the French prosecutors took the perspective of the victims, submitting postwar police reports.[151][144] Eleven witnesses, including victims of Nazi persecution, were called; resistance fighter and Auschwitz survivor Marie Claude Vaillant-Couturier testified about crimes she had witnessed.[152][151] The French charges of war crimes were accepted by the tribunal, except for the execution of hostages.[153] Due to the narrow definition of crimes against humanity in the charter, the only part of the Germanization charges accepted by the judges was the deportation of Jews from France and other parts of Western Europe.[150]

Soviet prosecution

[edit]
Roman Rudenko opens the Soviet case.

On 8 February, the Soviet prosecution opened its case with a speech by Rudenko that covered all four prosecution charges, highlighting a wide variety of crimes committed by the German occupiers as part of their destructive and unprovoked invasion.[154][155] Rudenko tried to emphasize common ground with the other Allies while rejecting any similarity between Nazi and Soviet rule.[155] The next week, the Soviet prosecution produced Friedrich Paulus—a German field marshal captured after the Battle of Stalingrad—as a witness and questioned him about the preparations for the invasion of the Soviet Union.[156] Paulus incriminated his former associates, pointing to Keitel, Jodl, and Göring as the defendants most responsible for the war.[157]

More so than other delegations, Soviet prosecutors showed the gruesome details of German atrocities, especially the death by starvation of 3 million Soviet prisoners of war and several hundred thousand residents of Leningrad.[132] Although Soviet prosecutors dealt most extensively with the systematic murder of Jews in eastern Europe, at times they blurred the fate of Jews with that of other Soviet nationalities.[158] Although these aspects had already been covered by the American prosecution, Soviet prosecutors introduced new evidence from Extraordinary State Commission reports and interrogations of senior enemy officers.[159] Lev Smirnov presented evidence on the Lidice massacre in Czechoslovakia, adding that the German invaders had destroyed thousands of villages and murdered their inhabitants throughout eastern Europe.[160] The Soviet prosecution emphasized the racist aspect of policies such as the deportation of millions of civilians to Germany for forced labor,[149] the murder of children,[161] systematic looting of occupied territories, and theft or destruction of cultural heritage.[162] The Soviet prosecution also attempted to fabricate German responsibility for the Katyn massacre, which had in fact been committed by the NKVD. Although Western prosecutors never publicly rejected the Katyn charge for fear of casting doubt on the entire proceedings, they were skeptical.[163] The defense presented evidence of Soviet responsibility,[164] and Katyn was not mentioned in the verdict.[165]

External videos
video icon Atrocities Committed by the German Fascist Invaders in the USSR, 57 minutes; shown on 19 February 1946
video icon Testimony of Abraham Sutzkever, 27 February 1946

Inspired by the films shown by the American prosecution, the Soviet Union commissioned three films for the trial: The German Fascist Destruction of the Cultural Treasures of the Peoples of the USSR, Atrocities Committed by the German Fascist Invaders in the USSR, and The German Fascist Destruction of Soviet Cities, using footage from Soviet filmmakers as well as shots from German newsreels.[166] The second film included footage of the liberation of Majdanek and the liberation of Auschwitz and was considered even more disturbing than the American concentration camp film.[167] Soviet witnesses included several survivors of German crimes, including two civilians who lived through the siege of Leningrad, a peasant whose village was destroyed in anti-partisan warfare, a Red Army doctor who endured several prisoner-of-war camps[168] and two Holocaust survivors—Samuel Rajzman, a survivor of Treblinka extermination camp, and poet Abraham Sutzkever, who described the murder of tens of thousands of Jews from Vilna.[144][169] The Soviet prosecution case was generally well received and presented compelling evidence about the suffering of the Soviet people and the Soviet contributions to victory.[170]

Defense

[edit]
Hermann Göring under cross-examination
A member of the Soviet delegation addresses the tribunal.

From March to July 1946, the defense presented its counterarguments.[120] Before the prosecution finished, it was clear that their general case was proven, but it remained to determine the individual guilt of each defendant.[171] None of the defendants tried to assert that the Nazis' crimes had not occurred.[172] Some defendants denied involvement in certain crimes or implausibly claimed ignorance of them, especially the Final Solution.[173][174] A few defense lawyers inverted the arguments of the prosecution to assert that the Germans' authoritarian mindset and obedience to the state exonerated them from any personal guilt.[175] Most rejected that Germany had deviated from Western civilization, arguing that few Germans could have supported Hitler because Germany was a civilized country.[175]

The defendants tried to blame their crimes on Hitler, who was mentioned 1,200 times during the trial—more than the top five defendants combined. Other absent and dead men, including Himmler, Reinhard Heydrich, Adolf Eichmann, and Bormann, were also blamed.[176] To counter claims that conservative defendants had enabled the Nazi rise to power, defense lawyers blamed the Social Democratic Party of Germany, trade unions, and other countries that maintained diplomatic relations with Germany.[177] In contrast, most defendants avoided incriminating each other.[178] Most defendants argued their own insignificance within the Nazi system,[179][180] but Göring took the opposite approach, expecting to be executed but vindicated in the eyes of the German people.[179]

The charter did not recognize a tu quoque defense—asking for exoneration on the grounds that the Allies had committed the same crimes with which the defendants were charged.[181] Although defense lawyers repeatedly equated the Nuremberg Laws to legislation found in other countries, Nazi concentration camps to Allied detention facilities, and the deportation of Jews to the expulsion of Germans, the judges rejected their arguments.[181] Alfred Seidl [de] repeatedly tried to disclose the secret protocols of the German–Soviet pact; although he was eventually successful, it was legally irrelevant and the judges rejected his attempt to bring up the Treaty of Versailles.[181][182] Six defendants were charged with the German invasion of Norway, and their lawyers argued that this invasion was undertaken to prevent a British invasion of that country; a cover-up prevented the defense from capitalizing on this argument.[112][183] Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz testified that the United States Navy had also used unrestricted submarine warfare against Japan in the Pacific; Dönitz's counsel successfully argued that this meant that it could not be a crime.[184][185] The judges barred most evidence on Allied misdeeds from being heard in court.[186]

Many defense lawyers complained about various aspects of the trial procedure and attempted to discredit the entire proceedings.[173] In order to appease them, the defendants were allowed a free hand with their witnesses and a great deal of irrelevant testimony was heard.[187] The defendants' witnesses sometimes managed to exculpate them, but other witnesses—including Rudolf Höss, the former commandant of Auschwitz, and Hans Bernd Gisevius, a member of the German resistance—bolstered the prosecution's case.[188] Over the course of the trial, Western judges allowed the defendants additional leeway to denounce the Soviet Union, which was ultimately revealed to be a co-conspirator in the outbreak of World War II.[189] In the context of the brewing Cold War—for example, in 1946 Winston Churchill delivered the Iron Curtain speech[112]—the trial became a means of condemning not only Germany but also the Soviet Union.[190]

Closing

[edit]

On 31 August, closing arguments were presented.[191] Over the course of the trial, crimes against humanity and especially against Jews (who were mentioned as victims of Nazi atrocities far more than any other group) came to upstage the aggressive war charge.[192][193] In contrast to the opening prosecution statements, all eight closing statements highlighted the Holocaust; and the French and British prosecutors made this the main charge, as opposed to that of aggression. All prosecutors except the Americans mentioned the concept of genocide, which had been recently invented by the Polish-Jewish jurist Raphael Lemkin.[194] British prosecutor Shawcross quoted from witness testimony about a murdered Jewish family from Dubno, Ukraine.[195] During the closing statements, most defendants disappointed the judges by their lies and denial. Speer managed to give the impression of apologizing without assuming personal guilt or naming any victims other than the German people.[196] On 2 September, the court recessed; and the judges retreated into seclusion to decide the verdict and sentences, which had been under discussion since June. The verdict was drafted by British deputy judge Norman Birkett. All eight judges participated in the deliberations, but the deputies could not cast a vote.[197][198]

Verdict

[edit]

The International Military Tribunal agreed with the prosecution that aggression was the gravest charge against the accused, stating in its judgment that because "war is essentially an evil thing", "to initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole".[1][199] The work of the judges was made more difficult due to the broadness of the crimes listed in the Nuremberg Charter.[200] The judges did not attempt to define the crime of aggression[201] and did not mention the retroactivity of the charges in the verdict.[202] Despite the lingering doubts of some of the judges,[203][204] the official interpretation of the IMT held that all of the charges had a solid basis in customary international law and that the trial was procedurally fair.[205] The judges were aware that both the Allies and the Axis had planned or committed acts of aggression, writing the verdict carefully to avoid discrediting either the Allied governments or the tribunal.[206]

The judges ruled that there had been a premeditated conspiracy to commit crimes against peace, whose goals were "the disruption of the European order" and "the creation of a Greater Germany beyond the frontiers of 1914".[199] Contrary to Jackson's argument that the conspiracy began with the founding of the Nazi Party in 1920, the verdict dated the planning of aggression to the 1937 Hossbach Memorandum.[165][207] The conspiracy charge caused significant dissent on the bench; Donnedieu de Vabres wanted to scrap it. Through a compromise proposed by the British judges, the charge of conspiracy was narrowed to a conspiracy to wage aggressive war.[208][209][210] Only eight defendants were convicted on that charge; all of whom were also found guilty of crimes against peace.[211] All 22 defendants were charged with crimes against peace, and 12 were convicted.[212] The war crimes and crimes against humanity charges held up the best, with only two defendants charged on those grounds being acquitted.[213] The judges determined that crimes against humanity concerning German Jews before 1939 were not under the court's jurisdiction because the prosecution had not proven a connection to aggressive war.[214][215]

Newsreel of the sentencing

Four organizations were ruled to be criminal: the Leadership Corps of the Nazi Party, the SS, the Gestapo, and the SD, although some lower ranks and subgroups were excluded.[216][217] The verdict only allowed for individual criminal responsibility if willing membership and knowledge of the criminal purpose could be proved, complicating denazification efforts.[218] The SA, the Reich Cabinet, and the General Staff and High Command were not ruled to be criminal organizations.[216] Although the Wehrmacht leadership was not considered an organization within the meaning of the charter,[216][219] misrepresentation of the verdict as an exoneration was one of the foundations of the clean Wehrmacht myth.[220][221] The trial had nevertheless resulted in the coverage of its systematic criminality in the German press.[222]

Sentences were debated at length by the judges. Twelve of the defendants were sentenced to death (Göring, Ribbentrop, Keitel, Kaltenbrunner, Rosenberg, Frank, Frick, Streicher, Sauckel, Jodl, Seyss-Inquart, and Bormann).[223][211] On 16 October, ten were hanged, with Göring killing himself the day before. Seven defendants (Hess, Funk, Raeder, Dönitz, Schirach, Speer, and Neurath) were sent to Spandau Prison to serve their sentences.[224] All three acquittals (Papen, Schacht, and Fritzsche) were based on a deadlock between the judges; these acquittals surprised observers. Despite being accused of the same crimes, Sauckel was sentenced to death, while Speer was given a prison sentence because the judges considered that he could reform.[225] Nikichenko released a dissent approved by Moscow that rejected all the acquittals, called for a death sentence for Hess, and convicted all the organizations.[217][226]

Subsequent Nuremberg trials

[edit]
Telford Taylor opens for the prosecution in the Ministries trial, 6 January 1948.
Monowitz prisoners unload cement from trains for IG Farben, presented as evidence at the IG Farben trial.

Initially, it was planned to hold a second international tribunal for German industrialists, but this was never held because of differences between the Allies.[227] Twelve military trials were convened solely by the United States in the same courtroom that had hosted the International Military Tribunal.[228] Pursuant to Law No. 10 adopted by the Allied Control Council, United States forces arrested almost 100,000 Germans as war criminals.[229] The Office of Chief Counsel for War Crimes identified 2,500 major war criminals, of whom 177 were tried. Many of the worst offenders were not prosecuted, for logistical or financial reasons.[230]

One set of trials focused on the actions of German professionals: the Doctors' trial focused on human experimentation and euthanasia murders, the Judges' trial on the role of the judiciary in Nazi crimes, and the Ministries trial on the culpability of bureaucrats of German government ministries, especially the Foreign Office.[231][232] Also on trial were industrialists—in the Flick trial, the IG Farben trial, and the Krupp trial—for using forced labor, looting property from Nazi victims, and funding SS atrocities.[233] Members of the SS were tried in the Pohl trial, which focused on members of the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office that oversaw SS economic activity, including the Nazi concentration camps;[234] the RuSHA trial of Nazi racial policies; and the Einsatzgruppen trial, in which members of the mobile killing squads were tried for the murder of more than one million people behind the Eastern Front.[235] Luftwaffe general Erhard Milch was tried for using slave labor and deporting civilians. In the Hostages case, several generals were tried for executing thousands of hostages and prisoners of war, looting, using forced labor, and deporting civilians in the Balkans. Other generals were tried in the High Command Trial for plotting wars of aggression, issuing criminal orders, deporting civilians, using slave labor, and looting in the Soviet Union.[236][237]

These trials emphasized the crimes committed during the Holocaust.[238] The trials heard 1,300 witnesses, entered more than 30,000 documents into evidence, and generated 132,855 pages of transcripts, with the judgments totaling 3,828 pages.[239] Of 177 defendants, 142 were convicted and 25 sentenced to death;[240] the severity of sentencing was related to the defendant's proximity to mass murder.[241] Legal historian Kevin Jon Heller argues that the trials' greatest achievement was "their inestimable contribution to the form and substance of international criminal law", which had been left underdeveloped by the IMT.[242]

Contemporary reactions

[edit]
Press at the International Military Tribunal
Germans read Süddeutsche Zeitung reporting the verdict, 1 October 1946

In all, 249 journalists were accredited to cover the IMT[55] and 61,854 visitor tickets were issued.[112] In France, the sentence for Rudolf Hess and acquittal of organizations were met with outrage from the media and especially from organizations for deportees and resistance fighters, as they were perceived as too lenient.[243] In the United Kingdom, although a variety of responses were reported, it was difficult to sustain interest in a long trial.[244] Where the prosecution was disappointed by some of the verdicts, the defense could take satisfaction.[245]

Many Germans at the time of the trials focused on finding food and shelter.[246][247] Despite this, a majority read press reports about the trial.[248] In a 1946 poll, 78 percent of Germans assessed the trial as fair, but four years later that had fallen to 38 percent, with 30 percent considering it unfair.[247][249] As time went on, more Germans considered the trials illegitimate victor's justice and an imposition of collective guilt, which they rejected—instead considering themselves victims of the war.[250][251] As the Cold War began, the rapidly changing political environment began to affect the effectiveness of the trials.[252] The educational purpose of the Nuremberg Military Tribunals was a failure, in part because of the resistance to war crimes trials in German society, but also because of the United States Army's refusal to publish the trial record in German for fear it would undermine the fight against communism.[253]

The German churches, both Catholic and Protestant, were vocal proponents of amnesty.[254] The pardon of convicted war criminals also had cross-party support in West Germany, which was established in 1949.[255] The Americans satisfied these wishes to bind West Germany to the Western Bloc,[256] beginning early releases of Nuremberg Military Tribunal convicts in 1949.[257] In 1951, High Commissioner John J. McCloy overturned most of the sentences[258][259] and the last three prisoners, all convicted at the Einsatzgruppen trial, were released in 1958.[260][261] The German public took the early releases as confirmation of what they saw as the illegitimacy of the trials.[262] The IMT defendants required Soviet permission for release; Speer was not successful in obtaining early release, and Hess remained in prison until his death in 1987.[263] By the late 1950s, the West German consensus on release began to erode, due to greater openness in political culture and new revelations of Nazi criminality, including the first trials of Nazi perpetrators in West German courts.[264]

Legacy

[edit]
Benjamin Ferencz, chief prosecutor of the Einsatzgruppen trial, in the Palace of Justice courtroom, 2012

The International Military Tribunal, and its charter, "marked the true beginning of international criminal law".[2] The trial has met a mixed reception ranging from glorification to condemnation.[265] The reaction was initially predominantly negative, but has become more positive over time.[266]

The selective prosecution exclusively of the defeated Axis and hypocrisy of all four Allied powers has garnered the most persistent criticism. Such actions as the German–Soviet pact,[267][268] the expulsion of millions of Germans from central and eastern Europe,[269] deportation of civilians for forced labor,[270] and violent suppression of anti-colonial uprisings would have been deemed illegal according to the definitions of international crimes in the Nuremberg charter.[271] Another controversy resulted from trying defendants for acts that were not criminal at the time,[272] particularly crimes against peace.[272][34] Equally novel but less controversial were crimes against humanity, the conspiracy charge, and criminal penalties on individuals for breaches of international law.[273] Besides these criticisms, the trials have been taken to task for the distortion that comes from fitting historical events into legal categories.[274]

The International Military Tribunal for the Far East (Tokyo Trial) borrowed many of its ideas from the IMT, including all four charges, and was intended by the Truman Administration to shore up the IMT's legal legacy.[267][275] On 11 December 1946, the United Nations General Assembly unanimously passed a resolution affirming "the principles of international law recognized by the Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal and the judgment of the Tribunal".[276] In 1950, the International Law Commission drafted the Nuremberg principles to codify international criminal law, although the Cold War prevented the adoption of these principles until the 1990s.[277][278] The 1948 Genocide Convention was much more restricted than Lemkin's original concept and its effectiveness was further limited by Cold War politics.[278][279] In the 1990s, a revival of international criminal law included the establishment of ad hoc international criminal tribunals for Yugoslavia (ICTY) and Rwanda (ICTR), which were widely viewed as part of the legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials. A permanent International Criminal Court (ICC), proposed in 1953, was established in 2002.[280][281][282]

The trials were the first use of simultaneous interpretation, which stimulated technical advances in translation methods.[283][284] The Palace of Justice houses a museum on the trial and the courtroom became a tourist attraction, drawing 13,138 visitors in 2005.[285] The IMT is one of the most well-studied trials in history, and it has also been the subject of an abundance of books and scholarly publications, along with motion pictures such as Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) and The Memory of Justice (1976).[286][287]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ a b Sayapin 2014, p. 148.
  3. ^ a b Sellars 2010, p. 1092.
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  6. ^ Hirsch 2020, p. 56.
  7. ^ Machcewicz & Paczkowski 2021, p. 43.
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  13. ^ Hirsch 2020, pp. 30–31.
  14. ^ a b Heller 2011, p. 9.
  15. ^ Gemählich 2019, paragraph 4.
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Sources

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Consists of footage from German films documenting Nazi personalities and activities interwoven with film shot during the trials — including testimony and statements from defendants, prosecuting attorneys, judges, and witnesses. It also contains flashbacks of a variety of Nazi crimes against humanity.

49°27′16″N 11°02′54″E / 49.45444°N 11.04833°E / 49.45444; 11.04833