David Irving's verdict:
Hubris, hypocrisy, tragedy
Nuremberg: The Last Battle by David Irving.
Focal Point Publications, 1996. 377
+ x pp. £20.00.
Reviewed by Stephen J. Sniegoski
As stated in the title of by
David Irving's book,
the Nuremberg Trial was the last battle of World War II in Europe. Nazi
Germany had already been physically destroyed by the superior military
power of the Allies. The purpose of Nuremberg was to demonstrate to
the world the unparalleled evil of Nazism and, consequently, the fact
that the Allied military victory constituted the triumph of superior
morality.
In the words of the chief prosecutor, Robert Jackson,
"We want to prove to Germany and to the world that the Nazi regime was
as wicked and as criminal as we have always maintained." (p. 166) The
trial, its adherents fondly believed, would do far more than terminate
the war; it would also fulfill the idealistic war aims that the Allies
had preached during the war. It would create the legal framework to
prevent aggression and atrocities from occurring in the future; in the
international realm, violence would be replaced by the rule of law.
Although the Allies were all-powerful, while the Germans in Irving's
words were "unarmed and had few friends," this last battle would prove
something less than a decisive victory for the trial's supporters.
Irving provides an overview of the Nuremberg Trial
of Germany's major war criminals, which lasted from November 1945 until
October 1946. (There were other war-crime trials at Nuremberg conducted
exclusively by the United States, but this trial of the principal figures
of the Third Reich conducted by the International Military Tribunal
[IMT] -- the United States, Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union
-- is what is usually meant by "Nuremberg Trial.") During the war, the
Allies had repeatedly stated their intention to punish German leaders
for their heinous crimes. How this punishment would be effected, however,
was in question. Churchill and the British government sought summary
executions of the high-ranking Germans. The Soviets mentioned both summary
executions and trials, meaning "show trials" that would have propaganda
value.
In the United States, both the trial and summary-execution
positions had their proponents. The advocates of the Morgenthau Plan,
who sought to mete out a harsh collective punishment to the German people,
identified with swift executions. The contrary idea of a judicial trial
conducted by an international court was pushed by the War Department
headed by Henry Stimson. President Roosevelt never firmly committed
himself to either position, though he leaned toward a judicial trial.
Harry Truman, upon becoming president after Roosevelt's death in April
1945, opted firmly for a trial. That the German leadership would be
given a trial, however, does not mean that there was any question about
the outcome. Encapsulating Truman's view, Irving writes, "The Germans
should be given a fair trial first -- and then hanged." (p. 32)
To represent the United States in negotiations
with its allies for the international trial, Truman chose Robert Jackson,
a justice of the U.S. Supreme Court; Jackson would later serve as the
trial's chief prosecutor. Irving describes him as "an idealist endowed
with clearly defined notions of justice and fair play" (p. 61) and dubs
him the "architect of a new international law." (p. 67) Jackson's fundamental
goal was to have the trial set the foundation for a new kind of international
law that would prohibit wars of aggression.
In short, the United States was the driving force
behind the international trial, which embodied America's somewhat naive
and self-righteous brand of idealism -- a description on which Irving
and I agree. Because of its power and prestige, the United States was
able to drag along the other major Allies -- Britain, France, and the
Soviet Union. Considerable squabbling broke out between those countries
regarding the specifics of the proposed trial, but finally the London
Agreement was concluded on August 8, 1945, setting up the International
Military Tribunal and defining its procedures. Ironically, that occurred
during the same week as the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The Statute drew up four counts of crimes for
which the German leadership would be tried. The first count involved
conspiracy -- conspiring to engage in the other three counts. That charge
was pushed by Jackson but not understood by the jurists from the other
countries. (The conspiracy charge is rather intriguing, since the Establishment
generally ridicules the idea of conspiracies.)
Count two was "crimes against peace" -- the actual
planning, preparing, and waging of aggressive war. That count was generally
interpreted as criminalizing the waging of war to alter the status quo.
Thus, the Germans could not use the unfairness of the Versailles Treaty
to justify making war to bring about its revision. (1)
The third count was "war crimes" -- a category
that included killing and mistreating soldiers and civilians in ways
not justified by military necessity.
Count four consisted of "crimes against humanity,"
which was a new idea, dealing with inhuman actions committed against
civilians. Included in count four was the mass murder of Jews.
The London Statute called for the indictment of
the major war criminals, and, after much debate, the IMT came up with
a list of 24 names, 22 of whom would, in the event, be tried. Among
those listed were Herman Göring, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Admiral Karl
Dönitz, General Alfred Jodl, Alfred Rosenberg, Albert Speer, Ernst Kaltenbrunner,
Hans Frank, and Julius Streicher. Martin Bormann, who is now believed
to have died prior to the indictment, would be tried in absentia. Also
indicted were the leading organizations of the Third Reich -- the Reich
Cabinet, the Nazi Party leadership, the SS, the Gestapo, the General
Staff, and the SA.
Nuremberg was not a show trial along the lines
of those perfected by Joseph Stalin. The defendants were allowed to
defend themselves and were given lawyers. But the scales of justice
were weighted heavily against the defense, a fact long recognized by
commentators on the trial. Contrary to the traditional American concept
of justice, the Germans were being judged by ex post facto laws -- being
tried for violating laws that did not exist at the time of the actual
offenses. The retroactive nature of Nuremberg troubled many legal minds
of differing political persuasions, including William O. Douglas on
the Left and Robert Taft on the Right. Also, the Statute prohibited
the accused from offering the defense of having obeyed orders from a
superior. Furthermore, the defendants were interrogated before the trial
with no lawyer present, and, Irving says, "they were never cautioned
as to their rights, because they had none." (p. 141) Irving shows that
interrogators used blackmail threats and sometimes even physical torture
to gain incriminating evidence from witnesses (though the defendants
themselves were not tortured).
The defendants had lawyers who sincerely worked
for their interest, but the defense had no access to the archives of
documents used by the prosecution. They could get hold of documents
only through the offices of the prosecution, and documents that would
aid the defense were routinely concealed from them. The London Statute
prohibited the defense from challenging the impartiality of the judges,
who openly fraternized with the prosecution.
Probably the most embarrassing feature of the
trial was that there were few crimes for which the Germans were convicted
that were not also committed by the Allies. In light of the likely comparison,
the London Statute specifically prohibited the "tu quoque" defense --
"you did it too." However, it is revealing to compare crimes for which
the Germans were convicted with analogous Allied actions. Regarding
the crime of aggressive war, the Soviet Union attacked Poland and also
Finland. A secret protocol of the 1939 Nazi-Soviet Pact had turned over
much of Eastern Europe to Soviet control, and, in fact, it was that
agreement that initiated World War II. The British violated Norwegian
neutrality and occupied Iceland, Persia, Madagascar, and French North-West
Africa. The Soviets murdered thousands of Polish officers in Katyn Forest
(although the Germans were indicted for that crime at Nuremberg) and
murdered hundreds of thousands of civilians in the areas of Eastern
Europe that they took over in 1939-40. At the end of the war, the Western
Allies repatriated to the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia millions of soldiers
who would be murdered by the Communists. At Dachau, the Americans murdered
German soldiers after they had surrendered and been disarmed. The Americans
and the British engaged in the intentional bombing of civilian populations,
and Churchill had made plans to equip the bombers with mustard gas and
anthrax. (2)
Although mainstream commentators have acknowledged
some of those Allied atrocities, Irving stands virtually alone in pointing
out that the Allied crimes did not cease with the war's termination.
The Soviets and the new pro- Soviet governments of Eastern Europe, for
example, were engaging in the ethnic cleansing of Germans from areas
turned over to Poland and Czechoslovakia, and were communizing Eastern
Europe by homicidal means. Both the Soviets and the Western Allies mistreated
German prisoners and required forced labor from the conquered civilian
populace. In essence, at the same time the Germans were being condemned
at Nuremberg, the Allies were engaging in similar criminal acts themselves
that took the lives of millions of people. It was apparent from the
outset that the Allies did not intend to abide by the high moral standards
they so piously preached and by which the Germans were judged.
Irving acknowledges that the Allied crimes do
not mitigate the crimes of Nazi Germany. "It is pointless to weigh,
one against the other, such catalogues of horrors and atrocities," he
writes. "The deeper lesson is that war itself is a crime -- and that
the real crime of war is not genocide but the far broader bestiality
which embraces genocide, and which we can label Innocenticide, the Slaughter
of the Innocents." (p. 39) Today, of course, it is the Holocaust that
stigmatizes Nazi Germany as the epitome of iniquity -- the Holocaust
being portrayed as a crime infinitely worse than anything the Allies
(or, for that matter, anyone else in history) committed. Thus, failure
to acknowledge the unparalleled nature of Nazi Germany's atrocities
is to engage in what Holocaust scholar Deborah Lipstadt labels "immoral
equivalency" -- a crime only one step less heinous than outright "Holocaust
denial." (3)
Yet as Irving points out, Nuremberg did not focus
on the killing of Jews. Representatives of influential Jewish organizations,
including Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann, had attempted to pressure Jackson
to concentrate on the Nazi persecution of Jews, but Jackson would have
none of it. Instead, he responded, "we are prosecuting these Nazis not
because they killed Jews, but because they killed men and women." (p.
90) It was essential, Jackson believed, to prevent the trial from being
seen as a "Jewish trial" engaging in vengeance.
The persecution of Jews was only one of many "crimes
against humanity" charged against the Germans. Irving writes: "In retrospect
it may seem remarkable that the Nazi 'factories of death' played a much
smaller part in the Nuremberg trial than did the shooting of a number
of R.A.F. officers who had escaped from the prisoner-of-war camp at
Sagan, and the conditions under which Speer's slave-labourers worked
in the munitions industry." (p. 235)
Although Nazi mass murder of Jews did not become
a central focus of the trial, prosecutors did deal with the issue. Jackson
charged the Germans with killing 5.7 million Jews, a figure that sounded
more precise than the round 6 million being claimed by Jewish authorities.
(4) Even those commentators who acknowledge Nuremberg's legal shortcomings
credit the trial with uncovering, documenting, and making known to the
world the heinous German effort to exterminate European Jewry. (5) In
the conventional view, Nuremberg revealed the Nazi persecution of Jews
with a degree of clarity and precision not available with respect to
other instances of mass killing. Thus, while historians differ dramatically
on many aspects of the Turkish slaughter of Armenians or the Soviet
mass murder of various classes and nationalities, there is a basic consensus
on the Holocaust.
It is here that Irving strays the farthest from
historical respectability (and, in some European countries, from legality)
by denying that such evidence was clear-cut or conclusive. First, he
points out that evidence on the alleged Nazi death camps was supplied
largely by the Soviet Union, hardly noted for a devotion to objective
truth. (6) And for the United States much of the information was gathered
by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), which was likewise noted
for disseminating propaganda. (7) Moreover, torture and blackmail appear
to have been used on occasion to induce witnesses to confess or provide
evidence.
Some of the evidence was contradictory and patently
incorrect. Testimony accepted as factual at Nuremberg included such
atrocity legends as gas chambers at Dachau, mass killing by steam, and
the making of soap from the remains of victims -- tales now rejected
even by Establishment historians. Overall, the information presented
to the court had been selectively chosen to incriminate the Nazis for
pursuing a systematic policy of Jewish extermination. (8) Information
that might have served to exonerate them was left out, such as a 1942
statement by Dr. Hans Lammers, chief of the Reich chancellery, that
Hitler would take care of the Jewish problem after the war.
Finally, the Allied prosecutors read into the
documents more than was there: for example, the Wannsee Protocol, which
was alleged to be the "key document" outlining the systematic policy
for extermination, actually makes no explicit reference to killing Jews.
(9) The fundamental purpose of the whole Nuremberg undertaking, as it
emerges in Irving's account, was not to arrive at truth but to convict
and demonize Nazi Germany. (10)
In contrast to a common contention of Holocaust
historians that the Nuremberg defendants did not deny the existence
of the crimes but merely denied their own culpability, Irving points
out that the defendants seemed unaware of the crimes against the Jews
and were ashamed for their country when informed of those deeds. (11)
What had the greatest emotional impact on the defendants was an OSS
documentary film on the concentration camps, based on pictures taken
by military photographers as the American and British armies advanced
through Germany. That documentary evidence, of course, did not deal
with the "death camps," which were in areas occupied by the Soviet Union.
The British and Americans, Irving writes, had "found and photographed
for posterity disturbing scenes of death from starvation and pestilence
-- scenes which should not, in retrospect, have surprised the Allied
commanders who had spent the last months bombing Germany's rail distribution
networks and blasting the pharmaceutical factories in order to conjure
up precisely these horsemen of the Apocalypse." (p. 50)
What all the Nuremberg material on the German
persecution of Jews should have done, but definitely did not do, was
absolve the German people of complicity in the crime. For, as Irving
points out, "Nowhere in the Allied archives, which contain mountains
of intercepted cipher messages and the reports on bags of mail captured
from enemy ships or from overrun enemy positions, is there the slightest
evidence that such atrocities were commonly known to the German public
at large."12
On the German mass killing of Jews, Irving concludes:
"The whole of the Nazi drive to liquidate their enemies had proceeded
in such a ramshackle, haphazard, and disorganised manner that it is
difficult even now to state with certainty precisely what happened and
what did not. The historian's task is not eased by the laws imposed,
fifty years after the event, by some European countries specifically
stifling informed conjecture and investigation." (p. 236)
Ultimately the Nuremberg court acquitted three
of the defendants. Twelve were sentenced to death by hanging. Three
were sentenced to life imprisonment, and four were sentenced to imprisonment
for terms ranging from 10 to 20 years.
Irving goes over the specifics of the cases of
the individuals, bringing out some of the anomalies. For example, Julius
Streicher received a death sentence although he played no role in the
German government from 1939 onward and consequently could have had no
direct responsibility for its wartime actions. In essence, Streicher
was sentenced to death for publishing anti-Semitic views. Also uninvolved
in government policies was Rudolf Hess, who did not engage in war planning
and had departed Germany in May 1941 before the onset of the killing
of the Jews. Hess had been imprisoned by the British after flying to
Scotland to seek a negotiated peace. Yet he was sentenced to life imprisonment.
Admiral Karl Dönitz had not acted in a military capacity any different
from that of Allied naval leaders, yet he was sentenced to 10 years
in prison. The American judge at Nuremberg, Nicholas Biddle, acknowledging
that "Germany waged a much cleaner war than we did" (p. 259), would
have acquitted Dönitz.
Nuremberg standards were not applied equally to
the defendants. Hjalmar Schacht, Hitler's economic czar, was acquitted
because of support from influential bankers, although Jackson saw him
as a key figure in the development of the Third Reich. In Jackson's
opinion, Schacht was "the most contemptible of all the defendants. He
had provided the finance for the spectacular rise and rearmament of
Hitler's Germany. More than any other, this man's financial genius had
paved the way for the violation of the Versailles Treaty." (p. 102)
Albert Speer, who ran German war industry in the
latter part of the conflict, received a 20-year sentence instead of
a harsher penalty because of his urbane character and his efforts to
portray himself as Hitler's opponent. Irving points out that the German
war industry relied on brutalized slave labor and that Speer had evicted
Jews from Berlin, "which became the first stage of the expulsion of
those Jews from Germany to uncertain fates in the eastern territories
and at Auschwitz." (p. 231) By Nuremberg standards Speer deserved execution.
Irving shows strong antipathy for those who, like
Speer, tried to divorce themselves from Hitler and his actions, and
shift the blame to others. In contrast, Herman Göring, who took responsibility
for and defended German actions, emerges as a heroic figure. His heroism
culminated in his successful avoidance of a humiliating death by hanging
when he ingested a cyanide pill.13 As Irving depicts it: "There is no
doubt that Hermann Göring's 'escape' -- for that is how he at least
had regarded it -- sent a thrill through Germany at a time when starvation
stalked the ruined streets and prison camps, and the humiliation of
defeat and the rigours of the Allied occupation were barely being endured."
(p. 297)
In summary, Irving points out that "the world
saw Nuremberg as the old- fashioned practice of the victors putting
the vanquished to the sword, behind a facade of retroactive law and
elegant speeches." (p. 312) The evidence in the book clearly brings
that out. An impartial application of the Nuremberg standards would
have led to the punishment of many leaders of the Allies, not just Soviet
but American and British as well.14 The critical fact was not that the
individual Germans had committed crimes of an unparalleled nature but
rather that they had lost the war. Moreover, Nuremberg did not achieve
its promise. It failed to set a precedent for international law, since
its principles were never codified. Quite obviously, it failed to prevent
future wars of aggression, which have been launched even by such purportedly
impeccable countries as Israel. (15)
But Irving's assessment of Nuremberg is not completely
negative. The Nuremberg Trial, he maintains, compared favorably with
other war-crime trials conducted in the same period. For example, although
witnesses were tortured, Nuremberg did not feature the savage beatings
that were routinely used to get prisoners to sign false confessions
in U.S. Army trials at Dachau. "All the defendants agreed they would
have suffered far greater indignities at the hands of their fellow-countrymen,
had they been put before German courts," he writes. (p. 280) And most
significantly, Irving holds that the punishment meted out to most of
the defendants was justified: "In most cases, the basic justice of the
sentence passed at Nuremberg was undeniable: German courts would have
disposed of many of the defendants for their actual responsibility for
known murders -- the killings after the Röhm putsch, the widespread
liquidation of political enemies or racial groups, the murder of enemy
prisoners-of-war." (p. 280)
It would have been helpful if Irving had more
thoroughly developed his point about the "basic justice" of the Nuremberg
sentences. Undoubtedly, some of the defendants deserved their severe
punishment, but the connection between more than a few of the defendants
and "known murders" seems at best tenuous.
Irving gives his account of the Nuremberg trial
the aura of a Greek tragedy. It was a tragedy for the American proponents
of the judicial trial, since its promise of world order based on law
was never realized. And that was a rather unexpected defeat, given America's
overwhelming power and moral prestige. But in a sense, Irving contends,
the defeat was deserved because of America's hubris and self-righteousness.
Irving sees the tragedy of Nuremberg as being
embodied in the career of Robert Jackson: "If this story needs a hero,
then he is Jackson." (p. vii) Jackson was an individual of integrity
who fought to make the trial legitimate and not simply a show trial
based on cooked-up evidence, which was the aim of the OSS. (16) Irving
writes:
Through his absence [from the U.S. political scene while] at Nuremberg,
he had lost his chance of becoming chief justice of the United States,
perhaps even president, and through his sponsoring of the trial
he had become a figure of controversy. His motives were misunderstood;
he was linked in many eyes with the scandalous series of war crimes
trials held concurrently with his own, by the military authorities.
Worst of all his dream of establishing a precedent for the prosecution
of aggressive warmongering went unfulfilled. (p. 310)
But Irving's depiction of Nuremberg's negative
impact on Jackson's career is exaggerated. It does not seem to be based
on secondary accounts of Jackson's life, nor does Irving make a significant
effort to prove his point. It is not apparent that Jackson would have
become chief justice: he had vehement and influential enemies on the
Supreme Court. It seems even less likely that he would have become president,
given the fact that the Supreme Court has never been a springboard for
the presidency. Moreover, Jackson (a Democrat) died in 1954, so he would
have been able to run only in 1952, and Dwight Eisenhower was a very
formidable Republican opponent.
Irving's rather cavalier assumption that the Nuremberg
Trial was a failure also is unwarranted. It can be judged a failure
only in the sense that it did not accomplish the august goals of its
original proponents. Most later accounts, however, have portrayed it
as at least a partial success, arguing that the trial succeeded in punishing
evildoers and, even more important, in documenting the unparalleled
crimes of Nazi Germany. (17)
Given the prevalence of those favorable accounts
of Nuremberg, it would be valuable to have a revisionist work that directly
countered their arguments. Irving's work does not even attempt such
a refutation. A debate with other historians is precluded by Irving's
historical methodology, whereby he focuses almost entirely on documentary
rather than published secondary sources. (18) In many of his works,
Irving's primary-source-oriented methodology has enabled him to make
use of unexploited materials. But it is of limited success in the present
book.
Irving does inject new material (or, at least,
material adduced only by revisionists) when dealing with the Holocaust
and the Allies' treatment of Germany. I regard that information as the
book's greatest contribution. However, Irving only briefly touches on
those issues. (That this review has given considerable attention to
them is not indicative of the actual coverage in the book.) Instead
of focusing on those controversial subjects, Irving has striven for
inclusiveness. Much of his work rehashes information and issues that
have been covered at length by mainstream historians. And Irving does
not really present as clear a picture of those issues as do some other
recent works on the subject. Although Irving's Nuremberg is in
many respects a valuable work, it falls short of being what this reviewer
would envision as an ideal revisionist account of the subject.
Copyright 1998 WTM Enterprises. All rights reserved. This review-essay
is posted by permission from Dispatches from The Last Ditch,
where it first appeared in issue No. 20, April 13, 1998.
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NOTES
1. The criminalizing of war to alter the status quo was ironic, since
the fundamental doctrine of Communist Russia was revolution against
the status quo.
2. According to today's media, Saddam Hussein's possession of chemical
and biological weapons makes him the world's greatest monster.
3. Deborah E. Lipstadt, Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault
on Truth and Memory (New York: The Free Press, 1993), pp. 212-15.
Although seemingly contradicting the bulk of the evidence he has marshaled,
Irving at one point does identify with the orthodox view of unparalleled
German evil when he writes that "Hitler's soldiers committed crimes
on a scale that beggared all comparisons in history." (p. 54)
4. Irving writes with skepticism about the 6 million figure: "Given
the turmoils and tragedies of a war-torn Europe ravaged by bombs and
plagues, it was not a data basis on which a statistician would properly
have relied. Where were the shifting frontiers? Who, indeed, was a Jew?
These were questions about which cartographers, ethnographers, religious
fanatics, and politicians are still at each other's throats. Six million?
By sad but extraordinary coincidence, the American Jewish community
had raised a similar outcry about a 'holocaust' a quarter of a century
earlier, after World War One. In a 1919 speech the governor of New York,
Martin Glynn, had claimed that 'six million' Jews were being exterminated."
(p. 62)
5. For example, Joseph E. Persico, Nuremberg: Infamy on Trial
(New York: Viking Penguin, 1994) writes: "The one indisputable good
to come out of the trial is that, to any sentient person, it documented
beyond question Nazi Germany's crimes. To those old enough to remember
personally the first horrifying film images of piles of pallid corpses
being bulldozed into mass graves, it is hard to believe that this evidence
of our eyes would ever be challenged." (p. 441)
6. Truth from the Soviet Marxist-Leninist perspective was simply
that which advanced the Soviets' own interests.
7. Irving does not mention this fact, but the OSS was riddled with
Communists and Communist sympathizers.
8. Irving discusses the testimony of Auschwitz commandant Rudolf
Höss at some length (pp. 240-46), pointing out its contradictions and
other discrepancies, and the fact that Höss had undergone torture before
initially providing such information. (Höss provided an affidavit and
was called upon to testify as a defense witness for Kaltenbrunner.)
Höss gave the most detailed account of the gassing policy, and it usually
features in overall accounts of Auschwitz.. Regarding the much-cited
testimony of SS officer Dr. Wilhelm Höttl -- that Adolf Eichmann in
August 1944 had told him of a report he had presented to Heinrich Himmler
documenting the killing of 6 million Jews -- Irving points out that
no such German report ever surfaced. Moreover, Höttl gained release
from American confinement, despite his background in the murderous activities
of the SS. Irving implies that his testimony induced that favorable
treatment. (pp. 236-38)
9. P. 91. Orthodox Holocaust historians focus on what they regard
as code words and euphemisms to prove the systematic extermination policy.
10. Establishment academia has considered partisanship as a rationale
for rejecting the validity of extensive eyewitness testimony in certain
cases -- e.g., Communist infiltration of the United States government
during World War II and the illegal actions of William Jefferson Clinton,
especially in Arkansas. This reviewer regards much of the evidence used
at Nuremberg to be more tainted than that dealing with the aforementioned
subjects.
11. Of course, it is impossible to prove a negative -- that some
alleged event never took place. The most that can be said is that one
has no knowledge of it.
12. P. 168. The ideas that the German people were complicit in the
crimes against the Jews and that the Nazis went to extreme lengths
to conceal their extermination process would seem to be a major contradiction
in Holocaust orthodoxy. Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's controversial Hitler's
Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust (New York:
Alfred E. Knopf, 1996) significantly revised the Holocaust story to
emphasize the direct role of ordinary Germans in the killing process.
13. Göring would have accepted execution by a firing squad, which
he considered an honorable death.
14. That does not mean that there was any possibility or desire to
establish an impartial court to objectively judge the activities of
the belligerents of World War II. It is understandable that the Allies
would punish the leaders of the defeated. Germany probably would have
acted likewise.
15. Israel initiated war in 1956 and in 1967. By the Nuremberg standard,
Israel would be judged guilty of making aggressive war. Of course, standards
applied to other countries are generally not applied to Israel.
16. Irving writes: "It soon became clear that the O.S.S. had intended
all along to stage-manage the whole trial along the lines of an N.K.V.D.
show-trial, with Jackson little more than a professional actor." (p.
150) The OSS, whose agents were skilled in propaganda, still played
a significant role in gathering information for the trial. Holocaust
revisionist Arthur Butz
claims that the OSS played a major role in the creation of the "Holocaust
hoax." See The Hoax of the Twentieth Century (Torrance, Calif.:
Institute for Historical Review, 1976), pp. 93-94.
17. Among histories favorable to the Nuremberg Trial, in addition
to Persico's, are: Robert E. Conot, Justice at Nuremberg (New
York: Harper & Row, 1983); Airey Nave, On Trial at Nuremberg
(Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1978); and Ann Tusa and John Tusa,
The Nuremberg Trial (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1983).
18. For example, in Hitler's War (New York: Viking Press,
1977, 1-vol. ed.), pp. xxii, Irving writes: "I eschewed as far as possible
all published literature...."
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