Nuremberg,
Eichmann, and Extra-Judicial Murder
by
Laurence
M. Vance
Recently
by Laurence M. Vance: Romans
13 and National Defense
Nazi Germany
– the totalitarian rule of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party from
1933-1945 – is infamously remembered for two things: World War II
and the Holocaust.
After pulling
out of the League of Nations, rearming, annexing Austria, remilitarizing
the Rhineland, allying with Mussolini’s fascist Italy, stripping
German Jews of their civil rights, occupying the Sudetenland, signing
a non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union, and turning into a
fascist dictatorship, Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939,
and then conquered much of Europe.
The Holocaust
that occurred during World War II is universally recognized as the
greatest example of systematic, state-sponsored murder. The Nazis
killed millions of Jews in their quest to rid Europe of them. Millions
of Poles, Gypsies, Serbs, Slovenes, Ukrainians, Belarusians, and
other "non-Aryans" were also killed, as well as Germans
that were disabled, institutionalized, homosexual, communist, or
opponents of the Nazi regime. The horrors of concentration camps
like Auschwitz, Treblinka, and Buchenwald are well known, as are
the Nazi doctor medical experiments on children, the slave labor,
the death marches, the gas chambers, and the mass graves.
The Nazi’s
are universally reviled and, rightly or wrongly, are the first choice
of comparison when a modern oppressive regime needs to be made into
an evil bogeyman.
After Germany
was finally vanquished by the Allies in May of 1945, twenty-four
Nazis were put on trial in Nuremberg, Germany, from November 20,
1945, to October 1, 1946, for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The Soviet Union, France, Great Britain, and the United States supplied
judges and prosecutors. The U.S. prosecutor was Supreme Court Justice
Robert Jackson. The defendants had German attorneys.
Twelve defendants
were sentenced to death by hanging: Martin Bormann, Hans Frank,
Wilhelm Frick, Hermann Göring, Alfred Jodl, Ernst Kaltenbrunner,
Wilhelm Keitel, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Alfred Rosenberg, Fritz
Sauckel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, and Julis Streicher. The hangings
were all carried on October 16, 1946. Bormann was not hanged because
he was tried in absentia. Göring committed suicide the night
before his scheduled execution, Seven defendants were sentenced
to prison terms; three were acquitted; one committed suicide before
the trial began; one was declared medically unfit for trial.
This does not
mean that the Nuremberg Tribunal was ideal or the only option. The
judges came only from the accusing nations and also acted as the
jury. And of course, the Soviet Union was itself guilty of gross
crimes against humanity. And then there is the matter of the United
States dropping atomic bombs on Japanese civilians. On World War
II in general, see my "Rethinking
the Good War."
Three of the
most notable Nazis committed suicide as the war was coming to an
end: Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, and Joseph Goebbels. One, however,
escaped, but was found later in South America, Adolf Eichmann.
Eichmann joined
the SS in 1932 in Austria. After a series of promotions, he became
a 1st Lieutenant and, through the Central Office for
Jewish Emigration which he had formed, began to forcibly expel Jews
from Austria. After the beginning of World War II, Eichmann became
an SS captain, major, and then lieutenant colonel. In 1944, he went
to German-occupied Hungary and oversaw the deporting of Hungarian
Jews to death camps.
Eichmann fled
Hungary after the Soviets invaded in 1945. After being captured
by the U.S. Army at the end of the war, Eichmann escaped, hid out
in Germany, went to Italy, and finally settled in Argentina.
Eichmann was
discovered by Israeli intelligence in 1959. After a period of extensive
surveillance to confirm his identify, Eichmann was captured on May
11, 1960, by team of Mossad (Israel’s official intelligence agency)
and Shin Bet (the Israeli security agency) agents and taken to Israel.
Eichmann was
charged with fifteen counts, including war crimes and crimes against
humanity. His trial began on April 11, 1961. Three judges presided
over the trial. The chief prosecutor was the Israeli Attorney General.
Eichmann had two defense attorneys. Ninety Holocaust survivors were
called as witnesses for the prosecution. Dozens of former high-ranking
Nazis sent the court depositions as witnesses for the defense. The
trial lasted for fourteen weeks. Eichmann was convicted on all counts
on December 11. He was sentenced to death on December 15. After
an appeal by Eichmann, Israel’s Supreme Court upheld his conviction
on May 29, 1962. Requests for clemency were received by the court.
The Israeli prime minister reject an Eichmann appeal for mercy.
Eichmann was
hanged on May 31, 1962, and then cremated.
On May 2, 2011,
Osama bin Laden was killed by U.S. Navy Seals in his home in Pakistan
on the order of President Barack Obama. He had been on the FBI’s
"Ten Most Wanted List" for the bombings of U.S. embassies
in Tanzania and Kenya, but not for the 9/11 terrorists attacks to
which he was allegedly connected.
On September
30, 2011, Anwar al-Awlaki was killed by a U.S. Predator drone strike
in Yemen on the order of President Barack Obama after being put
on a secret government hit list. He allegedly inspired and incited
others to commit acts of terrorism against the United States.
Whether bin
Laden or Awlaki ever killed anyone or actually committed a crime
will never be known since the president and his agents served as
prosecutor, judge, jury, and executioner.
As a candidate
for president, Obama claimed that he didn’t even believe the president
had the right to arrest and hold a U.S. citizen without charges.
When asked in a Boston Globe interview
if the Constitution permitted the president to detain U.S. citizens
without charges as unlawful enemy combatants, Obama replied: "No.
I reject the Bush Administration’s claim that the President has
plenary authority under the Constitution to detain U.S. citizens
without charges as unlawful enemy combatants." Obama’s campaign
literature makes it clear that as president he would "restore
habeas corpus so that those who pose a danger are swiftly tried
and brought to justice and those who do not have sufficient due
process to ensure that we are not wrongfully denying them their
liberty."
My point is
simply this: If the leaders of one of the most evil, despicable,
and murderous regimes in history were entitled to their day in court
before their execution, then certainly thugs like bin Laden and
Awlaki were.
In a memorandum
to President Roosevelt dated January 22, 1945, by Secretary of War
Henry Stimson, Secretary of State Edward Stettinius, and Attorney
General Francis Biddle, U.S. policy toward the "Trial and Punishment
of Nazi War Criminals" was laid out:
After Germany’s
unconditional surrender the United Nations could, if they elected,
put to death the most notorious Nazi criminals, such as Hitler
or Himmler, without trial or hearing. We do not favor this method.
While it has the advantages of a sure and swift disposition, it
would be violative of the most fundamental principles of justice,
common to all the United Nations. This would encourage the Germans
to turn these criminals into martyrs, and, in any event, only
a few individuals could be reached in this way.
We think
that the just and effective solution lies in the use of the judicial
method. Condemnation of these criminals after a trial, moreover,
Would command maximum public support in our own times and receive
the respect of history. The use of the judicial method will, in
addition, make available for all mankind to study in future years
an authentic record of Nazi crimes and criminality.
The German
leaders and the organizations employed by them, such as those
referred to above (SA, SS, Gestapo), should be charged both with
the commission of their atrocious crimes, and also with joint
participation in a broad criminal enterprise which included and
intended these crimes, or was reasonably calculated to bring them
about. The allegation of the criminal enterprise would be so couched
as to permit full proof of the entire Nazi plan from its inception
and the means used in its furtherance and execution, including
the prewar atrocities and those committed against their own nationals,
neutrals, and stateless persons, as well as the waging of an illegal
war of aggression with ruthless disregard for international law
and the rules of war. Such a charge would be firmly founded upon
the rule of liability, common to all penal systems and included
in the general doctrines of the laws of war, that those who participate
in the formulation and execution of a criminal plan involving
multiple crimes are jointly liable for each of the offenses committed
and jointly responsible for the acts of each other. Under such
a charge there are admissible in evidence the acts of any of the
conspirators done in furtherance of the conspiracy, whether or
not these acts were in themselves criminal and subject to separate
prosecution as such.
Saddam Hussein
was captured by U.S. troops, turned over to Iraqis, tried, sentenced
to death, and hanged. Yes, perhaps it was a kangaroo trial with a
pre-ordained verdict, but my point in bring him up is simply that
even though many people in the United States and its government
accused Hussein of committing unspeakable crimes against the Iraqi
people, compared him to Hitler, and thought he was responsible for
9/11, he was still not summarily executed by U.S. troops.
Awlaki should
likewise have been captured and brought to justice for his alleged
crimes, for as congressman and presidential candidate Ron
Paul has explained:
Awlaki was
a U.S. citizen. Under our Constitution, American citizens, even
those living abroad, must be charged with a crime before being
sentenced. As President, I would have arrested Awlaki, brought
him to the U.S., tried him and pushed for the stiffest punishment
allowed by law. Treason has historically been judged to be the
worst of crimes, deserving of the harshest sentencing. But what
I would not do as President is what Obama has done and continues
to do in spectacular fashion: circumvent the rule of law.
One of the
prosecutors at Nuremberg who is sill living, Benjamin Ferencz, wrote
a letter
to the New York Times just after the killing of bin Laden:
Your superb
report "Behind the Hunt for Bin Laden" leaves key questions
unanswered. Jubilation over the death of the most hunted mass
murderer is understandable, but was it really justifiable self-defense,
or was it premeditated illegal assassination?
The Nuremberg
trials earned worldwide respect by giving Hitler’s worst henchmen
a fair trial so that truth would be revealed and justice under
law would prevail. Secret nonjudicial decisions based on political
or military considerations undermine democracy. The public is
entitled to know the complete truth.
Ferencz also
told
London’s Guardian newspaper:
The picture
I get is that a bunch of highly trained, heavily armed soldiers
find an old guy in pyjamas and shoot him in the chest and head,
and that borders, without access to more facts, on murder. Even
Göring had a right to trial.
And, as evil
as they may have been, so did bin Laden and Awlaki.
October
20, 2011
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
writes from central Florida. He is the author of Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State, The
Revolution that Wasn't, and Rethinking
the Good War. His latest book is The
Quatercentenary of the King James Bible. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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