Las Vegas Review-Journal

’45 trials key to internatio­nal law

Germany, Nuremberg note 75th anniversar­y

- By David Rising

BERLIN — Seventy-five years ago, the dock of Courtroom 600 of the Nuremberg Palace of Justice was packed with some of the most nefarious figures of the 20th century: Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess, Joachim von Ribbentrop and 18 other high-ranking Nazis.

They weren’t yet known as war criminals — it was a charge that didn’t exist until the Nuremberg trials began on Nov. 20, 1945, in what is now seen as the birthplace of a new era of internatio­nal law.

The proceeding­s broke ground in holding government leaders individual­ly responsibl­e for their aggression and slaughter of millions of innocents. With establishi­ng the offense of war crimes, it produced the charges of crimes against peace, waging a war of aggression, and crimes against humanity, whose legacies live on in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court of today.

Nuremberg was the city where Adolf Hitler reviewed torchlight Nazi party rallies and promulgate­d the race laws of 1935, paving the way for the Holocaust.

The choice to use the city’s Palace of Justice for the trials was less symbolic than pragmatic, as it was one of the few large buildings left un

damaged by Allied bombing during the war.

The testimony of hundreds of witnesses was heard over 218 trial days. One of them was Rudolf Hoess, the Auschwitz death camp commandant, who “reacted to the order to slaughter human beings as he would have to an order to fell trees,” wrote U.S. prosecutor Whitney R. Harris.

On Oct. 1, 1946, Goering, Hitler’s air force chief, was sentenced to death with 11 others, including Martin Bormann, Hitler’s deputy, who was tried in absentia. Bormann

is now known to have died in Berlin in 1945 as he tried to flee the Soviets. Seven drew long prison sentences, and three were acquitted.

Fifteen days later, the condemned men were hanged in the courthouse’s adjacent prison. Goering committed suicide by swallowing a poison pill in his cell the night before.

The city is marking the anniversar­y in Courtroom 600 with a ceremony Friday that will include German President Frank-walter Steinmeier as the guest of honor.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? Hermann Goering, wearing headphones, stands in the prisoner’s dock on Nov. 21, 1945, and enters a plea of not guilty at the Nuremberg trials in Germany.
The Associated Press file Hermann Goering, wearing headphones, stands in the prisoner’s dock on Nov. 21, 1945, and enters a plea of not guilty at the Nuremberg trials in Germany.

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