Did the Germans Get a Fair
by Hadding Scott
TODAY SOMEBODY made the absurd assertion that the German defendants got a fair trial before the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg. This was how I responded.
Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, soon to be Chief Justice, Harlan Fiske Stone, criticized the IMT at Nuremberg as follows (in a private letter to Sterling Carr, dated 4 December 1945):
“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.” [A.T. Mason, Harlan Fiske Stone: Pillar of the Law, 1956, p. 716]
It is not necessary to appeal to personal authority in this matter, however. The specific points that I made, in support of the contention that the Germans did not get a fair trial before the IMT at Nuremberg, have become, over time, relatively uncontroversial: it is only when you derive from the uncontroversial facts the obvious conclusion that the IMT was indeed a “high-grade lynching party,” that controversy occurs. Here is a detailed presentation of those now uncontroversial facts.
Accusation and Retraction about Katyn
On 13 April 1943 the Germans informed the world of the mass-graves of about 4000 Polish officers that they discovered near Smolensk. They had been marched to a pit with their hands tied behind their backs, and shot in the back of the head, during the period when that part of Poland was under Soviet control.
The British foreign secretary, Sir Anthony Eden, spoke of the “cynicism which permits the Nazi murderers of hundreds of thousands of innocent Poles and Russians to make use of a story of mass-murder to disturb the unity of the Allies.” (AP, 4 May 1943)
The Polish government-in-exile however believed the Germans, and demanded that the Red Cross investigate (which they refused to do, on the pretext that the Soviet government must also ask for such an investigation). The Soviet government subsequently demanded that the Polish exile government be replaced (AP, 28 April 1943). Within three months the leader of that exile government, General Wladyslaw Sikorski, died in a mysterious plane-crash (AP, 17 February 1944).
At the time of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, the pretense that the Germans had done the Katyn Forest Massacre was still officially maintained. On 14 February 1946 the Deputy Chief Prosecutor for the Soviet Union, Colonel Y.V. Pokrovsky, stated:
We find, in the Indictment, that one of the most important criminal acts for which the major war criminals are responsible was the mass execution of Polish prisoners of war, shot in the Katyn Forest near Smolensk by the German fascist invaders. [IMT transcript, 14 February 1946]
By 1951 Arthur Bliss Lane, a former U.S. ambassador to Poland, accusing the U.S. government of “appeasement” of the Soviet Union, had formed the American Committee for the Investigation of the Katyn Massacre, declaring that “the American people, of which some 6,000,000 are of Polish descent, are entitled to know the facts.” The committee had to proceed without tax-exempt nonprofit status, however, this status having been begrudged on plainly political grounds. (Westbrook Pegler, 18 January 1951)
After Mikhail Gorbachev became the Soviet head of state, the executive branch of the Soviet government no longer denied that the Soviet secret police had done the killings. But it was 2010 before the Russian Duma officially admitted it:
Russia’s parliament on Friday declared Stalin responsible for ordering the Katyn massacre of Polish officers in World War II, a crime Moscow spent decades blaming on the Nazis to the fury of Poland. […] The resolution of the State Duma lower house of parliament broke more than half a century of official reluctance to admit that the Soviet leadership under Joseph Stalin ordered the killing of thousands of Polish officers in 1940. [D. Zaks, Agence France Presse, 26 November 2010]
Dachau, Bergen-Belsen, and Buchenwald
This letter from Dr. Martin Broszat, director of the authoritative Institut für Zeitgeschichte, appeared in the respected German newspaper Die Zeit on 19 August 1960. Broszat says in the first sentence:
Neither in Dachau nor in Bergen-Belsen nor in Buchenwald were Jews or other prisoners gassed.
But British chief prosecutor Sir Hartley Shawcross, in his closing speech on 26 July 1946, had referred to:
Murder conducted like some mass production industry in the gas chambers and the ovens of Auschwitz, Dachau, Treblinka, Buchenwald, Mauthausen, Maidanek, and Oranienburg. [IMT transcript, 26 July 1946]
There does not seem to have been any explicit claim during the IMT that gassings occurred at Bergen-Belsen, but it was a very widespread belief: hence Martin Broszat’s inclusion of Bergen-Belsen in his 1960 letter about places where gassings definitely did not occur.
Winston Churchill is credited with the observation:
A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth can get its pants on.
This is certainly a case in point. Because the powers that be never had any particular interest in making sure that their old lies were corrected, even people who should know better still believe that there were gassings at Dachau, and Bergen-Belsen, and Buchenwald.
Human-Skin Lampshades
The claim that lampshades had been made out of human skin, from prisoners murdered specifically for the purpose, seems to have been introduced purely for prejudicial purposes. The claim was put before the Tribunal in a film made by Hollywood director George Stevens. After that the American prosecutor, Thomas Dodd, rationalized further treatment of the subject by declaring:
We have had turned over to us two exhibits which we are prepared to show to this Tribunal only because they illustrate the depths to which the administration of these camps had sunk shortly before, at least, the time that they were liberated by the Allied Army. [IMT transcript, 13 December 1945]
Dodd implied that the gratuitous murder of prisoners to make lampshades (and other items) was typical of how the German camps functioned, and that this reflected the character of the National-Socialist state, and ultimately indicated the character of the defendants being tried by the IMT. In a fair trial, this discussion would have been excluded on grounds of irrelevance, because only one person at one camp, who was not on trial before the IMT, could ever be formally accused of this crime — and she was not guilty of it.
Here is some background on the woman actually accused of having prisoners killed to make lampshades from their skins.
In late 1943 Ilse Koch’s husband, former Buchenwald commandant Karl Koch (at the time, transferred to Majdanek) was investigated by the SS and eventually sentenced to death for embezzlement and the murder of three prisoners at Buchenwald. Ilse was investigated at the same time on a charge of concealing stolen property, but was acquitted for lack of evidence.
After the war, Ilse Koch was accused by the Allies of having caused prisoners at Buchenwald to be killed so that she could have items made from their tattooed skins. There was a credibility-problem with this accusation from the beginning because SS-judge Konrad Morgen, who had sentenced her husband to death for killing prisoners, had also investigated her and found no such thing. She had not been at Buchenwald since 1943.
Ilse Koch was tried with 30 others before an American military court in 1947, the so-called Dachau Trial, where she was convicted and received a life sentence.
The following year, the military governor of the American Zone, General Lucius Clay, commuted her sentence to 4 years, explaining that “there was no convincing evidence that she had selected inmates for extermination in order to secure tattooed skins, or that she possessed any articles made of human skin.”
In 1949 Ilse Koch was arrested by West German authorities and tried again, on various charges, including the old, discredited accusation about lampshades. Four witnesses supported the accusation, but they must have been unconvincing, because the charge was dropped due to the same lack of physical evidence previously indicated by General Clay.
Soap from Jews
A rumor spread that cheap soap mass-produced by the Germans and distributed in concentration camps during the war was made from Jewish fat. The soap bore the letters RJF, which was alleged to stand for reines juedisches Fett — Pure Jewish Fat. This most likely began as a joke, because if Jews were secretly being made into soap, it would be unthinkable to put any remote indication of it on the product. In fact, the letters were RIF (capital I and capital J in the old Fraktur script being identical), an entirely innocent acronym representing Reichsstelle für industrielle Fettversorgung — Reich’s Center for Industrial Fat-Provisioning.
On 24 November 1942, Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, Chairman of the World Jewish Congress, endorsed and promoted the rumor that Hitler had ordered every possible Jew to be killed and every possible Jewish corpse to be used to make soap:
That Nazis have established a price of 50 reichsmarks for each corpse — mostly Jewish, Dr. Wise indicated — and are reclaiming bodies of slain civilians to be “processed into such war-vital commodities as soap fats and fertilizer.”
“He (Hitler) is even exhuming the dead for the value of the corpses,” Dr. Wise said during a press conference shortly after he had conferred with State Department officials.
He stressed the fact that most of his information came form various sources other than the State Department, but said those sources had been confirmed as authentic by the department. [AP, 24 November 1942]
Because of the widespread rumor, Heinrich Himmler contacted Heinrich Müller to confirm that nothing like this was happening:
You have guaranteed me that at every site the corpses of these deceased Jews are either burned or buried, and that at no site anything else can happen with the corpses. [Himmler to Müller, 20 November 1942]
The fact that the rumor of soap made from human fat was circulating as early as 1942, before the world had any possibility of discovering whatever was happening, is in itself a good indication that the story was only an empty rumor.
During the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg the story of soap made from human fat was pushed especially by Soviet prosecutors. What was the evidence? There were former Auschwitz-internees who apparently had heard the rumor about it and believed it, and there were affidavits from three men who said that they had worked at the Danzig Anatomic Institute where, they claimed, some soap had been produced.
On 8 February 1946 Soviet chief prosecutor General R.A. Rudenko mentioned the soap story while quoting “an extract of the appeal to the public opinion of the world from the representatives of several thousand former internees at Auschwitz” that includes these claims:
To save gasoline, the fats and oils necessary for cremations were partly derived from the bodies of gassed people. Fats and oils for technical purposes and for the manufacture of soap were also obtained from the corpses. [IMT transcript, 8 February 1946]
It seems that the bodies of Jews yield huge quantities of fats and oils. How former internees at Auschwitz would know about the alleged manufacture of soap from the fat of their fellow prisoners is not explained: it could only have been a rumor.
The big presentation about soap from human fat, spanning about 1500 words, was given on 19 February 1946 by Soviet assistant prosecutor Colonel L.N. Smirnov. It was based on extracts from an interview (Document Number USSR-197) with Sigmund Mazur, alleged to be a former laboratory assistant at the Danzig Anatomic Institute under “Professor Spanner.” There were also affidavits from two British POWs, John Henry Witton (Document Number USSR-264) and William Anderson Neely (Document Number USSR-272), who had supposedly worked at the Institute.
The Danzig Anatomic Institute directed by Dr. Rudolf Spanner had legitimate reasons for dealing with cadavers. German Wikipedia states that this was a place where autopsies were performed. It was not a soap-factory.
Taking Smirnov’s presentation at face-value, a little math shows that the alleged production of soap at the Institute was hardly on an industrial scale. Mazur claimed that from 40 cadavers 70 to 80kg of fat could be collected, yielding 25 kg of soap. Witton says that on average 7 to 8 cadavers arrived per day, while Neely’s estimate was only 2 to 3 per day. The maximum possible production therefore would have been in the range of only 1.25 to 5 kg of soap per day.
Mazur says that the soap was for use by personnel at the Institute, while Neely says that it was used to clean dissection-tables. There is no indication in the information presented by Smirnov that that the soap was made available commercially. The details read by Smirnov, taken at face-value, indicate that this was lye-soap for in-house use.
Even if the story is true, it is far from the systematic, industrial use of human fat that was the substance of Rabbi Wise’s rumor. Furthermore, Smirnov did not even try to argue that anyone was killed for the purpose of making soap.
Smirnov presented to the tribunal samples of “half-finished and some finished soap, which from the exterior, after lying about a few months, reminds you of ordinary household soap.”
The obvious question would have been: how could anyone tell that this was not indeed just ordinary household soap? Significantly, Dr. Rudolf Spanner, the physician in charge of the Danzig Anatomic Institute, was never charged with any crime. This did not however stop the postwar Communist government of Poland from erecting a plaque to commemorate the “victims of genocide” supposedly turned into soap at the Institute.
The soap-accusation was mentioned at other times during the proceedings. On 2 March 1946 General Rudenko made a rhetorical reference to the soap story (IMT transcript 2 March 1946). On 27 July 1946 the British chief prosecutor Sir Hartley Shawcross became the only non-Soviet prosecutor to invoke the soap story. (IMT transcript, 27 July 1946)
The Soviets liked the soap-accusation because it supported Marxist rhetoric about the “cannibalistic” tendencies of capitalism, and the false contention that “fascism” was extreme capitalism.
The last paragraph of the Judgement of the Tribunal, read by the Soviet judge General I.T. Nikitchenko on 30 September 1946, begins with this sentence:
After cremation the ashes were used for fertilizer, and in some instances attempts were made to utilise the fat from the bodies of the victims in the commercial manufacture of soap. [IMT transcript, 30 September 2016]
There is a bit of weaselwording in this sentence.
If 1.5 to 5 kg of soap per day were indeed produced (not merely attempted) at the Danzig Anatomic Institute (which was not a soap factory) as Smirnov argued, this is obviously not “commercial manufacture.” The insinuation in the tribunal’s judgment that there were only “attempts” at producing soap “in some instances” is an admission that industrial use of fat to produce soap had not occurred.
But according to the statement read to the tribunal by General Rudenko, thousands of former Auschwitz-internees asserted that industrial production of soap from human fat had occurred.
Because the evidence prepared and presented to the tribunal did not come close to even appearing to validate the accusation that the Germans had commercially manufactured soap from Jewish fat, the tribunal pretended that the manufacture of lye soap was a difficult process still in the experimental stages, and accused the Germans of only intending to do it and trying to do it. That way the Germans could be morally reproached for the evil intention of mass-producing soap from humans, even though there was no evidence that they had actually done it.
The Judgement of the Tribunal is worded in such a way as to avoid committing to the soap-rumor, without clearly stating that it was wrong. The result was that the rumor of industrial production of soap from Jewish fat continued to live on.
In any case the story is now rejected by mainstream Holocaustography. Walter Laqueur, in The Terrible Secret (1980), wrote:
“It emerged after the war that the [soap] story was in fact untrue.”
Yehuda Bauer (an Israeli professor of Holocaust Studies) has even claimed:
“… the overwhelming majority of Holocaust historians have never believed that the Nazis mass produced human soap.” [Y. Bauer, “The Soap Allegations”]
Since my aim here is not to embarrass “Holocaust historians” but only to demonstrate that the IMT was not the scrupulously fair process that some people seem to assume, it is perfectly acceptable to me if “Holocaust historians” agree that the soap accusation was false.
The Jewish soap story may never have been unanimously endorsed by “Holocaust historians” but it is indisputable that Jews, including the Chairman of the World Jewish Congress, promoted the story, and that the story was introduced and repeatedly dignified in discussion, without ever being explicitly rejected, during the proceedings of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg.
Like the lampshade-story, the soap-accusation really should have been excluded as irrelevant, because even if somebody somewhere in Germany had made lye-soap from human fat (which is impossible to disprove entirely), there was no evidence that any of the defendants before the IMT at Nuremberg had anything remotely to do with it, and the man who had supposedly ordered and supervised this activity, Dr. Rudolf Spanner, was never prosecuted.
Q.E.D.
It is clear that the German defendants before the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg did not receive a fair trial, because a number of shocking accusations now widely acknowledged to be false were presented and given credence during that process, among them:
- The Germans were blamed for the Katyn Forest Massacre of 4000 Polish officers, which even the Russian Duma now admits was done by the Soviet secret police.
- It was explicitly stated and even supposedly documented on film that gassings had occurred at Dachau and Buchenwald. But expert opinion, at least since 1960, has said that nobody was gassed at either location, nor at Bergen-Belsen as widely believed.
- The allegation that prisoners at Buchenwald had been killed to produce lampshades, stated in George Stevens’ film and in a presentation by U.S. prosecutor Thomas Dodd, was irrelevant to the proceedings since the alleged perpetrator was not on trial, and a few years later the accusation was found to be false anyway.
- The claim that Jews had been turned into soap on an industrial scale, widely propagated during the war, was read into the record by a Soviet prosecutor. In the verdict it was cautiously scaled back to an accusation of mere “attempts” to turn Jews into soap “in some instances,” without clearly rejecting the accusation as initially stated. If the Tribunal’s verdict does not quite make it clear, “Holocaust historians” today agree that the Germans did not mass-produce soap from the fat of Jews.
These are all propositions that were treated as credible at the time of the International Military Tribunal (1945-1946) but are not treated as credible today even by “Holocaust historians,” who are biased toward keeping such accusations intact. The inescapable conclusion is that the defendants did not receive a fair trial.
Furthermore, it shows that the Holocaust narrative has changed significantly, and for that reason alone cannot reasonably be regarded as beyond question. Falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus. It has been demonstrated that mere verbal testimony against the Germans about gassings, shootings, etc., without physical evidence, cannot be trusted.
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