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Why did so many Nazis escape justice?

Seventy five years after the Nuremberg trials, a new documentary asks why so many murderers got off scot free. Stephen Applebaum reports.

September 29, 2021 18:25
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6 min read

On October 1, 75 years ago, the historic International Military Tribunal, in Courtroom 600 in Nuremberg, reached its conclusion. Originally there were 24 senior Nazis indicted on charges including war crimes and crimes against humanity. Only 21 appeared in court, however, as one committed suicide and another was excluded on grounds of infirmity. A third defendent, Martin Bormann, was tried in absentia.

When the judges delivered their verdict, they convicted 19 of the accused and acquitted three.

There was a thirst for justice, and 12 Allied successor trials — of doctors, teachers, death squad leaders — followed in a bid to show how a civilised nation had allowed itself to descend into barbarism by tolerating, accepting, and supporting unimaginable atrocities.

By the end of the 1950s, everyone serving time for convictions in these dozen trials had been released and allowed to melt back into society. Even before this injustice, the Nuremberg trials, and other trials that had taken place immediately after the end of the war, had merely scratched the surface of the crimes committed by the Nazis and their collaborators. Despite an avowed determination to re-establish the rule of law and lead the world to a future where leaders feared the consequences of their actions, most Holocaust perpetrators were never even questioned, let alone convicted.