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Nuremberg Trials
Opening Address for the United States
Robert Jackson
This document was retrieved from the archives of Nizkor. Source: Nazi Conspiracy & Aggression, Volume I, Chapter VII, Office of the United States Chief Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality, United States Government Printing Office, Washington, 1946.
 
THE CRIME AGAINST PEACE 
 
A basic provision of the Charter is that to plan, prepare, initiate or 
wage a war of aggression, or a war in violation of international 
treaties, agreements, and assurances, or to conspire or participate in a 
common plan to do so is a crime. 
 [Page 166]
 
It is perhaps a weakness in this Charter that it fails itself to define 
a war of aggression. Abstractly, the subject is full of difficulty and 
all kinds of troublesome hypothetical cases can be conjured up. It is a 
subject which, if the defense should be permitted to go afield beyond 
the very narrow charge in the Indictment, would prolong the trial and 
involve the Tribunal in insoluble political issues. But so far as the 
question can properly be involved in this case, the issue is one of no 
novelty and is one on which legal opinion has well crystallized. 
 
One of the most authoritative sources of International Law on this 
subject is the Convention for the Definition of Aggression signed at 
London on July 3rd, 1933 by Roumania, Estonia, Latvia, Poland, Turkey, 
The Soviet Union, Persia, and Afghanistan. The subject has also been 
considered by international committees and by commentators whose views 
are entitled to the greatest respect. It had been little discussed prior 
to the First World War but has received much attention as International 
Law has evolved its outlawry of aggressive war. In the light of these 
materials of International Law, and so far as relevant to the evidence 
in this case, I suggest' that an "aggressor" is generally held to be 
that state which is the first to commit any of the following actions: 
 
(1) Declaration of war upon another State; 
 
(2) Invasion by its armed forces, with or without a 
declaration war, of the territory of another State; 
 
(3) Attack by its land, naval, or air forces, with or without a 
declaration of war, on the territory, vessels, or aircraft of another 
State; 
 
(4) Provision of support to armed bands formed in the territory of 
another State, or refusal, notwithstanding the request of the invaded 
State, to take in its own territory, all the measures in its power to 
deprive those bands of all assistance or protection. 
 
And I further suggest that it is the general view that no political, 
military, economic or other considerations shall serve as an excuse or 
justification for such actions; but exercise of the right of legitimate 
self-defense, that is to say, resistance to an act of aggression, or 
action to assist a State which has been subjected to aggression, shall 
not constitute a war of aggression. 
 
It is upon such an understanding of the law that our evidence of a 
conspiracy to provoke and wage an aggressive war is prepared and 
presented. By this test each of the series of wars begun by these Nazi 
leaders was unambiguously aggressive. 
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It is important to the duration and scope of this trial that we bear in 
mind the difference between our charge that this war wa one of 
aggression and a position that Germany had no grievances. We are not 
inquiring into the conditions which contributed to causing this war. 
They are for history to unravel. It is no part of our task to vindicate 
the European status quo as of 1933, or as of any other date. The United 
States does not desire to enter into discussion of the complicated 
pre-war currents of European politics, and it hopes this trial will not 
be protracted by their consideration. The remote causations avowed are 
too insincere and inconsistent, too complicated and doctrinaire to be 
the subject of profitable inquiry in this trial. A familiar example is 
to be found in the Lebensraum slogan, which summarized the contention 
that Germany needed more living space as a justification for expansion. 
At the same time that the Nazis were demanding more space for the German 
people, they were demanding more German people to occupy space. Every 
known means to increase the birth rate, legitimate and illegitimate, was 
utilized. Lebensraum represented a vicious circle of demand from 
neighbors more space, and from Germans more progeny. We do not need to 
investigate the verity of doctrines which led to constantly expanding 
circles of aggression. It is the plot and the act of aggression which we 
charge to be crimes. 
 
Our position is that whatever grievances a nation may have, however 
objectionable it finds the status quo, aggressive warfare is an illegal 
means for settling those grievances or for altering those conditions. It 
may be that the Germany of the 1920's and 1930's faced desperate 
problems, problems that would have warranted the boldest measures short 
of war. All other methods -- persuasion, propaganda, economic 
competition, diplomacy -- were open to an aggrieved country, but 
aggressive warfare was outlawed. These defendants did make aggressive 
war, a war in violation of treaties. They did attack and invade their 
neighbors in order to effectuate a foreign policy which they knew could 
not be accomplished by measures short of war. And that is as far as we 
accuse or propose to inquire. 
 
 
 
 
A Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust 
  
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