The Nuremberg Trials

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In 1933, the Chancellor of Germany, Adolf Hitler alongside the defendants consisting of a bracket of Nazi officials, doctors and lawyers, military officers, and German industrialists, were impeached for crimes against mortality and human nature. The Nuremberg trials brought Nazi criminals to their justice (Harvard University, Nuremberg Trials Project). The Nazi superior, Adolf Hitler, had committed suicide and was never conducted in these trials. The legal rationale of the cases at the time, were contentious. These trials were known as the benchmark of the creation of a permanent international court, and are today recognized as the catalyst of later instances of genocide and other crimes against humanity. Due to the effects of the trials, it is accurate to say that the sickening persecutions of the trials lack the characteristics of civility and democracy.
On the path that led up to the trials, shortly after Hitler became chancellor in 1933, the Nazi government had begun executing policies designed to oppress the German-Jewish people and other known enemies of the Nazi state. Allied leaders of Great Britain, the United States, and the Soviet Union had disseminated the “first joint declaration officially noting the mass murder of European Jewry and resolving to prosecute those responsible for violence against civilian populations” (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 1942). Soon after, Joseph Stalin initially suggested the execution of 50,000 to 100,000 German staff officers, but British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had discussed the execution of higher ranking Nazis without any trials whatsoever. Churchill was later persuaded by some American leaders to embark in criminal trials, which he thought would be more effective (...

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All but three defendants were found guilty. Twelve were sentenced to death (the men that were hung), and the rest were put in prison. Twelve additional trials including well-known cases such as the Doctors Trial and the Judges Trial, were held soon after the Trial of Major War Criminals. This lasted from December of 1946 to April of 1949 (History Channel, 2010)
All in all, leading the criminals of Nuremberg to their morality, the Nuremberg Trials were a calamitous and brutal set of cases pointed towards men, who some were innocent. Even so, these individuals were dispatched by impassive military leaders in the name of the law. The trials and the executions led to an immense amount of genocide of the Jewish people, and felonies against mankind, all in the presence and aid of the venomous teachings of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi government.

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