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May 2001

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Nuremberg was largely an American creation. ("Typical American humor," scoffed Karl Dönitz, in his Nuremberg cell.) Britain and the Soviet Union were forced to follow America’s lead. Roosevelt’s free-wheeling and haphazard administration thus offers the single most important and vivid example of how governments argue about international justice.
National Archives 
This grand American debate over Nuremberg was waged mostly between two of Roosevelt’s most powerful cabinet members: Henry Stimson, the secretary of war, and Henry Morgenthau Jr., the treasury secretary. Stimson insisted on trials for the top Nazis; Morgenthau wanted summary executions. In March 1945, Stimson, while emphasizing postwar economic and political issues over the question of war criminals, gave a good first-hand outline of the way the decision was made:

Never has anything which I have witnessed in the four years shown such instance of the bad effect of our chaotic administration and its utter failure to treat matters in a well organized way. …Morgenthau advanced his project for destroying industrial Germany and turning it into a "pastoral" country. …Then the President pranced up to the meeting at Quebec in September taking Morgenthau and leaving Hull and me behind, and there he put his initials to the fantastic "pastoral Germany" program which was drawn by Churchill and Morgenthau. Morgenthau came back and told us about it, and the character of the paper leaked out evidently through somebody in the Treasury Department. It was at once torn to pieces by public opinion and the President hastily retreated from his position. At a luncheon with me in the White House he spoke of this paper as something that had been put over him in Quebec and which he had never fathered. I had a copy of it in my pocket, fished it out, and showed his initials at the bottom of it. Then he said he had made a great mistake and has admitted that with great frankness since.
Then for a while Morgenthau was in the doghouse…

While more than a little self-congratulatory, this account is basically accurate. The Morgenthau Plan, which Churchill and Roosevelt initialed at the Québec Conference in September 1944, called for the summary execution of the Nazi leadership as war criminals. But Stimson managed to triumph, insisting that even Nazi war criminals be given the benefit of due process as it had evolved in America.

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