Chapter One
Architects of Genocide
The Victorious Allies Put Hitler's Henchmen in the Defendant's Box at Nüremberg
The Guns Fall Silent
Dawn came early to Reims, France, on the morning of May 7, 1945. This was not
nature's dawn, but then the darkness which it ended was not the brief and pretty
peace of nature's night. The darkness was a maelstrom made of men, bent on
Holocaust and war. As the dawn finally came, the light of Europe's liberation
from National Socialism illuminated the deeds of those evil men, who now faced
judgment for having turned much of the world on a perverted Axis of persecution,
the darkest point of which was Nazi Germany.
At Reims, France, at 2:41 A.M., May 7, 1945, General Alfred Jodl, chief of the
Operations Staff of the German High Command, signed the instrument of
unconditional surrender of all German land, sea, and air forces.
The newborn peace found more than 30 million dead, many of them civilians and
Allied prisoners of war who endured a crimson march of displacement, inter ... read full excerpt from Ladies and Gentlemen of the Jury: Greatest Closing Arguments in Modern Law ebook