Sunday, April 10, 2011

Lessons From Nuremberg

"GEORGE ORWELL is usually a footsure guide across political battlegrounds. In late 1943, when the tide had turned in the Allies’ favor, he wrote about postwar trials. Oddly, he advocated Hitler and Mussolini slipping away. His verdict for them would not be death unless the Germans and Italians themselves carried out summary executions (as they eventually did in Mussolini’s case). 

For once Orwell missed his step. The Allies did stage a trial of the Nazi war criminals, at Nuremberg. .... The trial had flaws. To some it will always seem to be “victors’ justice” and it can be called hypocritical in that the Soviet Union, guilty of many of its own crimes against humanity, was an equal partner with the democratic prosecutors and judges. But, over all, it succeeded very well."
[NYT ]

No comments:

Post a Comment