MOSCOW - Germany
is preparing for a trial of a Nazi criminal, widely referred by
the local media as "the
last one."
It is unknown as yet when the proceedings on Ivan (John) Demjanjuk, extradited
to Germany from the United States, will begin. It is even less clear
what the outcome will be. However, the deportation of the native
Ukrainian 89-year-old retired auto mechanic from Cleveland, Ohio,
his transportation to Munich, Bavaria and his impending trial have
made the news in both Germany and the United States and elsewhere.
This is probably natural, given that we are witnessing the "last" trial of a war crimes suspect.
Watching the unwinding justice exercise, one gets
a strange feeling that this really is the last effort and a colossal
victory, brought about by painstaking efforts of hundreds of legal
officials and investigators. There is some obvious finality about
the whole business.
The Second World War "biological
clock" will indeed stop ticking five or eight years from now, as those Nazis who were
the youngest to commit war crimes will be past the 100 years mark
or nearing it then. They will certainly be beyond the reach of justice.
Therefore, today seems like the last chance to hold a high-profile
show trial - just to remind the younger generations how it used to
be and check any possible revival of Nazism.
It may be a good idea, because there is increasing
talk these days that there were no death camps and that the Wehrmacht
was "clean" and only SS executed people. These things are horrible to hear. That is why
the world should appreciate the effort put in by the Simon Wiesenthal
Center to continue the search for former camp guards despite meager
funds, which prevents the world from forgetting about the victims.
However, it is as strange and horrible to hear that
the Nazis' worst crime was to exterminate Jews. Admittedly, it was
a monstrous crime, even though many facts have now been exaggerated.
But what about the millions of Russians, Belarusians,
Ukrainians, Georgians and Uzbeks? No one seems to remember their
plight. OK, many died. It was a war, wasn't it? No one knows what
those colonized people were fighting for in the first place and what
benefits they got from their victory. Their living standards are
much lower than those of their defeated enemies.
It is even worse to read Western war memoires mentioning
only the Soviet "contribution" as an appendage to the "glorious victory" won by Anglo-Saxon forces in Normandy and the Pacific.
In fact high-profile public campaigns are well established
in failing to do something, or failing to do it properly. Not necessarily
on purpose - possibly by negligence. The search for war criminals
is exactly the case.
With so much previous effort to forget about them,
any declared suspect becomes a prized trophy. The triumph of each
successful "catch" helps disguise the 60-years-old hypocrisy around the search for the suspects.
Contrary to the widespread belief, hundreds of war
criminals have not gone into hiding or laid low after the end of
the war. They simply divested their Nazi uniforms they swapped for
civilian clothes and obtained fake passports. What's more, many did
not do even that.
According to well-known German judge and prosecutor
Fritz Bauer, over 100,000 Nazis involved in the Holocaust atrocities
had been happily living in Germany through the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
Some of them even worked for federal agencies.
Other estimates cite over 300,000. However, since
the end of the war, less than 5,000 Nazi criminals were exposed and
convicted in Germany. "The West needed a strong West Germany and did not want to spend time hunting
for Nazis, many of which were now part of the society and even the
Federal Republic government," said Jean-Marc Dreyfus, professor at Manchester University and leading expert
in Nazism. "Removing those individuals would have weakened the nation, and for the West it
was more important by then to have a strong West German position
against Russia."
The situation in the United States was not much better
- especially for a former member of the anti-Hitler coalition. The
country had not extradited a single war crimes suspect before 1973
- the year when they finally deported former death camp guard Hermine
Brauensteiner-Ryan, and only due to the insistence of the Wiesenthal
Center.
Since then, the United States deported a mere 90 people.
No one knows now how many more Demjanjuks America had. Meanwhile,
America certainly was the place where most former collaborationists
moved from Ukraine, Belarus and the Baltic countries in the first
post-war decade. They were granted citizenship (just like Demjanjuk).
The authorities turned a blind eye to their fake IDs and hidden Nazi
past. Many of them were later sought out to work for the CIA in the
Soviet Union or other socialist countries.
Eli Rosenthal, head of U.S. Department of Justice's
Office of Special Investigations (OSI), admitted shortly before Demjanjuk's
deportation that it would take 100 years to expose all Nazi criminals
at the current pace of searching. He was referring to the whereabouts
of dozens of thousands of people. But there will be no one to search
for ten years from now. They will die a natural death.
They use a simple search method in the United States.
They match the lists of the 70,000 SS officers from Germany, and
run the names and pictures through a computer in the hope of finding
U.S. citizens with similar identities.
As a result, in the past eight years (2001-2008),
37 former Nazis were exposed. The current practice is to deport them
once they are identified in the countries where they had committed
the crimes.
For the same period, 26 war criminals were convicted
in Italy, 6 in Canada, 3 in Germany, 2 in Lithuania, 1 in Poland
and 1 in France.
There are 11 "most wanted" suspects
on top of the Wiesenthal Center, including Demjanjuk. Three of them
have been found and deported. They are now living normal lives in
Estonia and Lithuania.
Former Belarusian national Mikhail Gorshkov, who was
stripped of U.S. citizenship, found guilty of mass killing of Jews
and communists during the war, now lives in Estonia. So does Harry
Mannil, who executed Jews and communists in the Baltic republics.
He was also deported from the United States and banned to return,
but was later acquitted by the Estonian court.
Algimantas Dailide, also deported from the U.S., ended
up in Lithuania. He was stripped of his U.S. citizenship, deported
to Lithuania, convicted as a Nazi criminal, but released on parole.
en.rian.ru
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