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Seeking Justice for the Holocaust - Herbert C. Pell, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and the Limits of International Law (Hardcover)
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Seeking Justice for the Holocaust - Herbert C. Pell, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and the Limits of International Law (Hardcover)
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The Nuremberg War Crimes Trial has become a symbol of justice, the
pivotal moment when the civilized world stood up for Europe's Jews
and, ultimately, for human rights. Yet the world, represented at
the time by the Allied powers, almost did not stand up despite the
magnitude of the horrors perpetrated by the Nazis. Seeking justice
for the Holocaust had not been an automatic - or an obvious -
mission for the Allies to pursue. In this book, Graham Cox recounts
the remarkable negotiations and calculations that brought the
United States and its allies to this point. At the center of this
story is the collaboration between Franklin D. Roosevelt and
Herbert C. Pell, Roosevelt's appointee as U.S. representative to
the United Nations War Crimes Commission, in creating an
international legal protocol to prosecute Nazi officials for war
crimes and genocide. Pell emerges here as an unheralded force in
pursuing justice and in framing human rights as an international
concern. The book also enlarges our perspective on Roosevelt's
policies regarding European Jews by revealing the depth of his
commitment to postwar justice in the face of staunch opposition,
even from some within his administration. What made the
international effort especially contentious was a debate over its
focus - how to punish for aggressive warfare and crimes against
humanity. Cox exposes the internal contradictions and contortions
behind the U.S. position and the maneuverings of numerous officials
negotiating the legal parameters of the trials. Most telling
perhaps were the efforts of Robert H. Jackson, the chief U.S.
prosecutor at Nuremberg, to circumscribe the scope of new
international law - for fear of setting precedents that might
boomerang on the United States because of its own racial
segregation practices. With its broad new examination of the
background and context of the Nuremberg trials, and its expanded
view of the roles played by Roosevelt and his unlikely deputy Pell,
Seeking Justice for the Holocaust offers a deeper and more nuanced
understanding of how the Allies came to hold Nazis accountable for
their crimes against humanity.
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