Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 26, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A10
OPINION WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, MONDAY, APRIL 21, 2014
A 10
Winnipeg Free Press
Sunday, July 26, 2015
winnipegfreepress. com
S HOULD Denmark prosecute a
90- year- old Dane who volunteered
as a Nazi concentrationcamp
guard more than 70 years
ago?
The question isn't hypothetical. The
Simon Wiesenthal Center has presented
Danish authorities with a dossier urging
the prosecution of Helmuth Leif Rasmussen,
who by his own account was present
at the Bobruisk camp in 1942- 43, when
1,400 Jews were killed there.
And the answer isn't obvious. By
contemporary terms, Rasmussen was
at least complicit in war crimes. There's
merit to the idea war criminals should
be hunted down no matter what and no
matter how long ago they acted. But the
post- Second World War consensus of the
Allies was to punish Nazi leaders at the
Nuremberg trials while giving at most
minor punishments to subordinate actors,
including thousands of people with
blood on their hands. Trying Rasmussen
now would symbolically hint at a retrospective
repudiation of that policy decision.
The facts are not only painful, but also painfully
interesting. Some 20,000 Danes participated
in the resistance against Germany and saved
the overwhelming majority of Danish Jews, a
heroic effort recently revisited in Bo Lidegaard's
Countrymen: the Untold Story of How Denmark's
Jews Escaped the Nazis . Yet some 6,000 Danes,
many from Denmark's German- speaking minority,
volunteered for service in the Waffen- SS
and were sent by the German command to the
eastern front.
It's always been known some of the Danish volunteers
were at the Bobruisk camp, in presentday
Belarus, when Jews were killed there. What
gave rise to the request for the prosecution of
Rasmussen was testimony he provided to the
authors of A Book of Violence , a historical work
published in Danish in 2014. The authors argue
Danes were not merely present at the camp
but actively participated in killings. Part of the
evidence came from Rasmussen himself, who
denied ( and still denies) he personally took part.
To further complicate matters, Rasmussen,
who is also known as Rasboel, apparently received
some sort of punishment after the war, although
it isn't clear whether it was for betraying
Denmark by volunteering to serve with German
forces or for specific crimes he may have committed.
The Danish prosecutor has said the state
wants to avoid prosecuting Rasmussen twice
for the same offence, which would be a kind of
double- jeopardy violation.
To sharpen the question of whether this is a
worthy prosecution, let's stipulate that, if Rasmussen's
acts occurred now, whether in Rwanda
or Iraq or anywhere else, they would be punishable
as war crimes. And let's also assume there
would be no double- jeopardy problem in prosecuting
him now. Is it still the right thing to do?
From the perspective of the Nazi hunters at
the Wiesenthal Center, the answer is certainly
yes. Efraim Zuroff, the famed Nazi hunter who
brought the dossier to the Danes, knows the
prosecution of Nazis is coming to the end of the
line as fewer and fewer war criminals remain
alive. Institutionally, the centre is on the brink
of moving its justice- seeking operations into the
realm of history rather than the active pursuit of
individual criminals.
The centre's commitment to tracking down
every Nazi war criminal has become part of the
contemporary ideology of the prosecution of war
crimes generally. The Rome statute establishing
the International Criminal Court doesn't
restrict prosecutions to high- level commanders
who order crimes against humanity. The international
prohibition on genocide extends to any
individual who participates in a genocide - not
just those who conceive and direct the crime. In
practice, prosecutions in the special tribunals for
the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda and Sierra Leone
have focused on criminals responsible for many
deaths, but that's a policy judgment by prosecutors,
not a requirement of those tribunals or the
laws they apply.
What's more, within individual militaries,
soldiers suspected of war crimes are prosecuted
zealously even for crimes that are isolated rather
than systematic. And that must be right: it would
make little sense to ignore the wilful murder of
an Iraqi or Afghan civilian just because it was
committed in violation of the rules of engagement.
Yet Rasmussen's crimes came in a conflict to
which different rules were applied. Faced with
the scale of the Nazis' atrocities, the Nuremberg
prosecutors chose to focus almost exclusively
on the big fish and to let the little fish go if they
would renounce their commitment to Nazism. No
other course of action would have been practical.
And both the American and Soviet sides, anticipating
future Cold War conflict, hoped to win
over the German population.
In the light of today's moral approach to war
criminals, that decision may seem shocking.
And you can hardly fault the Wiesenthal Center
for doing its best to undermine it and remind
the world Hitler had many willing executioners,
as Daniel Goldhagen has put it. Yet there were
also extremely important practical benefits to
allowing a society of perpetrators to go free,
primarily the postwar reconciliation that's been
so elusive in Iraq. And Germany was able to grow
into an effective democracy in part because it
wasn't riven by a lengthy truth and reconciliation
process.
Rasmussen's case reminds us Denmark has
much to be proud of, but also a stain of its own to
remember. Prosecuting a 90- year- old won't make
either of these historical realities go away. We've
already entered the era of history. The way to
produce justice now is by finding the truth - and
telling it to the world.
Noah Feldman, a Bloomberg View columnist, is a
professor of constitutional and international law
at Harvard University and the author of six books,
most recently Cool War: the Future of Global
Competition.
By Noah Feldman
Danes face difficult decision
EDDIE WORTH / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Defendants at the Nuremberg war- crimes trials in September 1946.
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