A FLAS Fellow's Semester Abroad in Amman

Audrey Dombro, an agricultural and consumer economics student and 2019-20 FLAS fellow, reflects upon her experience studying in Jordan.

Master of Arts in European Union Studies

The European Union Center at the University of Illinois offers the only Master of Arts in European Union Studies (MAEUS) program in the Western Hemisphere. Learn more here.

Nuclear Energy and Its Environmental, Policy, and Security Implications

On Earth Day 2022, the EU Center organized a symposium on the future of technology, energy, and security in Europe, featuring prominent scholars and policy makers from France, Germany, and the U.S.

Conversations on Europe

Watch the collection of online roundtable discussions on different EU issues sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh.

Accelerating Climate Change Mitigation: Policy Statements on the Road to Sharm-El-Sheikh and Beyond

Bruce Murray, Resident Director of the Illinois Program in Vienna, presents a series of student-written policy statements for accelerating climate change mitigation.

Videos of Previous Lectures

Missed an EUC-hosted lecture? Our blog's video tag has archived previous EUC-sponsored lectures.

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

The Nuremberg Trials as a Model for Holding Putin’s Regime Accountable

Dr. Francine Hirsch
by Ben Nathan, MA Student in European Union Studies

On March 8, the European Union Center had the privilege of hosting Dr. Francine Hirsch (Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison) for an afternoon of virtual discussion on the atrocities being committed by Russia in Ukraine. Dr. Hirschs presentation highlighted what may be the most promising option to solidify Putins legacy of devastation and eventually see the wars principal actors duly punished for their crimes: the creation of a special tribunal – potentially on the Nuremberg model – to try Russias leaders for their deplorable crimes in Ukraine.

While there is admittedly very little chance of Putin or any of his coterie of oligarchs, military leaders, and propagandists willingly submitting to the will of any such tribunal, in citing the Washington Post, Dr. Hirsch emphasized that it would be unconscionable to fail to establish a formal mechanism” to hold the individuals responsible for the war accountable for their actions. This mechanism, she and many others in the international community suggest, could be very effectively based on a Nuremberg-style model.

In pondering the validity of such a models utilization in pursuit of the rectification of the heinous crimes being committed by Russian actors in Ukraine, its vital to understand its implications. The discussions title itself references the Nuremberg trials, which referred to Germanys actions in World War II as crimes against peace." This thus begs the questions of what are crimes against peace, and why is there an important distinction crimes against peace and, for example, war crimes or crimes against humanity. In short, it is because the concept of "crimes against peace" is not simply a rephrasing of war crimes but rather refers to something else entirely.

Dr. Hirsch noted that in the Nuremberg trials, it was argued that the Nazi regime and its many collaborators should be charged not only for war crimes, which, as Dr. Hirsch said, are violations of the laws and customs of war that had been codified” into international law, but also for initiating the war in the first place. Crimes against peace thus refers not to any specific violation of a specific international convention so much as the destruction of a period of relative peace between the world's nations. In light of that comparison, its not difficult to draw parallels between then and now, with the world having been in a similarly peaceful period devoid of interstate war before Putins invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Yet, for a Nuremberg-style tribunal to be created and successfully implemented, it would need widespread international support, even beyond what we are currently seeing. At the end of the presentation, Dr. Hirsch offered the audience an important question to think on. Where is our public conscience at for war crimes to be punished for our international legal system? To work, states must be willing to get behind international principles, to join international institutions, and to pursue enforcement. States, even large and powerful ones, must be willing to seed some degrees of sovereignty... well need, dare I say, a new Nuremberg moment.

The recording of Dr. Hirsch's talk can be found here.


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