DR. EXNER: Göring has also asked for him as a witness.
THE PRESIDENT: Has he been allowed to the Defendant Göring?
DR. EXNER: He had counted on my calling him as a witness, on his being allowed and on being able to question him. He is here in Nuremberg. May I now turn to the documents?
THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
DR. EXNER: Regarding Points 1 and 4, the Prosecution has no objections. I take this to mean that I put into my document book an extract of the part I read. I submit the entire document to the Tribunal without a translation of anything except the part which I am going to read; and which deals with an important point which must be clarified. If I am dealing with a large document and I need to quote only one paragraph, it is sufficient if I submit the original document to the Tribunal in its entirety and include in my document book only the particular paragraph in question and its translation.
THE PRESIDENT: That is right.
DR. EXNER: Regarding Points 5 and 6, the Prosecution objects and I withdraw these two documents.
Point 7 is a curious one. That is Document Number 532-PS, submitted by the Prosecution and to which I made objection at the time. The document was removed from the record, and now I myself apply for this document to be submitted again. This is for the following reason: The document is an order that was submitted to Jodl in draft form. Jodl did not approve it, crossed it out, and sent it back without signing it. This draft was submitted by the Prosecution, and I objected to its being presented as if it were actually an order signed by Jodl. I want to submit it now in order to prove that Jodl, by making it impossible for this order to be carried out, deprived an illegal order of its effectiveness.
Regarding Points 8 to 15, the Prosecution also has no objection.
SIR DAVID MAXWELL-FYFE: Points 16 and 17 are the subjects of objection from the Prosecution. Point 16 relates to the English “Close Combat Regulations” of the year 1942, and 17 is the English order for the Operation Dieppe of the same year. With regard to the “Close Combat Regulations,” the only relevance they could seem to have would be in relation to an objection to this form of training, and in the submission of the Prosecution it would be irrelevant on the question of the Commando order.