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Encyclopedia > List of war criminals

This is a list of formally charged and convicted war criminals as according to the conduct and rules of warfare as defined by the Nuremberg Trials following World War II as well as earlier agreements such as Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907, the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928, and the Geneva Conventions of 1929 and 1949. Image File history File links Broom_icon. ... A war crime is a punishable offense, under international law, for violations of the law of war by any person or persons, military or civilian. ... The laws of war (Jus in bello) define the conduct and responsibilities of belligerent nations, neutral nations and individuals engaged in warfare, in relation to each other and to protected persons, usually meaning civilians. ... The Süddeutsche Zeitung announces The Verdict in Nuremberg. ... Combatants Allied powers: China France Great Britain Soviet Union United States and others Axis powers: Germany Italy Japan and others Commanders Chiang Kai-shek Charles de Gaulle Winston Churchill Joseph Stalin Franklin Roosevelt Adolf Hitler Benito Mussolini Hideki Tōjō Casualties Military dead: 17,000,000 Civilian dead: 33,000... The Hague Conventions were international treaties negotiated at the First and Second Peace Conferences at The Hague, Netherlands in 1899 and 1907, respectively, and were, along with the Geneva Conventions, among the first formal statements of the laws of war and war crimes in the nascent body of international law. ... President Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, and Frank B. Kellogg, standing, with representatives of the governments who have ratified the Treaty for Renunciation of War (Kellogg-Briand Pact), in the East Room of the White House. ... The Geneva Conventions consist of treaties formulated in Geneva, Switzerland that set the standards for international law for humanitarian concerns. ...

See also: List of war crimes
Contents

Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z - References This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. ...

A

  • Heinrich Otto Abetz (1903-1958), German ambassador to France
  • Jean-Marie Charles Abrial (1879-1962), French admiral
  • Jean Akayesu (b. 1953), Rwandan Mouvement Démocratique Républicain politician and mayor (bourgmestre) of Taba commune
  • Muto Akira (1883-1948), Japanese army commander and member of the General High Staff
  • Josef Altsotter, German Justice Ministry official
  • Otto Ambros, German government official
  • Ion Antonescu (1882-1946), Romanian marshal; found guilty by the Romanian People's Tribunals; executed;
  • Mihai Antonescu (1907-1946) , Romanian government official; found guilty by the Romanian People's Tribunals; executed;
  • Andrija Artuković (1899 - 1988), Croatian minister of Justice and Internal Affairs, Ustasha

Portrait of Otto Abetz Otto Abetz (May 26, 1903 – May 5, 1958) was the German ambassador to Vichy France during World War II. Abetz was born in Schwetzingen. ... Jean-Marie Charles Abrial (1879-1962). ... Jean Paul Akayesu (b. ... Akira Muto was born in Japan in 1883. ... Office Prime Minister, Conducător of Romania Term of office from September 4, 1940 until August 23, 1944 Profession Soldier, politician Political party none, formally allied with the Iron Guard Spouse Rasela Mendel Date of birth June 15, 1882 Place of birth PiteÅŸti, Romania Date of death June 1... The two Romanian Peoples Tribunals, the Bucharest Peoples Tribunal and the Northern Transylvania Peoples Tribunal (which sat in Cluj) were set up by postwar Romanian Government, overseen by the Allied Control Commission to try suspected war criminals, in line with Article 14 of the Armistice Agreement with... Mihai Antonescu Mihai Antonescu (1907-1946) was Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Romania during World War II. Antonescu made his living as an attorney before becoming Prime Minister Ion Antonescu’s (whom he was not related to) Minister of Propaganda in 1940. ... The two Romanian Peoples Tribunals, the Bucharest Peoples Tribunal and the Northern Transylvania Peoples Tribunal (which sat in Cluj) were set up by postwar Romanian Government, overseen by the Allied Control Commission to try suspected war criminals, in line with Article 14 of the Armistice Agreement with... Andrija Artuković (November 29, 1899 - January 16, 1988), was an ethnically Croatian right-wing politician convicted of war crimes and genocide committed against minorities in the WWII Independent State of Croatia (NDH). ... The Ustaše (often spelled Ustashe in English; singular Ustaša or Ustasha) was a Croatian right-wing organisation put in charge of the Independent State of Croatia by the Axis Powers in 1941. ...

B

  • Milan Babić (1956-2006), Croatian Serb and prime minister of Republic of Serb Krajina
  • Erich von dem Bach (1899-1972), German official and SS officer
  • Herbert Backe (1896-1947), German Acting Food Minister
  • Richard Baer (1911-1963), first commander of Auschwitz concentration camp
  • Hans Baier, German WVHA official
  • Lazlo Baky, (d. 1946), Hungarian Interior Ministry official
  • Klaus Barbie (1913-1991), German Gestapo officer
  • Laszlo Bardossy (1890-1946), Hungarian Prime Minister
  • Franz Anton Basch (1901-1946), German Nazi leader in Hungary
  • Adolf Heinz Beckerle, German ambassador to Bulgaria and Police President of Frankfurt
  • Friedrich Berger, German Gestapo intelligence officer
  • Gottlob Berger (1897-1975), German SS official
  • Robert H. Best, American collaborator and propaganda broadcaster.
  • Werner Best (1903-1989), German Plenipotentiary of Denmark
  • Ernst Biberstein, German Einsatzgruppe C official
  • Hans Biebow (1902-1947), chief of German Administration of the Łódź Ghetto
  • Johannes Blaskowitz (1883-1948), German field marshal accused of murdering civilians and prisoners of war in Poland
  • Paul Blobel (1894-1951), German Einsatzgruppe C official
  • Kurt Blome, German Party Main Office official
  • Walter Blume, German Einsatzgruppe B official
  • Hans Bobermin, German WVHA official
  • Wilhelm Bolger (b. 1907), German Auschwitz intelligence officer
  • Franz Bohme (1885-1947), German military commander in Serbia
  • Martin Ludwig Bormann (1900-c. 1945), German Party Chancellor
  • Herbert Bottcher (d. 1950), German SS and Police Leader in Radom, Poland
  • Philipp Bouhler (1899-1945), German Fuhrer Chancellory official
  • Viktor Brack (1904-1948), German Fuhrer Chancellory official
  • Otto Bradfisch (1903-1994), member of the German SS Obersturmbannführer, Leader of Einsatzkommando 8 of Einsatzgruppe B of the Security Police (Sicherheitspolizei) and the SD, and Commander of the Security Police in Litzmannstadt (Łódź) and Potsdam
  • Karl Brandt (1904-1948), German Plenipotentiary for Health official
  • Rudolf Brandt (1909-1948), secretary of Heinrich Himmler
  • Heinrich Alfred Hermann Walter von Brauchitsch (1881-1948), German Commander-in-Chief of the Army
  • Werner Braune (d. 1951), German Einsatzgruppe D official
  • Hermine Braunsteiner-Ryan, German Majdanek Prison guard
  • Fernand de Brinion (d. 1947), French collaborator and member of the Vichy government
  • Alouis Brunner (d. 1951), German SS deportation expert in France, Salonika and Slovakia
  • Karl Bruno (b. 1911), Yugoslavian collaborator and Belgrade merchant of Croatian origin who accepted the store of a deported Jewish owner
  • Yuri Budanov, Russian officer convicted of war crimes against civilian population in Chechnya
  • Joseph Buhler (d. 1948), German Generalgouvernement official
  • Heinrich Bunke, German doctor involved in the euthanasia of handicapped in 1940-1941
  • Heinrich Butefisch (b. 1907), German I.G. Farben official

Milan Babić in Hague courtroom Milan Babić (February 26, 1956 – March 5, 2006) was from 1991 to 1995 the leader of the Republic of Serbian Krajina, a largely Serb-populated region that broke away from Croatia. ... The borders of the RSK c. ... Erich von dem Bach, born Erich von Zelewski and also known as Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski (March 1, 1899 - March 8, 1972), was a Nazi official and a member of the SS (in which he reached the rank of SS-Obergruppenführer). ... Herbert Backe (1896-1947), was a German doctor and public servant,himself borned in Batum(Batumi),Georgia. ... Richard Baer (September 9, 1911 - June 17, 1963) was a Nazi official with the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer and commander of the Auschwitz I concentration camp from May 1944 to February 1945. ... Auschwitz, in English, commonly refers to the Auschwitz concentration camp complex built near the town of Oświęcim, by Nazi Germany during World War II. Rarely, it may refer to the Polish town of Oświęcim (called by the Germans Auschwitz) itself. ... Klaus Barbie in Army NCO Uniform. ... László Bárdossy László Bárdossy de Bárdos (December 10, 1890-January 10, 1946) was Prime Minister of Hungary from 1941 to 1942. ... Dr. Franz Anton Basch (Hungarian: Basch Ferenc Antal) (July 13, 1901 – April 27, 1946) was a German Nazi politician, the chairman of Volksbund and the leader of Germans in Hungary. ... Gottlob Berger (July 16, 1896 - January 5, 1975) was a German SS general during World War II. From 1940, he was Chief of Staff for the military SS and head of the SS main leadership office. ... Robert H. Best (1898-1952) was an American broadcaster of Nazi propaganda during World War II. He was convicted in 1948 of treason and sentenced to life imprisonment. ... Werner Best (1903-June 23, 1989), was a German Doctor in Law and Nazi official, serving during World War II. SS-Obergruppenführer (Lieutenant-General), department head in the SS-Gestapo within the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) and deputy of Reinhard Heydrich from 1939 to 1940, Best was one... Hans Biebow (1902 - April 24, 1947) was the chief of German Administration of the Lodz Ghetto in Poland. ... The Łódź Ghetto (historically the Litzmannstadt Ghetto) was the second-largest ghetto (after the Warsaw Ghetto) established for Jews and Roma in Nazi-occupied Poland. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Categories: People stubs ... Kurt Blome was a high-ranking Nazi scientist before and during the Second World War. ... Franz Böhme. ... Philipp Bouhler (born 11 September 1899 in Munich; died 19 May 1945 in Dachau (suicide)) was a Nazi German government official, head of the Führers Chancellery and leader of the euthanasia programme, the so-called Aktion T4. ... In 1929, Viktor Brack became a member of the NSDAP and the SS. In 1936, he was supervising operation of the office 2 (Amt 2) in the Chancellery of the Führer in Berlin, that office examined complaints received by the Führer from all parts of Germany. ... Otto Bradfisch (born 10 May 1903 in Zweibrücken; died 22 June 1994 in Seeshaupt) was an economist, a jurist, an SS Obersturmbannführer, Leader of Einsatzkommando 8 of Einsatzgruppe B of the Security Police (Sicherheitspolizei) and the SD, and Commander of the Security Police in Litzmannstadt (Łódź) and Potsdam. ... Brandt at the Doctors Trial Karl Brandt (January 8, 1904 – June 2, 1948) was the personal physician to Adolf Hitler and headed the administration of the Nazi euthanasia programme from 1939. ... Rudolf Brandt (June 2, 1909, Frankfurt an der Oder - June 2, 1948), was a SS officer and civil servant. ...   (October 7, 1900 – May 23, 1945) was the commander of the German Schutzstaffel (SS) and one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany. ... In December of 2002, a Russian court tried Russian Colonel Yuri Budanov on war crimes charges. ... Chechen Republic (IPA: ; Russian: , Chechenskaya Respublika; Chechen: , Noxçiyn Respublika), or, informally, Chechnya (; Russian: ; Chechen: , Noxçiyçö), sometimes referred to as Ichkeria, Chechnia, Chechenia or Nokhchiyn, is a federal subject of Russia (a republic). ...

C

  • William Calley (b. 1943), United States officer responsible for the My Lai Massacre
  • Corneliu Calotescu, Romanian Governor of Bukovina
  • Pierto Caruso (d. 1944), Italian police chief of Rome
  • Josef Catlos, Slovakian war minister
  • Paul Chack (1876-1945), French collaborator
  • Dmitri Christov, Bulgarian interor minister
  • Carl Clauberg (1898-1957), medical doctor present at Auschwitz concentration camp
  • Karl Clodius, German economist
  • Granville Cubage, American POW serviceman

This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Photographs of the My Lai massacre provoked world outrage and made it an international scandal. ... Image:Carlclauberg. ... Auschwitz, in English, commonly refers to the Auschwitz concentration camp complex built near the town of Oświęcim, by Nazi Germany during World War II. Rarely, it may refer to the Polish town of Oświęcim (called by the Germans Auschwitz) itself. ...

D

  • Kurt Daluege (1897-1946), German ORPO and Protektorat official
  • Theodor Dannecker (1913-1945), German SS deportation expert in France and Bulgaria
  • Joseph Darnand (1897-1945), Vichy French chief of police
  • Denice Delfau (d. 1945), French collaborator
  • John Demjanjuk (Ivan Denjanjuk) (1921-), officier in Treblinka concentration camp
  • Albert Deutscher (d. 1981), member of a Nazi paramilitary group
  • Joseph Dietrich, (Sepp Dietrich) (b. 1893) personal bodyguard to Adolf Hitler and commander of Nazi security
  • Otto Dietrich (1898-1957), personal Press Secretary to Adolf Hitler
  • Doihara Kenji (d. 1948), Japanese general
  • Karl Dönitz, German minister of war and successor to Adolf Hitler
  • Anton Dostler (d. 1945), German General
  • Walter Durrfeld, official in Auschwitz concentration camp.

Kurt Daluege (September 15, 1897 – October 24, 1946) was an SS-Oberstgruppenführer und Generaloberst der Polizei, officer of the Central Reich Security Office (RSHA) and the governor of the Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia. ... Theodor Dannecker (born 27 March 1913 in Tübingen; died 10 December 1945 in Bad Tölz) was an SS Hauptsturmführer and one of Adolf Eichmanns associates. ... Joseph Darnand, wearing the wide beret of the Milice Joseph Darnand (March 19, 1897 - October 10, 1945) was a French pro-Nazi traitor and leader of the Vichy French Milice. ... John Demjanjuk John Demjanjuk (b. ... Treblinka is a small village in the Mazowieckie voivodship (province) of Poland. ... General Sepp Dietrich Josef Sepp Dietrich (May 28, 1892–April 21/22, 1966) was a German Waffen-SS general, an SS-Oberstgruppenführer, and one of the closest men to Hitler. ... SS-Obergruppenführer Sepp Dietrich Josef Sepp Dietrich also known as Ujac (May 28, 1892–April 21/22, 1966) was a German Waffen-SS general, an SS-Oberstgruppenführer, and one of the closest men to Hitler. ... Otto Dietrich was the Third Reichs Press Chief, and Hitlers confidante. ... Kenji Doihara (土肥原 賢二 Doihara Kenji, 1883 - December 23, 1948) was a Japanese spy who served in northeastern China since 1913. ... This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ... Dostler tied to a stake before his execution Anton Dostler (May 10, 1891 - December 1, 1945) was a General of infantry in the regular German army during World War II (see Germany and Nazi party). ... Auschwitz, in English, commonly refers to the Auschwitz concentration camp complex built near the town of Oświęcim, by Nazi Germany during World War II. Rarely, it may refer to the Polish town of Oświęcim (called by the Germans Auschwitz) itself. ...

E

  • Adolf Eichmann (1906-1962), German SS official
  • August Eigruber (1907-1947), German Gauleiter of Oberdonau (Upper Danube) and Landeshauptmann of Upper Austria
  • Franz Eirenschmalz (1879-1962), German WVHA official
  • Lazlo Endre (d. 1946), Hungarian Minister of the Interior
  • Lynndie England (b. 1982), United States soldier convicted in the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal
  • Leonard Ennis, American POW serviceman
  • Franz von Epp (1882-1946), Bavarian politician
  • Hans Eppinger (1879–1946), Austrian physician who performed medical experiments on prisoners in the Dachau concentration camp

Adolf Eichmann in Germany in 1940 Otto Adolf Eichmann (known as Adolf Eichmann; March 19, 1906 – June 1, 1962) was a high-ranking Nazi and SS Obersturmbannführer (Lieutenant Colonel). ... August Eigruber (born 16 April 1907 in Steyr; died 28 May 1947 in Landsberg am Lech) was the Nazi Gauleiter of Oberdonau (Upper Danube) and Landeshauptmann of Upper Austria. ... Lynndie Rana England (born November 8, 1982) is a United States Army reservist who served in the 372nd Military Police Company. ... This article or section seems to contain too many quotations for an encyclopedia entry. ... Hans Eppinger Jr. ... The main entrance just after the liberation Two ovens inside the Dachau crematorium Dachau was a Nazi German concentration camp located on the grounds of an abandoned munitions factory near the medieval town of Dachau, about 10 miles northwest of Munich in southern Germany. ...

F

Miroslav Filipović (1915 - 1946) was a former Franciscan friar from Bosnia and Herzegovina who commanded the Jasenovac concentration camp in Yugoslavia during World War II. As a Croatian extreme nationalist and a fascist, Miroslav Filipović/Majstorović (as he would become known) combined his religion with his extremist political ideology. ... Jasenovac concentration camp (in Croatian: Logor Jasenovac in Serbian: Логор Јасеновац) was the largest concentration and extermination camp in Croatia during World War II. It was established by the Ustaša (Ustasha) regime of the Independent State of Croatia in August 1941. ...

G

  • Jean-Baptiste Gatete (b. 1953), Rwandan politician responsible for the Rwandan Genocide
  • Karl Gephardt (d. 1948), German SS chief clinician
  • Karl Genzken (1895-1957), German SS medical officer
  • Richard Glucks (1889-1945), German WVHA official
  • Josef Goebbels [Gobbels] (1897-1945), German Minister of Propaganda
  • Hermann Goring (1893-1946), Commander of the German Luftwaffe
  • Peter Grabowsky, Bulgarian Minister of the Interior
  • Charles Graner (b. 1968), United States soldier convicted in the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal
  • Ernst Grawitz (d. 1945), German SS Reich physician
  • Ulrich Greifelt (d. 1949), German Main Office official
  • Artur Greiser (d. 1946), German Gauleiter of Wartheland
  • Irma Grese (1923-1945), German administrator of the Auschwitz consentration camp
  • Rolf Gunther, German RSHA official

Wanted poster for Gatete and others Jean-Baptiste Gatete (born 1953) is a Rwandan politician, accused of complicity in the 1994 Rwandan Genocide. ... The Rwandan Genocide was the 1994 mass extermination of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutu sympathizers in Rwanda and was the largest atrocity during the Rwandan Civil War. ... Karl Genzken (born on June 8, 1895 in Preetz, Holstein), a physician, he conducted human experiments on prisoners of several concentration camps. ... Richard Glücks (April 22, 1889 – May 10, 1945) was a high-ranking Nazi official. ... Joseph Goebbels Dr. Paul Joseph Goebbels (October 29, 1897 – May 1, 1945) was Adolf Hitlers Propaganda Minister (see Propagandaministerium) in Nazi Germany. ... Hermann Göring Hermann Wilhelm Göring (also spelled Hermann Goering in English) (January 12, 1893–October 15, 1946) was a prominent and early member of the Nazi party, founder of the Gestapo, and one of the main architects of Nazi Germany. ... Graner poses with Pvt. ... This article or section seems to contain too many quotations for an encyclopedia entry. ... Prof. ... Irma Grese (October 7, 1923 Wrechen near Pasewalk (Mecklenburg) – December 13, 1945 Hameln) was a supervisor at the Nazi concentration camps at Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen. ... Auschwitz, in English, commonly refers to the Auschwitz concentration camp complex built near the town of Oświęcim, by Nazi Germany during World War II. Rarely, it may refer to the Polish town of Oświęcim (called by the Germans Auschwitz) itself. ...

H

  • Emil Hacha (1872-1945), German jurist and president of Czechoslovakia
  • Walter Haensch, German Einsatzegruppe C official
  • Franz Halder (1884-1972), German general and chief of Army General Staff
  • Siefred Handloser, German Armed Forces Medical Service chief
  • Fritz Hartjenstein (1905-1954), German Auschwitz concentration camp administrator
  • Emil Haussmann (d. 1948), German major
  • August Heissmeyer (1897-1979), German SS officer
  • Konrad Henlein (1898–1945), German Gauleiter of Sudetenland
  • Rudolf Hess (1884–1987), German deputy Führer (leader) of Nazi Germany
  • Reinhardt Tristan Eugene Heydrich (1904-1942), German RSHA official and Reichprotektor
  • Friedrich Hildebrandt (1898-1948), German RuSHA chief and Higher SS and Police Leader of Danzig
  • Richard Hildebrandt (1895-1945), German NSDAP Gauleiter of Franconia and SA Gruppenführer
  • Heinrich Himmler (1900–1945), commander of the German SS and Gestapo
  • Oskar von Hindenburg (1883-1960), German commander of prisoner of war camps in East Prussia
  • Hirota Koki (1878-1948), Japanese premier from 1936-1937
  • August Hirt (d. 1945), German medical officer who ran the Struthof-Nazweiler laboratory
  • Franz Hofer (1902-1975), German Gauleiter of the Tyrol and Vorarlberg
  • Heinrich Hoffman, photographer of Adolf Hitler
  • Hans Hofle, German SS and Police Leader in Lublin
  • Hermann Hofle (1911-1962), German Higher SS and Police Leader in Slovakia
  • Otto Hofmann (1896-1982) , German RuSHA official
  • Hans Hohberg (1898-1948), German WVHA official
  • Karl Holz (1895-1945), German NSDAP Gauleiter of Franconia and SA Gruppenführer
  • Homma Masaharu (1887-1946), Japanese general involved in the Bataan Death March
  • Erich Hoppner (d. 1944), German commander of 4th Panzer Army and Army Group North
  • Rudolf Francis Ferdinand Hoss (1900-1947), German Auschwitz concentration camp commander and deputy inspector of Nazi concentration camps
  • Franz Hossler (d. 1945), German Auschwitz concentration camp administrator
  • Hermann Hoth (1885-1971), German commander of Panzer Group 3, Army Group Center, 17th Group Army and Army Group South
  • Eduard Houdremont, German Krupp Essen official
  • Waldemar Hoven (1903-1948), German Buchenwald concentration camp doctor
  • Otto Hunsche, German RSHA official

Emil Hácha (July 12, 1872-June 26, 1945) was a Czech lawyer, the third Czechoslovakian President, taking office in 1938, and the last president of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. ... Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, Adolf Hitler, a General Staff officer and General Alfred Jacob NOT Franz Halder Franz Ritter von Halder (June 30, 1884- April 2, 1972) was a German General and the head of the Army General Staff from 1938 until September 1942, when he was dismissed after frequent... Friedrich Fritz Hartjenstein (July 3, 1905 - October 20, 1954) was an SS-Obersturmbannführer (Lieutenant Colonel). ... Auschwitz (Konzentrationslager Auschwitz) was the largest of the Nazi German concentration camps. ... Emil Haussmann served as an SS Sturmbannführer; an officer in Einsatzkommando 12 of Einsatzgruppe D. One of 24 officers indicted during the Einsatzgruppen Trial, Haussmann committed suicide before the arraignment on July 31, 1947 - the only defendant who thus escaped being sentenced. ... Serving as SS Hauptamt chief, August Heissmeyer received command of the National Political Educational Establishment in 1936 In April 1939, Richard Schulze served as an adjutant to Heissmeyer until his transfer on June 8th. ... Konrad Henlein as SS-Gruppenführer Konrad Henlein (May 6, 1898 - May 10, 1945) was the most important pro-Nazi politician in Czechoslovakia and leader of Sudeten German separatists. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Friedrich Hildebrandt (born 1898; died 5 November 1948 in Landsberg am Lech) was an SS Obergruppenführer, a Gauleiter and a war criminal in the time of the Third Reich. ... For alternative meanings of Gdańsk and Danzig, see Gdansk (disambiguation) and Danzig (disambiguation) The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. ...   (October 7, 1900 – May 23, 1945) was the commander of the German Schutzstaffel (SS) and one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany. ... Oskar von Hindenburg (January 31, 1883 - February 12, 1960) was the politically powerful son and aide-de-camp to Field Marshal and President of Germany Paul von Hindenburg. ... Koki Hirota (広田 弘毅 Hirota Kōki, February 14, 1878–December 23, 1948) was a Japanese politician and the 32nd Prime Minister of Japan from March 9, 1936 to February 2, 1937. ... August Hirt in an undated photograph SS-Hauptsturmführer August Hirt served as a chairman at the Reich University in Strasbourg. ... Franz Hofer (born 27 November 1902 in Bad Hofgastein, died 18 February 1975 in Mülheim an der Ruhr) was, in the time of the Third Reich, the Nazi Gauleiter of the Tyrol and Vorarlberg. ... Hitler redirects here. ... Hermann Julius Höfle (June 19, 1911 – August 20, 1962) was an SS-Sturmbannführer (major). ... SS-Gruppenführer Otto Hofmann of Nazi Germanys Race and Settlement Main Office, was present at the Wannsee Conference planning the Holocaust against the Jews. ... Karl Holz (born 27 December 1895 in Nuremberg; died 20 April 1945 in Nuremberg) was the NSDAP Gauleiter of Franconia and an SA Gruppenführer. ... Masaharu Homma Masaharu Homma (本間雅晴 Honma Masaharu, November 27, 1887 in Sado, Niigata Prefecture, Japan - April 3, 1946 in Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines), also known as the Poet General, was the Japanese General in charge of the troops and actions that created the Bataan Death March in Philippines during 1942... The Bataan Death March (aka The Death March of Bataan) was a war crime involving the forcible transfer of prisoners of war, with wide-ranging abuse and high fatalities, by Japanese forces in the Philippines, in 1942, after the three-month Battle of Bataan, which was part of the Battle... Auschwitz (Konzentrationslager Auschwitz) was the largest of the Nazi German concentration camps. ... Auschwitz (Konzentrationslager Auschwitz) was the largest of the Nazi German concentration camps. ... General Hermann Hoth Hermann Papa Hoth (12 April 1885 - 26 January 1971) was a general of the Third Reich during World War II, notable for victories in France and on the Eastern Front, and later, after serving six years in prison for war crimes, as a writer on military history. ... Waldemar Hoven Waldemar Hoven (February 10, 1903 – June 2, 1948) was chief Doctor for the Buchenwald Concentration Camp, where he was responsible for euthanizing prisoners with injections of either phenol or gasoline. ... Gate with the words Jedem das Seine (To each his own) Buchenwald concentration camp was a Nazi concentration camp established on the Ettersberg (the Etter Mountain) located near Weimar, Thuringia, Germany, in July 1937. ...

I

  • Max Otto Ihn, German Krupp personnel officer
  • Max Ilgner (1895-1957), German I.G. Farben official
  • Bela Imredy (1891-1946), Hungarian Prime Minister
  • Modest Isopescu, Romanian Transnsitrian(?) official
  • Seishiro Itagaki (1885-1948), Japanese War Minister

B la Imr dy de Omeravica (1891 1946) was the Prime Minister of Hungary from May 14, 1938 until February 16, 1939. ... Itagaki Seishiro (板垣 征四郎 Itagaki Sēshirō; January 21, 1885 - December 23, 1948) was a Japanese military officer in the Guandong Army. ...

J

  • Andor Jarosz (d. 1946), Hungarian interior minister
  • Freidrich Jeckeln (d. 1946), German SS officer and Police Leader of Ostland
  • Goran Jelisić (b. 1968), Serbian army officer
  • Alfred Jodl (1890-1946), German commander of operations personnel
  • Miodrag Jokić (b. 1935), Serb commander in Siege of Dubrovnik
  • Heinz Jost (d. 1946), German Einsatzgruppe commander
  • Alphonse Juin (1888-1967), French General, commander of French Expeditionary Corps in the US Fifth Army.
  • Hans Jüttner (1894-1965) commander of German SS's Main Leadership Office and Obergruppenführer.
  • Kurt Janovsky (1791-1846) Commander of private militai.

Goran Jelisić (Serbian Cyrillic Горан Јелисић), indicted Serb war criminal from Bosnia and Herzegovina. ... Generaloberst Alfred Jodl Alfred Jodl (May 10, 1890 - October 16, 1946) was a Wehrmacht leader. ... Combatants Yugoslav Army (JNA), Montenegro Territorial Defence Forces Croatian Army (HV) Commanders Veljko Kadijević (Chief of Staff of Yugoslav Peoples Army) Anton Tus (Chief of Staff of Croatian Army 1991-1992) Janko Bobetko (from 1992) Strength Between 7,500 and 20,000 men [1] Up to 2,000 soldiers... Alphonse Juin (December 16, 1888-January 27, 1967) was a Marshal of France. ... Hans Jüttner (born 2 March 1894 in Schmiegel, died 24 May 1965 in Bad Tölz) was head of the SSs Main Leadership Office and also an SS Obergruppenführer. ...

K

  • Jean Kambanda (b. 1955), Rwandan prime minister and participant in the Rwandan Genocide
  • Clément Kayishema (b. 1954), Rwandan politician and participant in the Rwandan Genocide
  • Dietrich Klagges (b. 1891-d.1971), German politician and premier (Ministerpräsident) of Braunschweig
  • Ilse Koch (1906–1967), German female officer at Buchenwald and Sachsenhausen concentration camps
  • Johnny Paul Koromah (b. 1960), Sierra Leone Army officer and participant in the attempted 1996 coup against President Ahmad Tejan Kabbah government.
  • Momčilo Krajišnik, Bosnian Serb politician and participant of war crimes against civilian population of former Yugoslavia
  • Alfred Krupp {1907-1967} German Steel/Arms maker; Involved in slave labor
  • Franz Kutschera (1904-1944), German SS general and Gauleiter of Carinthia.

Jean Kambanda (born October 19, 1955) was the prime minister in the caretaker government of Rwanda from the start of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide. ... Clément Kayishema (born 1954) is a Rwandan doctor, politician and the former prefect of Kibuye. ... Dietrich Klagges (IPA /di:trɪç klagəs/) (born 1 February 1891 in Herringsen, nowadays part of Bad Sassendorf, (Kreis Soest); died 12 November 1971 in Bad Harzburg) was a Nazi politician and from 1933 to 1945 the appointed premier (Ministerpräsident) of the now abolished state of Braunschweig (English sometimes... Collection of prisoners tattoos Ph Jules Rouard -Buchenwald 1945 Ilse Koch, née Ilse Kohler Schnitzel (September 22, 1906 – September 1, 1967), was the wife of Karl Koch, the commandant of the concentration camp Buchenwald. ... Slave laborers in the Buchenwald concentration camp (Elie Wiesel is second row, seventh from left). ... Entry to the camp Sachsenhausen was a concentration camp in Germany, operating between 1936 and April 1945. ... This article needs cleanup. ... Ahmad Tejan Kabbah (born February 16, 1932) is the President of Sierra Leone (1996–1997, 1998–present). ... Momcilo Krajisnik (born 20 January 1945) is a Serbian politician. ... Yugoslavia (Jugoslavija in Latin, Југославија in Cyrillic, English: Land of the South Slavs) describes four political entities that existed one at a time on the Balkan Peninsula in Europe, during most of the 20th century. ... The Krupp family is a prominent 400-year-old German family from Essen, famous for their steel production and manufacture of ammunition and armaments. ... Franz Kutschera (born 22 February 1904 in Oberwaltersdorf in Lower Austria; died 1 February 1944 in Warsaw, Poland) was an SS general and Gauleiter of Carinthia. ...

L

  • Hartmann Lauterbacher (1909-1988) German Gauleiter of the Gau of South Hanover-Braunschweig, SS Gruppenführer Leader and high area leader (Obergebietsführer) of the Hitler Youth.
  • Hinrich Lohse (1896-1964), German politician
  • Werner Lorenz (1891-1974), German head of Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle (Repatriation Office for Ethnic Germans) and an SS Obergruppenführer.
  • Maks Luburić (1911-1969), Croatian Ustashi and commander of the Jasenovac concentration camp

Hartmann Lauterbacher (born 24 May 1909 in Reutte, Tyrol; died 12 April 1988 in Seebruck, Bavaria) was a high area leader (Obergebietsführer) of the Hitler Youth, as well as Nazi Gauleiter of the Gau of South Hanover-Braunschweig and an SS Gruppenführer. ... This article does not cite its references or sources. ... Werner Lorenz (born 2 October 1891 in Grünhof, Pomerania, now in Poland; died 13 March 1974 in Hamburg) was leader of the Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle (sometimes translated Repatriation Office for Ethnic Germans), an organization charged with settling ethnic Germans in the Reich from other parts of Europe. ... Vjekoslav Luburić, aka Maks Luburi&#263 (1914-1969), was a member of the Croatian World War II regime the Ustaše, best known as the commander of the Jasenovac concentration camp. ... Jasenovac concentration camp (in Croatian: Logor Jasenovac in Serbian: Логор Јасеновац) was the largest concentration and extermination camp in Croatia during World War II. It was established by the Ustaša (Ustasha) regime of the Independent State of Croatia in August 1941. ...

M

  • Harry 'Breaker' Harbord Morant (1864– 27 February 1902) convicted and executed for illegal summary executions of Boer and other Prisoners during the Second Boer War.
  • Milan Martić (b. 1954), President and defence minister of Croatian Serbs during Croatian War of Independance
  • Dragomir Milošević (b. 1942), commander of the Sarajevo-Romanija Corps of the Bosnian Serb Army who committed atrocities against the local population of Sarajevo during War in Bosnia
  • Slobodan Milošević (1941-2006), former President of Yugoslavia, was on trial for war crimes at the time of his death.
  • Milan Milutinović (b. 1942), Serbian president and supporter of Slobodan Milošević
  • Salomon Morel (b. 1919), Polish collaborator and commandant of the Soviet Zgoda labor camp
  • Mile Mrkšić (b. 1947), Croatian Serb army officer
  • Alfred Musema (b. 1949), Rwandan businessman who participated in the Rwandan Genocide

Harry Breaker Harbord Morant For the film of the same name, see Breaker Morant (film) Harry Breaker Harbord Morant (1864- 27 February 1902) was an Anglo-Australian drover, horseman, poet and soldier whose renowned skill with horses earned him the nickname The Breaker. ... Combatants United Kingdom Australia New Zealand Canada Cape Colony Orange Free State South African Republic Commanders Redvers Buller Frederick Roberts Herbert Kitchener Paul Kruger Martinus Steyn Louis Botha Christiaan de Wet Casualties 22,000 6,500 Civilians killed [mainly Boers]: 24,000+ The Second Boer War, commonly referred to as... Milan Martić (born 18 November 1954, near Knin, Yugoslavia) is an ethnic Serbian politician from Croatias Serbian minority. ... Combatants Croatian Army Paramilitary organisations Republic of Serb Krajina Army Yugoslav Peoples Army Paramilitary organisations Commanders Franjo TuÄ‘man (President of Croatia) Anton Tus (Chief of Staff of Croatian Army 1991-1992) Janko Bobetko (Chief of Staff of Croatian Army 1992-1995) Milan Martić (President of Republic of Serb... General Dragomir MiloÅ¡ević (February 4, 1942) was the commander of the Sarajevo-Romanija Corps of the Bosnian Serb Army which besieged Sarajevo for three years during the 1992-1995 war in Bosnia. ... Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Sarajevo) Coordinates: Country Bosnia and Herzegovina Entity Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina Canton Sarajevo Canton Government  - Mayor Semiha Borovac (SDA) Area [1]  - City 141. ... This is the history of Bosnia and Herzegovina. ... Slobodan MiloÅ¡ević (Požarevac, Nedićs Serbia, 20 August 1941 – The Hague, 11 March 2006) was President of Serbia and of Yugoslavia. ... Yugoslavia (Jugoslavija in Latin, Југославија in Cyrillic, English: Land of the South Slavs) describes four political entities that existed one at a time on the Balkan Peninsula in Europe, during most of the 20th century. ... Milan Milutinović (Милан Милутиновић), born 19 December 1942, is a former President of Serbia. ... Slobodan MiloÅ¡ević (Požarevac, Nedićs Serbia, 20 August 1941 – The Hague, 11 March 2006) was President of Serbia and of Yugoslavia. ... Salomon Morel, passport photo taken in 1993 Salomon (also Solomon or Shlomo) Morel (born November 15, 1919 in Garbów, Poland, died February 2007 in Tel Aviv, Israel) was a Polish Jew, who, between February and November 1945, was a member of Communist State Security, known in Polish as Urz... We dont have an article called Mile MrkÅ¡ić Start this article Search for Mile MrkÅ¡ić in. ... Alfred Musema (22 August 1949- ) is a Rwandan businessperson. ...

N

  • Erich Naumann (d. 1951), German Einsatzgruppe B commander
  • Samuel Ndashyikirwa, Rwandan businessman and a participant in the Rwandan genocide
  • Hermann Neubacher (d. 1960), German supported mayor of Vienna and Southeast Economic Plenipotentiary
  • Konstantin von Neurath (1873-1956), German Foreign Minister and Reichsprotektor
  • Mirko Norac (b. 1967), Croatian Army general and commander of forces involved during the Gospic massacre
  • Gustav Noske (1868-1946), German defence minister
  • Frank Novak, German RSHA official
  • Étienne Nzabonimana (b. 1950), Rwandan businessman and participant in the Rwandan genocide

Erich Naumann Erich Naumann (April 29, 1905 - June 7, 1951) was an SS-Brigadeführer, member of the SD and commanding officer of Einsatzgruppe B. Early life and Career Born April 29, 1905 in Meissen, Saxony, Erich Naumann left school at the age of sixteen and obtained employment in a... Samuel Ndashyikirwa, formerly a small businessman in Kirwa, Rwanda, was convicted in Belgium on June 29, 2005 for his role in the Rwandan genocide of 1994. ... Konstantin von Neurath Konstantin Freiherr von Neurath (February 2, 1873 – August 14, 1956) was a German diplomat, Foreign Minister of Germany (1932-1938) and Reichsprotektor (nazi representative in the Czech puppet state) of Bohemia and Moravia (1939-1943). ... Mirko Norac as duke of Sinjska alka Mirko Norac (born September 19, 1967 in Otok, municipality of Sinj, Croatia) is former general of Croatian Army and a convicted war criminal. ... Gospić on the map of Croatia The Gospić massacre was an incident that took place between 16 October-18 October 1991 in the town of Gospić, a city in the district of Lika in Croatia. ... Noske and Ebert Gustav Noske (July 9, 1868 - November 30, 1946) was a German administrator. ... Frank Novak as a mob boss in A Servant of Two Masters. ... Étienne Nzabonimana, formerly a small businessman in Kirwa, Rwanda, was convicted in Belgium on June 29, 2005 for his role in the Rwandan genocide of 1994. ...

O

  • Karl Albrecht Oberg, German SS officer and Police Leader in Galacia and France
  • Otto Ohlendorff (d. 1951), German Einsatzgruppe D commander
  • Shunei Okawa, Japanese railroad agent in Manchuria
  • Hiroshi Oshima (1886-1975), Japanese ambassador to Germany
  • Adolf Ott, German Einsatzegruppe B official

Baron Hiroshi Oshima (男爵 大島 ひろし Danshaku Ōshima Hiroshi) (1886 - 1975) was the Japanese ambassador to Nazi Germany during World War II — and unknowingly a major source of communications intelligence for the Allies. ...

P

  • [Friedrich Panzinger] (d. 1959), German RSHA official
  • Franz von Papen (1879-1969), German diplomat and deputy chancellor
  • Cemal Pasha Ottoman Minister of the Interior 'Referance Needed'
  • Enver Pasha Ottoman Minister of War 'Referance Needed
  • Talat Pasha Ottoman Minister of Interior Affairs 'Referance Needed'
  • Joachim Peiper (1915-1976) SS-Standartenführer, 1st SS Panzer Division, Leibstandarte-SS Adolf Hitler, held responsible for the Malmedy massacre during the Malmedy massacre trial
  • Henri Philippe Petain (1856-1951), Marshal of France and head of the collaborative Vichy France
  • Biljana Plavšić (b. 1930), is a Serbian politician and former president of the Republika Srpska
  • Paul Pleiger (1899-1985), German state adviser and corporate general director
  • Pol Pot (1925-1998) Prime minister of Cambodia and of the Khmer Rouge from 1975-1979.
  • Oswald Pohl (d. 1951), German WVHA official
  • Adolf Pokorny, German sterilization plan author
  • Hermann Pook, German WVHA official
  • Hans-Adolf Prützmann (1901-1945) German (Superior) SS officer, SS Obergruppenführer and Police Leader
  • Emil Puhl, German Reichsbank official

Franz Joseph Hermann Michael Maria von Papen (29 October 1879 – 2 May 1969) was a German nobleman Catholic politician, General Staff officer, and diplomat, who served as Chancellor of Germany in 1932. ... Ahmed Djemal Pasha (Turkish: Ahmet Cemal Paşa) was born on May 6, 1872, in Midilli. ... Ismail Enver Ismail Enver, known to Europeans during his political career as Enver Pasha ( Istanbul, November 22, 1881 - August 4, 1922) was a military officer and a leader of the Young Turk revolution in the closing days of the Ottoman Empire. ... Mehmed Talat Pasha was one of leaders of the Young Turks , Ottoman statesman, grand vizier (1917) , and leading member of the Ottoman government from 1913 to 1918. ... Joachim Peiper as an SS major. ... United States soldiers discover the aftermath of the Malmedy Massacre. ... The Malmedy massacre The factual accuracy of this article is disputed. ... World War II and Vichy France After the fall of France during World War II, in the spring of 1940, the Chamber of Deputies appointed Pétain as Prime Minister of France and granted him extraordinary powers. ... Motto: Travail, famille, patrie (Work, family, country) unoccupied zone of Vichy France (until November 1942) Capital Vichy Language(s) French Religion Roman Catholicism Government Republic President of the Council  - 1940 - 1944 Philippe Pétain Legislature National Assembly Historical era World War II  - Battle of France June 16, 1940  - Battle of... Biljana PlavÅ¡ić (Биљана Плавшић) (born July 7, 1930 in Tuzla, Yugoslavia), was a Serb politician based in Bosnia and Herzegovina. ... Anthem: Bože Pravde2 (English: God of Justice) Patron Saint: Saint Stephen3 The location of Republika Srpska as part of Bosnia and Herzegovina. ... Paul Pleiger (born 28 September 1899 in Gräfenhainichen; died 22 July 1985 in Hattingen) was a German state adviser and corporate general director. ... Saloth Sar (May 19, 1925–April 16, 1998), better known as Pol Pot (short for Politique Potentielle, French for potential politic), was the ruler of the Khmer Rouge and the Prime Minister of Cambodia (officially Democratic Kampuchea during his rule) from 1976 to 1979, having been de facto leader since... The Khmer Rouge saw (Khmer: ) was the Communist party that ruled Cambodia -- which it renamed to Democratic Kampuchea -- from 1975 to 1979. ... Adolf Pokorny was born on July 26, 1895 in Vienna. ... Hans-Adolf Prützmann (born 31 August 1901 in Tolkemit; died 21 May 1945 in Lüneburg) was a Superior SS and Police Leader, as well as an SS Obergruppenführer. ... Dr. Emil Puhl (August 31, 1889 - 1962) was a Nazi economist and banking official during World War II. He was director and vice-president of Germanys Reichsbank during World War II and also served as a director of the Bank of International Settlements. ...

R

  • Karl Rademacher , German Foreign Office official
  • Waldemar von Radetzky , German Einsatzgruppe B official
  • Erich Raeder (1876-1960), German grand admiral
  • Friedrich Rainer (1903-1947?), German Gauleiter and an Austrian Landeshauptmann of Salzburg and Carinthia
  • Otto Rasch , German Einsatzgruppe commander
  • Karl Rasche, German Dresdner Bank official
  • Sigmund Racher, German medical officer involved in medical experiments in the Dachau concentration camp
  • Hans Albin Rauter (d. 1949), German Higher SS and Police Leader in Holland
  • Željko Ražnatović "Arkan" (1952-2000), Serbian leader of paramility units during the Yugoslav Wars
  • Hermann Reinecke (1888-1973), German OKW official
  • Hans Reinhardt, German commander of Panzer Group 3, Army Group Center and 3rd Panzer Army
  • Hans Reiter (1881-1969), German SS officer and involved in medical experiments at the Buchenwald concentration camp
  • Lothar Rendulic (1887-1971), German commander of 52nd Infantry Division
  • Joachim von Ribbentrop (1893-1946), German foreign minister
  • Karl Ritter, German foreign office official
  • Mario Roatta, Italian chief of staff and head of the secret police
  • Henrick Rogstad (d. 1945), Norwegian collaborator and SS security police chief
  • Karl von Roques (d. 1949), German Rear Area Army Group South commander
  • Gerhard Rose, German official to the [[Robert Koch/Division of Tropical Medicine
  • Wilhelm Rosenbaum, German SS officer
  • Alfred Rosenberg (1893-1946), German east minister
  • Oswald Rothaug, German judiciary official
  • Curt Rothenburger, German justice ministry official
  • Heinz Rothke, German SS deportation expert in France
  • Felix Ruehl, German Einsatzgruppe D official
  • Obed Ruzindana, Rwandan businessman involved in the Rwandan Genocide
  • Risto Ryti (1889-1956), Finnish premier (1939-1940) and president (1940-1944), convicted for crimes against peace, 10 year hard labor, pardoned 1949

Erich Raeder. ... Friedrich Rainer (born 28 July 1903 in Sankt Veit an der Glan; died 19 July 1947 (date unconfirmed) in Ljubljana, Yugoslavia – now in Slovenia) was a Nazi Gauleiter and an Austrian Landeshauptmann of Salzburg and Carinthia. ... SS Gruppenführer Dr Otto Rasch (7 December 1891 - 1 November 1948) was a high-ranking Nazi official in the occupied Eastern territories, commanding Einsatzgruppe C (northern and central Ukraine) until October 1941. ... The main entrance just after the liberation Two ovens inside the Dachau crematorium Dachau was a Nazi German concentration camp located on the grounds of an abandoned munitions factory near the medieval town of Dachau, about 10 miles northwest of Munich in southern Germany. ... Željko Ražnatović (Serbian: Жељко Ражнатовић), widely known as Arkan (Serbian: Аркан), (April 17, 1952 - January 15, 2000), was a Serbian paramilitary leader accused on numerous accounts of war crimes committed during Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s. ... This does not adequately cite its references or sources. ... Hermann Reinecke (March 14, 1888 - October 10, 1973) was a general of Nazi Germanys Wehrmacht during World War II. He was a former Lieutenant General and the head of the General Office of the Armed Forces at OKW (Allgemeines Wehrmachts-Amt, AWA). ... // Early Life Hans Conrad Julius Reiter was born on February 26, 1881 in Reudnitz near Hessen in Germany. ... Slave laborers in the Buchenwald concentration camp (Elie Wiesel is second row, seventh from left). ... Lothar Rendulic (November 23, 1887 – January 18, 1971) was a Colonel General in the Wehrmacht during WWII. Rendulic was born on in Wiener Neustadt, Austria to a Croatian family (Croatian spelling of the surname is Rendulić). He entered the Austro-Hungarian Army in 1910 and served during World War I... Joachim von Ribbentrop with his son. ... Carl Ritter (August 7, 1779, Quedlinburg – September 28, 1859, Berlin) was, along with his fellow German Alexander von Humboldt, one of the founders of modern geography (and of the Berlin Geographical Society). ... Gerhard Rose was an expert on tropical medicine who was tried for war crimes at the end of World War II. Roses studed at the University of Breslau and the University of Berlin. ... Alfred Rosenberg Alfred Rosenberg (January 12, 1893, Reval (Tallinn) Estonia, then part of the Russian Empire–October 16, 1946) was an early and intellectually influential member of the Nazi party, who later held several important posts in the Nazi government. ... Obed Ruzindana (1962- ) is a Rwandan businessperson who owned a small transport company. ... The Rwandan Genocide was the 1994 mass extermination of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutu sympathizers in Rwanda and was the largest atrocity during the Rwandan Civil War. ... Risto Heikki Ryti (February 3, 1889 - October 25, 1956) was the president of Finland from 1940 to 1944. ...

S

  • Dinko Šakić, Croat government official of Independent State of Croatia (NDH) and former administrator of the Jasenovac concentration camp.
  • Hans von Salmuth, German commander of the 30th Corps, 11th Army and Second Army, and Army Group Center
  • Martin Sandburger, German Einsatzgruppe A official
  • Fritz Sauckel (Fritz Saukel) (d. 1946), German Labor Plenipotentiary official
  • Anthony Sawoniuk (1921-2005), Polish collaborator
  • Hjalmar Schacht (1877-1970), German Reichbank official
  • Emanuel Schafer, German BdS official in Serbia
  • Gustav Adolf Scheel (1907-1979), German physician and Nazi deportation officer
  • Rudolf Scheide, German WVHA official
  • Walter Schellenberg (d. 1952), German RSHA official
  • Conrad Heinrich Schellong, Sachsenburg and Dachau concentration camp official
  • Baldur von Schirach (1907-1974), German Vienna Reichsstatthalter
  • Franz Schlegelberger (1876-1970), German State Secretary in the Reich Ministry of Justice (RMJ) and later Justice Minister
  • Paul Schmidt, German Foreign Office press official
  • Hermann Schmitz, German I.G. Farben official
  • Heinrich Schwarz (1906-1947), German administrator of the Auschwitz III Monowitz concentration camp
  • Georg von Schnitzler, German director of I.G. Farben
  • Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, German leader of German Women
  • Karl Schongarth, German BdS Holland and BdS Generalgouverment official
  • Oskar Schroder, German Air Force Medical Service official
  • Heinz Hermann Schubert, German Einsatzgruppe C official
  • Erwin Schulz, German Einsatzgruppe C official
  • Willi Seibert, German Einsatzgruppe D official
  • Siegfried Seidl (1911-1947), German administrator of the Theresienstadt concentration camp
  • Vojislav Šešelj (b. 1954), leader of the Serbian Radical Party and founder of several paramilitary units during the Yugoslav Wars
  • Artur Seyss-Inquart (1892-1946), Austrian government official, collaborator and High Commissioner of the Neatherlands
  • Ariel Sharon (b. 1927), former Israeli Prime Minister, Defense Minister during the Sabra and Shatila massacre during the 1982 Lebanon War
  • Mamoru Shigemitsu (1887-1957), Japanese foreign minister
  • Wolfram Sievers (d. 1948), German Ahnenerbe official
  • Gustav Simon, German chief of civil administration in Nazi occupied Luxembourg
  • Franz Six, German Vorkommando Maskau official
  • Vladimir Sokolov, Russian journalist and German collaborator who published a pro-Nazi newspaper in the Nazi occupied Soviet Union
  • Max Sollmann, German Lebensborn official
  • Karl Sommer, German WVHA official
  • Albert Speer (1905-1981), German armorment and munitions minister
  • Wilhelm Speidel, German commander in Nazi occupied Greece
  • Jakob Sporrenberg, German SS and Police Leader in Lublin
  • Franz Walter Stahlecker (d. 1942), German Foreign Office official
  • Franz Stangl (1908–1971) German SS officer and administrator of the Sobibór and of the Treblinka concentration camps.
  • Adolf Steengracht von Moyland, German foreign office official
  • Eugen Steimele, German Einsatzgruppe B official
  • Otto Steinbrinck (1888-1949), German industrialist and member of the SS
  • Eduard Strauch, German Einsatzgruppe A official
  • Julius Streicher (1885-1946), German journalist and editor of the Der Sturmer
  • Arnold Strippel, Majdanek prison guard
  • Jurgen Stroop (d. 1951), German SS and Police leader in Warsaw
  • Pavle Strugar(b. 1933), Serb general in the Siege of Dubrovnik
  • Wilhelm Stuckart (d. 1953), German Interior Ministry official
  • Otto von Stulpnagel (d. 1948), German military commander of Nazi-occupied France
  • Karol Swerczewski (General Walter), Generalmajor 2. Polish Army 1944/45, Katyn 1940
  • Ferenc Szalasi (1897-1946), Hungarian head of state
  • Dome Sztojay (d. 1946), Hungarian prime minister

Dinko Å akić was a Croatian who was one of the leaders of the Army of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) during World War II. He commanded the Jasenovac concentration camp at one time. ... It has been suggested that Hanging in NDH be merged into this article or section. ... Jasenovac concentration camp (in Croatian: Logor Jasenovac in Serbian: Логор Јасеновац) was the largest concentration and extermination camp in Croatia during World War II. It was established by the UstaÅ¡a (Ustasha) regime of the Independent State of Croatia in August 1941. ... Hans Eberhard Kurt von Salmuth (November 11, 1888–January 1, 1962) was a German general during World War II. A lifelong professional soldier, he served his country as a junior officer in WWI, a staff officer in the inter-war period and early WWII, and an army level commander in... Fritz Sauckel Fritz Sauckel (Ernst Friedrich Christoph Sauckel) (October 27, 1894 – October 16, 1946) was a Nazi war criminal, who organized the systematic enslavement of millions of men and boys from lands occupied by Nazi Germany. ... Anthony Sawoniuk (real name in Belarusian: Андрэй Саванюк Andrej Savaniuk; real name in Polish: Antoni Sawoniuk) was born on March 7, 1921, in Domaczewo, Poland. ... Dr. Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht Dr. Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht (22 January 1877 – 3 June 1970) was a German financial expert and Minister of Economics from 1935 until 1937. ... Gustav Adolf Scheel (born 22 November 1907 in Rosenberg, Baden; died 25 March 1979 in Hamburg) was a German physician and multifunctionary in the time of the Third Reich (SA and SS member, Leader of the National Socialist Students Federation, Organizer of the SD in the southwest, Superior SS and... Correctly: Walther Schellenberg, full name Walther Friedrich Schellenberg (January 16, 1910 - March 31, 1952) was a German Nazi and second-in-command of the Gestapo. ... The main entrance just after the liberation Two ovens inside the Dachau crematorium Dachau was a Nazi German concentration camp located on the grounds of an abandoned munitions factory near the medieval town of Dachau, about 10 miles northwest of Munich in southern Germany. ... Baldur von Schirach Baldur Benedikt von Schirach (May 9, 1907 – August 8, 1974) was a Nazi youth leader later convicted of being a war criminal. ... Louis Rudolph Franz Schlegelberger (born 23 October 1876 in Königsberg, East Prussia, now Kaliningrad, Russia; died 14 December 1970 in Flensburg) was State Secretary in the German Reich Ministry of Justice (RMJ) and served awhile as Justice Minister during the Third Reich. ... Paul Schmidt was a translator in the German foreign ministry from 1923-1945. ... Heinrich Schwarz (born 14 June 1906 in Munich; died 20 March 1947 in Sandweiher, executed) was camp commandant of the Auschwitz III Monowitz concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Poland. ... Gertrud Scholtz-Klink Gertrud Scholtz-Klink nee Treusch (February 9, 1902 - March 24, 1999) Fervent Nazi Party member and Reichs Womens Leader. ... Dr. Karl Eberhard Schöngarth (April 22, 1903 – May 16, 1946) was a Nazi associated with the Holocaust during World War II. Schöngarth was born in Leipzig, Germany. ... Siegfried Seidl (born 24 August 1911 in Tulln; died 4 February 1947 in Vienna, executed) was Commandant of the Theresienstadt concentration camp. ... Location of the concentration camp in the Czech Republic Gate Work Brings Freedom in the Small Fortress Concentration camp Theresienstadt (often referred to as Terezín) was a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. It was established by the Gestapo in the fortress and garrison city Terezín (German... A poster for the 2004 presidential elections, for which Å eÅ¡elj himself was not running, due to the fact that he was awaiting trial in The Hague. ... The Serbian Radical Party (Serbian: Српска радикална странка or Srpska radikalna stranka) is a nationalist, far-right, political party in Serbia. ... This does not adequately cite its references or sources. ... Arthur Seyß-Inquart (born Arthur Zajtich) (July 22, 1892 - October 16, 1946) was a prominent Nazi official in Austria and for wartime Germany in Poland and the Netherlands. ... The Netherlands (Dutch Nederland) is the European part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (Dutch Koninkrijk der Nederlanden), a parliamentary democracy under a constitutional monarch. ...   (Hebrew: , also known by his diminutive Arik אָרִיק) (born February 27, 1928) is a former Israeli politician and general. ... Combatants Lebanese Phalangist No combatants Commanders Elie Hobeika No commander Strength 150 irregulars Unarmed civilian population Casualties 2 700 - 3,500 civilians The Sabra and Shatila massacre (or Sabra and Chatila massacre; Arabic: صبرا وشاتيلا) was carried out in September 1982 by Lebanese Maronite Christian militias against refugee camps. ... Mamoru Shigemitsu (重光 葵, 1887 - June 27, 1957) was the Japanese Minister of Foreign affairs at the end of World War II. He, along with Yoshijiro Umezu, was the one who signed the instrument of surrender on September 2, 1945. ... REDIRLink titleBold textItalic textECT Insert textMedia:Example. ... Gustav Simon (born 2 August 1900 in Malstatt-Burbach, nowadays part of Saarbrücken; died 21 December 1945 in Luxembourg, or possibly Paderborn) was, as the Nazi Gauleiter in the Moselland Gau from 1940 until 1944 the Chief of the Civil Administration in Luxembourg, which was occupied at that time... SS-Brigadeführer Franz Six Dr. Franz Alfred Six (August 12, 1909 in Mannheim - July 9, 1975 in Bozen-Bolzano) first rose to prominence as dean of the faculty of Economics of the University of Berlin. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Franz Walter Stahlecker (10 October 1900–23 March 1942) was commander of Einsatzgruppe A and Höhere SS- und Polizeiführer (HSSPF: Higher SS and Police Leader) of Reichskommissariat Ostland. ... Franz Stangl (March 26, 1908 – June 28, 1971) was an SS officer, commandant of the Sobibór and of the Treblinka Nazi extermination camps. ... Sobibór was a Nazi extermination camp that was part of Operation Reinhard. ... Treblinka is a small village in the Mazowieckie voivodship (province) of Poland. ... Otto Steinbrinck (born 19 December 1888 in Lippstadt, died 16 August 1949 in Landsberg am Lech) was a German industrialist and an accused in the Nuremberg Flick Trial. ... Julius Streicher at the Nuremberg Trials. ... 1934 Stürmer issue: Storm above Juda 1943 Stürmer issue: Satan Der Stürmer was a weekly Nazi newspaper published by Julius Streicher from 1923 to the end of World War II in 1945. ... Jürgen Stroop in custody for war crimes Jürgen Stroop, September 26, 1895 - March 6, 1952, was an SS-Gruppenführer und Generalleutnant der Waffen-SS und Polizei, who served as the SS and Police Leader of the Poland-Warsaw area during the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943. ... Combatants Yugoslav Army (JNA), Montenegro Territorial Defence Forces Croatian Army (HV) Commanders Veljko Kadijević (Chief of Staff of Yugoslav Peoples Army) Anton Tus (Chief of Staff of Croatian Army 1991-1992) Janko Bobetko (from 1992) Strength Between 7,500 and 20,000 men [1] Up to 2,000 soldiers... Dr. Wilhelm Stuckart (November 16, 1902 – November 15, 1953) was a Nazi Party lawyer and official, and a state secretary in the German Interior Ministry. ... Otto von Stülpnagel was the German military commander of France during the Second World War. ... Ferenc Szálasi Ferenc Szálasi (January 6, 1897-March 12, 1946) was a Fascist and the Prime Minister of Hungary during the final days of Hungary’s participation in World War II. Born the son of a soldier in Kassa, Szálasi followed in his father’s... Döme Sztójay (January 5, 1883–August 22, 1946) was a fascist politician in Hungary during World War II. In March 1944, when German troops occupied Hungary, they forced regent Miklós Horthy to appoint Sztójay (then ambassador to Berlin) as Prime Minister and Foreign Minister. ...

T

  • Takejiro Onishi, (d. c. 1945), Japanese vice admiral who created the Kamikaze suicide attacks
  • Väinö Tanner (Alfred Tanner) (1881-1966), Finland finance minister
  • Fritz Ter Meer, German I.G. Farben official
  • Josef Terboven (1898-1945), German Nazi commissioner of Norway
  • Eberhard von Thadden (1906-1947), German foreign office official
  • Otto Thierack (1889-1946), German justice minister
  • Max Thomas, German BdS official in Ukraine
  • Fritz Thyssen (1873–1951), German inductrialist
  • Tihomir Blaškić (b. 1960), Bosnian Croat army officer
  • Jozef Tiso (1887-1947), Slovakian president
  • Hideki Tojo, (1884-1948), Japanese prime minister
  • Tokuda Hisakichi, Japanese Shingawa Prison medical officer
  • Erwin Tschentscher, German WVHA official
  • Vojtech Tuka (1880-1946), Slovakian prime minister
  • Harald Turner, Serbian military governor official

It has been suggested that Personnel involved in the development of World War II suicide attacks be merged into this article or section. ... Väinö Tanner (March 12, 1881 – April 19, 1966) was a pioneer and leader in the Co-op Movement in Finland. ... Josef Terboven Josef Antonius Heinrich Terboven (May 23, 1898 - May 8, 1945) was a Nazi leader most known for his brutal leadership during the Nazi occupation of Norway. ... Otto Georg Thierack (born 19 April 1889 in Wurzen, Saxony; died 22 November 1946 in Sennelager in Paderborn, suicide) was a National Socialist jurist and politician. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Tihomir Blaškić (born November 2, 1960) was a Bosnian Croat army officer who had been sentenced for war crimes at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. ... Josef Tiso in photo Monsignor Jozef Tiso (October 13, 1887–April 18, 1947) was a Roman Catholic priest who became a deputy of the Czechoslovak parliament, a member of the Czechoslovak government, and finally the President of Independent Slovak Republic from 1939-1945, allied with Nazi Germany. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article may require cleanup. ... Vojtech Tuka (July 4, 1880, Štiavnické Bane (at that time Piarg) - August 20, 1946, executed in Bratislava) was the Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Slovak Republic between 1940 and 1945 and one of the most controversial people in Slovak history. ...

U

  • Siegfried Uiberreither (1908-1984?/1986?), German Gauleiter in Styria, Austria
  • Aquilin Ulrich, German doctor involved in Nazi euthanasia of handicaped in 1940-1941

Siegfried Uiberreither (born 29 March 1908 in Salzburg; died 29 December 1984? or possibly 7 January 1986?) was a war criminal and a Nazi Gauleiter in Styria, Austria in the time of the Third Reich. ... A Gauleiter was the party leader of a regional branch of the NSDAP (more commonly known as the Nazi Party) or the head of a Gau or of a Reichsgau. ...

V

  • Xaiver Vallat, French collaborator and anti-Jewish commissioner
  • Leo Volk, German WVHA official

W

  • Wada Shusuke, Japanese translator convicted of mistreating prisoners of war, of which 450 out of 1,690 survived, while onboard a Japanese troop ship
  • Gerhard Wagner (1888-1939), German Reich Doctors' Leader (Reichsärzteführer)
  • Horst Wagner, German Foreign Office official
  • Robert Wagner (1895-1946), German Chief of Civil Administration in Alsace and Reichsstatthalter of Baden
  • Edward Waiter (d. 1945), German administrator of the Dachau concentration camp
  • Kurt Waldheim (b. 1918), Austrian army lieutenant and former United Nations Secretary General
  • Fritz Walther (d. 1946), German railroad official
  • Frank Walus, American soldier
  • Walter Warlimont (1894-1976), German OKW official
  • Maximilian von Weichs (1881-1954), German general
  • Henry Wirz (1822-1865), Confederate administrator of the Andersonville Camp
  • Fritz Weiedemann, German Council-General and Nazi spy
  • Ernst von Weizsacker, German Foreign Office official
  • Gustav Wilhaus, German officer in the Janovsky consentration camp
  • Max Winkler (1875-1961), German Main Trusteeship Office East official
  • Dieter Wiesliceny (d. 1948), German SS deportation expert in Greece, Slovakia and Hungary
  • Otto Wohler, German 11th Army officer
  • Karl Wolff (1900-1984), Heinrich Himmler Chief of Staff
  • Ernst Wormann, German Foreign Office official
  • Karl Wuster, German I.G. Farben official

Gerhard Wagner (born 18 August 1888 in Neu-Heiduk, Upper Silesia, now in Poland; died 25 March 1939 in Munich) was the first Reich Doctors Leader (Reichsärzteführer) in the time of Nazi Germany. ... Robert Heinrich Wagner (born 13 October 1895 in Lindach, died 14 August 1946) was Gauleiter and Head of the Civil Government of Alsace during the German occupation in World War II. He was later tried, convicted and sentenced to death by the Permanent Military Tribunal in Strasbourg in 1946. ... The main entrance just after the liberation Two ovens inside the Dachau crematorium Dachau was a Nazi German concentration camp located on the grounds of an abandoned munitions factory near the medieval town of Dachau, about 10 miles northwest of Munich in southern Germany. ... Kurt Josef Waldheim (born December 21, 1918) is an Austrian diplomat and conservative politician. ... Walter Warlimont (* October 3, 1894 Osnabrück, Germany - † October 9, 1976 Kreuth near the Tegernsee) was a German officer known for his role in the OKW inner circle (deputy chief). ... Maximilian von Weichs Maximilian Maria Joseph Karl Gabriel Lamoral Reichsfreiherr von Weichs zu Glon (12 November 1881 - 27 September 1954) was a German Generalfeldmarschall and a military leader in World War II. He was born into a noble family at Dessau, a son of an Army colonel. ... The execution of Henry Wirz before the US Capitol as the trap door is sprung Captain Henry Wirz (November 1822 – November 10, 1865) was the only Confederate soldier executed in the aftermath of the American Civil War for war crimes. ... Ernst von Weizsäcker (German Resistance Museum, Berlin) Ernst Freiherr von Weizsäcker (25 May 1882 in Stuttgart - 4 August 1951) was a German diplomat. ... Max Winkler (7 September 1875 - 12 October 1961) was Mayor of Graudenz (now GrudziÄ…dz, Poland), Reich Trustee and Reich Commissioner for German Cinema. ... Karl Wolff (2nd from the right) together with, from left to right: Heinrich Himmler (far l. ...   (October 7, 1900 – May 23, 1945) was the commander of the German Schutzstaffel (SS) and one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany. ...

Y

Tomoyuki Yamashita, 1945 General Tomoyuki Yamashita (山下 奉文 Yamashita Tomoyuki) (November 8, 1885 – February 23, 1946) was a general of the Japanese Army during the World War II era. ...

Z

  • Walter Zirpins, German Police Leader of Lodz and later Hannover Polizedirecktor official

References

  • Glueck, Sheldon. War Criminals: Their Prosecution and Punishment. New York: Kraus Reprint Corporation, 1966.
  • Minear, Richard H. Victors' Justice: The Tokyo War Crimes Trial. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1971.
  • Taylor, Telford. Nuremberg and Vietnam: an American Tragedy. Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1970.


 

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