Commission of Responsibilities
The Commission on the Responsibility of the Authors of the War and on Enforcement of Penalties was a commission established at the Paris [Peace Conference, 1919|Paris Peace Conference] in 1919. Its role was to examine the background of the First World War, and to investigate and recommend individuals for prosecution for committing war crimes.
Background
During the First World War, the Allied governments had decided to try defeated leaders whom they considered responsible for violations of international law and the laws of war. For that purpose, it was decided to establish an expert committee to make recommendations to that effect. Following the conclusion of the Armistice in November 1918, preparations began. The defeated German government officially concurred with the initiative on grounds that:A complete truthful account of the world conditions and of the negotiations among the powers in July 1914 and of the steps taken at that time by the several governments could and would go far toward demolishing the walls of hatred and misconstruction erected by the long war to separate the peoples.
In addition, the German government proposed the establishment of a neutral committee of experts to study the matter. The Allied governments refused, claiming that:
they do not consider that the German proposal requires any reply as the responsibility of Germany for the war has been long ago incontestably proved.
Composition of the Commission
The commission was established at the conference plenary session of 25 January 1919, and consisted of representatives of the five major Allied powers – the US, the British Empire, France, Italy, and Japan – with the addition of Belgium, Greece, Poland, Romania and Serbia. Its members were as follows:USA:
- Robert Lansing, United States Secretary of State
- James Brown Scott, professor of law at Johns Hopkins University
- Gordon Hewart, Attorney General
- or: Ernest Pollock, Solicitor General
- William Massey, Prime Minister of New Zealand
- André Tardieu, Commissioner General for Franco-American Affairs of War
- alternate: Captain R. Masson
- Ferdinand Larnaude, Dean of the Paris Law Faculty
- Vittorio Scialoja, Senator, Foreign Minister after 26 November 1919
- alternates: A. Ricci-Busatti, chief of the claims section in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Gustavo Tosti, Consul General
- Raimondo
- then: G. Brambilla, Counselor of Legation
- then: M. d'Amelio, counselor to the Court of Cassation
- Mineichirō Adachi, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Belgium
- Harukazu Nagaoka, counselor of the Japanese Embassy in France
- then: Sakutaro Tachi, law professor at Tokyo Imperial University
- Edouard Rolin-Jaequemyns, Secretary General of the Belgian Delegation to the Peace Conference
Poland:
- Constantin Skirmunt, member of the Polish National Committee
- then: Leon Łubieński, member of the Polish National Committee
- S. Rosental, legal consultant
- Slobodan Jovanović, law professor at the University of Belgrade
- alternates: Kosta Kumanudi, law professor at the University of Belgrade, and Mileta Novaković, lecturer at the University of Belgrade
- on Criminal Acts, charged with investigating into war crimes allegations
- on Responsibility for the War, charged with recommending which individuals to indict for bringing about the war
- on Responsibility for the Violation of the Laws and Customs of War, charged with deciding whom to indict for crimes committed during the war