Eichmann trial


The Eichmann trial was the 1961 trial of major Holocaust perpetrator Adolf Eichmann, who was captured in Argentina by Israeli agents and taken to Israel to stand trial. Eichmann was a senior Nazi party member and served at the rank of Obersturmbannführer in the SS, and was primarily responsible for the implementation of the Final Solution. He was responsible for shipping Jews and other people from across Europe to the concentration camps, including managing the shipments to Hungary directly, where 564,000 Jews died. After the end of World War II, he fled to Argentina, living under a pseudonym until his capture in 1960 by Mossad.
Eichmann was charged with fifteen counts of violating the Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Law. His trial began on 11 April 1961 and was presided over by three judges: Moshe Landau, Benjamin Halevy, and Yitzhak Raveh. He was convicted on all fifteen counts and sentenced to death. He appealed his conviction to the Israeli Supreme Court, which confirmed the convictions and the sentence.
President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi rejected Eichmann's request to commute the sentence and he was hanged on 1 June 1962 at Ramla Prison.

Background

Eichmann was a high-ranking SS official who played a key role in planning and executing the Holocaust. As head of Section IV-B-4 of the Reich Security Main Office under Reinhard Heydrich, Eichmann was in charge of Jewish affairs and deportations. He organized the forced removal of hundreds of thousands of Jews from Germany and occupied parts of Europe, arranging transport trains to ghettos and extermination camps as part of the Final Solution. Eichmann coordinated with other Nazi officials to ensure the systematic deportation and murder of Jews, and was deeply involved in operations such as the deportation of 440,000 Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz in 1944.

Escape from Germany to Argentina

As the Second World War was ending in Europe, Eichmann fled as the Third Reich collapsed. He was captured by American forces in 1945, but managed to hide his identity using false papers and escaped from an American detention camp in 1946. For several years he lived under aliases in Germany and avoided the trials associated with denazification. In 1950, with assistance from a network that helped fugitive Nazis, Eichmann secured an Argentine visa and a Red Cross passport under the name Ricardo Klement, fleeing Europe for South America. Settling in Argentina, he was later joined by his wife and children and lived a low-profile life working various jobs, including at a Mercedes-Benz factory in Buenos Aires, all while concealing his true identity. Among the German expatriate community, it eventually became an open secret that the individual known as Klement was in fact Eichmann. During this period, he showed little to no remorse for his actions; he even gave interviews to pro-Nazi acquaintances, reportedly boasting that "not having murdered all the Jews" was his only regret.
Meanwhile, an international manhunt was underway in Europe. Pursued persistently by war-crimes investigators and Nazi hunters like Simon Wiesenthal, Eichmann's name had surfaced during the Nuremberg trials but his whereabouts were unknown. In the mid-1950s, clues and rumors suggested he was hiding in Argentina. In 1957, Fritz Bauer, the Attorney General of the German state of Hesse and himself a Jewish holocaust survivor, secretly informed Israeli agents that Eichmann was living in Buenos Aires under the name Ricardo Klement. Bauer acted covertly due to fear that people in West Germany would potentially tip off Eichmann if official channels had been used instead. His tip, corroborated by information from a German expatriate and Holocaust survivor in Argentina, gave Mossad critical leads that set them on Eichmann's trail. Notably, it later emerged that the West German intelligence service and the Central Intelligence Agency had also learned his location by 1958, but chose not to pursue him or alert Israel. Cold War considerations and the presence of ex-Nazis as informants contributed to their reluctance – an embarrassment that was acknowledged decades later when these facts came to light. Ultimately, it was the persistence of individuals like Bauer, Herrmann, and Wiesenthal, combined with Israel's resolve, that led to Eichmann's discovery.

Abduction

Preparation

By 1960, Mossad had confirmation of Eichmann's whereabouts in the suburbs of Buenos Aires. Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, aware that formal extradition to Israel was unlikely approved a covert operation to capture Eichmann. In May 1960, a Mossad team led by agent Rafi Eitan and orchestrated by director Isser Harel set up surveillance and prepared an elaborate abduction plan.
Ten people were put to the task, including a disguise expert, a doctor, a document forger, a melee specialist and Harel himself. One of the agents was a survivor of Auschwitz where his parents were sent to the gas chamber. "We have not only the right, but also a moral duty to bring this man to justice We are embarking on a historic journey. It goes without saying that this is no ordinary task. We must arrest the man who has the blood of our people on his hands," said Harel.
The operation was top secret: Israel's embassy in Buenos Aires knew nothing and the mission was a violation of several UN conventions. For example, Argentina had to issue an extradition order before Eichmann could be taken out of the country. Using false passports, Mossad agents travelled to Buenos Aires in early 1960, and began an intensive and more than three-month long surveillance of Eichmann.
The agents rented eight cars, as well as seven houses and apartments, which served as hiding places. One of the houses was isolated and served as headquarters. A few days after his arrival, this villa was transformed into a small fort with an alarm system and a cell where Eichmann was to be held captive until his departure for Israel. A female Mossad agent stayed in the house the whole time disguised as a maid; her role was to cook for the group, keep the house clean and give the outside world the impression that a normal family lived there.
The agents tracked down Eichmann's residence. On 19 March 1960, an agent drove slowly past the house, and at 2:00pm he saw a man in his fifties with a high forehead and glasses who was about to carry in the laundry. After Eichmann was identified, he was constantly shadowed and regularly photographed by Israeli agents. The agents were regularly rotated so that Eichmann would not become suspicious. The agents charted Eichmann's habits: where he worked, when he showed up, when he went home for the day, and which bus he took to and from work. Eichmann seemed like a normal family man, and lived according to fixed routines. He got off the bus every night at 7:40 p.m. and then walked along a deserted road to his house.

Implementation

The plan was first to transport Eichmann out of the country by plane in connection with Argentina's national day, when Israeli diplomats were invited for an official visit. They were due to arrive on 19 May, and the plan was to return the plane on 20 May – without the diplomats, but with Eichmann on board. With the approval of the government of Israel, he was nevertheless captured on 11 May 1960.
When Eichmann got off the bus in the evening, the agents had been feigning a breakdown. One of them signaled to Eichmann with the only Spanish phrase they knew:. Then, the agents took him by force into a waiting car. During questioning, he immediately acknowledged who he really was. While held prisoner, he wrote a declaration that he voluntarily joined Israel and that he was willing to stand trial there. Eitan told the BBC in 2011 that Eichmann was "completely average" in terms of physical description.
The car with Eichmann went unnoticed through airport security. Eichmann was sedated and dressed in the uniform of Israel's flag carrier El Al. One member of the original flight crew remained in Buenos Aires so that the number of crew members would match, averting suspicion from the Argentinians. The Mossad agents gave the impression that Eichmann had been out drinking. After a layover in Dakar on the west coast of Africa, Eichmann arrived in Israel on 22 May.
The Israeli government initially denied involvement in the abduction, claiming he had been taken by Jewish volunteers. On 23 May 1960, Ben Gurion announced in the Knesset that Eichmann had been captured with the government's blessing and described Eichmann as the greatest criminal of all time. He promised that the mass murderer would soon be brought to justice. Ben Gurion's announcement was followed by long and intense applause.

Diplomatic reaction

When Ben-Gurion announced Eichmann's capture to the Knesset, the revelation stunned the world. The Argentine government, angered that Israel had violated its sovereignty, lodged an official protest at the United Nations. A heated diplomatic dispute ensued in which Argentina demanded accountability for the act. The Security Council debated the matter, and in June 1960 it adopted United Nations Security Council Resolution 138 acknowledging Argentina's grievance and requesting "Israel to make appropriate reparation". Ultimately, Israel and Argentina reached an agreement that Israel would express formal regret in exchange for Argentina not insisting on Eichmann's return. By the time the trial commenced, the rift had largely been repaired quietly, and international focus shifted to the legal proceedings about to unfold in Israel.

Trial

The trial of Eichmann was held from 11 April to 15 August 1961 at Beit Ha'am, a community theatre temporarily reworked to serve as a courtroom capable of accommodating 750 observers. It was held under the Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Law, legislation enacted to allow Israel to prosecute Holocaust perpetrators. A special tribunal of the Jerusalem District Court was convened to handle the sensitive case. The indictment, filed by Attorney General Gideon Hausner, charged Eichmann with 15 crimes, including crimes against the Jewish people, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and membership in outlawed organizations. A summary of the charges and verdict can be found below.