On 27 March 1946, the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg summoned Gustav Adolf Steengracht von Moyland, former assistant to Reich Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, First Class Envoy and later State Secretary for Foreign Policy at the Reich Foreign Office, for cross-examination.
At first, Steingracht tried to whitewash and get himself and his former boss off the hook. His testimony was replete with standard legal language: “I have not been instructed to do so”, “this is the first time I have seen this document”. His professional diplomatic resourcefulness produced astonishing turns of phrase: “even the holding of an anti-Jewish congress in its effect would not have been directed against the Jews”. About his former superior Ribbentrop, Steingracht said: “I cannot class him with the ordinary Nazis, as one usually expresses it”. He insisted that Ribbentrop was above Nazism, engaged in diplomacy and carrying out his duties, and while others were committing crimes, the Foreign Office was not aware of them at all.
The prosecution, however, had encountered such tactics many times before. Once it had presented the Court with documents that could harm either the witness or his superiors, the loyalty disappeared instantly. Sensing danger, Steingracht effectively “turned in” his boss with the wording: “…he was completely hypnotised by Hitler and then became his tool”.
Steingracht would later become a defendant in the “Wilhelmstrasse Trial”, a trial that would convict high-ranking Nazi officials and diplomats. On 11 April 1949, he was sentenced to 7 years in prison, but would serve less than a year before being pardoned on 28 January 1950.