[ ... ] air forces. I have, if the Tribunal please, our document Number L-172. It is photostat of a microfilm of a speech by General Jodl, and I offer that class="speaker">THE PRESIDENT: But in my copy of L-172, as far as I can see, it begins with the word "Introduction". MR [ ... ]
[ ... ] THE PRESIDENT: Does it come after TC-72? SIR GRIFFITH-JONES: It comes after L-172 [ ... ]
[ ... ] which has already been put in, L-172, and it was put in as U.S. [ ... ]
[ ... ] West was still in progress, they began to consider the possibility of launching a war of aggression against the USSR. set forth in our document L-172 class="speaker">THE PRESIDENT: Are you reading from L-172? MR. ALDERMAN: Yes. [ ... ]
[ ... ] delivered a lecture at Munich to the Reichsleiter and Gauleiter. I now refer to Document L-172, previously introduced in evidence as U.S.A. Exhibit 34. The [ ... ]
[ ... ] . The defendant Jodl has stated this better than I could possibly put it in his speech to the Gauleiters on 7 November 1943. That is in Document L 172, U [ ... ]
[ ... ] independence. in L-172, which is U.S. 34, Jodl explained: (that is at page 5, paragraph 3 of the translation): "The Austrian Anschluss, in its turn, brought [ ... ]
[ ... ] November 7, 1943 at Munich before an audience of Gauleiters. This speech forms document L-172. I offer it in evidence to the Tribunal under Number 54. I [ ... ]
[ ... ] threshold of the fifth year of the war, Jodl declared this in his perorations. This is document FR 1431, L-172, submitted by the American prosecution 27 [ ... ]
[ ... ] is L-172, US-34, Jodl's lecture. informed during a conference with Goering that the Fuehrer desired punctual delivery to the Russians only until the [ ... ]