In 1946, the
Nuremberg Tribunal declared the Waffen-SS to be a criminal organization, making an exception of people who had been forcibly conscripted. The Nuremberg tribunal ruled that those who had served in the Baltic Legions were conscripts, not volunteers. In 1946 former
Schutzstaffel servicemen from the Baltic states were granted an amnesty by the Soviet government, an unprecedented decision in relation to Soviet citizens who collaborated with the Nazi government. Subsequently, on 13 April 1950, a message from the
Allied High Commission (HICOG), signed by
John J. McCloy to the Secretary of State, clarified the US position on the Baltic Legions: "they were not to be seen as 'movements', 'volunteer', or 'SS'. In short, they had not been given the training, indoctrination, and induction normally given to SS members". With the full support of Nuremberg and Allied High Commission, the US Displaced Persons Commission declared in September 1950 that:
"The Baltic Waffen SS Units (Baltic Legions) are to be considered as separate and distinct in purpose, ideology, activities, and qualifications for membership from the German SS, and therefore the Commission holds them not to be a movement hostile to the government of the United States." Even before this decision, around 1,000 former Latvian Legion soldiers had served as guards at the
Nuremberg trials, guarding Nazi war criminals. Afterwards, during the
Berlin Blockade, they took part in securing Allied facilities involved in the
Berlin Airlift and later also were guarding US Army headquarters. During the Soviet period, the Latvian Legion were described as having been illegally conscripted by Nazi Germany in 1943, with no indication of being war criminals or of Holocaust involvement. For example, the Soviet film
I Remember Everything, Richard (also known as
Rock and Splinters in its uncut release) made during the 1960s (during the Cold War) at the
Riga Film Studio, while being full of Soviet propaganda clichés, clearly illustrates recognition of several essential aspects with respect to Legion soldiers, amongst those: that they were front-line soldiers, they were mostly forcefully conscripted, they were not supporters of Nazi ideology. This contrasts sharply with Russia's post-Soviet stance, which denounces the Legion as Waffen SS war criminals and uses the Legion issue to assert political and ideological pressure on Latvia on the international scene. In 1946, the coalition government of Sweden led by the Social Democrats, despite strong protests from many sectors of Swedish society,
extradited soldiers from the Latvian Legion (also some Estonian Legion and Lithuanian soldiers) who had fled to Sweden and were interned there to the USSR. In the 1990s, the Swedish government admitted that this had been a mistake. Surviving Baltic veterans were invited to Sweden in 1994, where they were met by the King of Sweden
Carl XVI Gustaf and the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden
Margaretha af Ugglas and participated in various ceremonies commemorating the events surrounding their extradition. Both the King and the Minister for Foreign affairs expressed their regret for Sweden's past extradition of Baltic Legion soldiers to the Soviet Union. Leanid Kazyrytski argues that there are grounds for supposing that the Latvian Legion possesses all the features of a criminal organization specified at the Nuremberg trials: the conscription procedure into the Legion had certain peculiarities, which do not allow to definitively speak of its compulsory character. == War crimes ==