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Posted on Dec 7, 2010 in War College

Japanese-American Internment During World War II

By Jerry D. Morelock

April 5, 1942. Persons of Japanese ancestry arrive at the Santa  Anita Assembly Center from San Pedro, Calif. Evacuees lived at this center at the former Santa Anita race track before being moved inland to relocation centers. (National Archives)

One of the most controversial actions taken by the United States government during World War II was the early 1942 relocation of about 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry living on the West Coast and their internment for much of the duration of the war in well-guarded, isolated camps farther into the U. S. interior. Likely only the U. S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945 that ended the Pacific War have generated more controversy than the Japanese-American internments. Approximately 40-percent of those interned were Japanese “resident aliens” (non-U. S. citizens, although many had lived in the United States for decades); but the majority, about 60-percent, were U. S. citizens of Japanese ancestry.

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Japan’s surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, that brought the United States into World War II, outraged Americans and sparked a wave of anti-Japanese sentiment across the country. Many blamed all Japanese for the attack, directing their anger and frustration even at Japanese resident aliens and Japanese-Americans who had done nothing that would bring into question their loyalty to the United States. Residents of the U. S. West Coast, where the majority of Japanese-Americans in the continental U. S. lived, also feared that their Japanese-American neighbors represented a potential “Fifth Column” of spies and saboteurs who could target critical defense industries or even help pave the way for an invasion by Japanese military forces – a fear that seemed to Americans on the West Coast real enough in the confusion and chaos of the war’s early months. The decisions by U. S. political and military leaders that led to the internment of Japanese-Americans played out within this super-charged atmosphere of fear, uncertainty and, indeed, racial animosity.

In the decades following World War II, however, the internment of Japanese-Americans has generally been acknowledged as a national embarrassment, a shameful episode that stands as a blot on America’s record during the “Good War” that defeated Nazism, fascism and Japanese militarism. In the 1980s, Congressional legislation provided $1.6 billion in monetary redress (about $20,000 to each surviving internee). Yet, despite the belated monetary redress, the wartime Japanese-American internment remains an emotionally divisive and highly controversial action.

In recent years, the issue of “internment” has evolved from being merely a nearly seven decade-old, controversial historical incident to become one of the subjects brought into the ongoing national debate about the disposition of War on Terror “internees” (such as the “detainees” now held at Guantanamo Bay). Although the circumstances are certainly different (Japanese-American citizens living in the U. S. versus enemy combatants captured on the battlefield), some of the underlying Constitutional questions seem relevant – for example, the government’s authority to hold “internees” indefinitely and what Constitutionally-protected rights (such as habeas corpus, speedy trial, etc.) ought to be extended to them. In 1944, the U. S. Supreme Court sided with the government; in a 2008 decision, however, the Court ruled that Guantanamo detainees were entitled to the protections of the U. S. Constitution. The 1942-45 internments, therefore, are of much more than merely historical interest.

The purpose of this article is to provide the facts and time line regarding the United States government’s internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II. Additionally, it presents the major arguments against – and for – one of America’s most controversial actions.

FACTS AND TIME LINE

On December 7, 1941, Japan launched a devastating surprise aerial attack on the U. S. Pacific Fleet anchored at Pearl Harbor and on American military airfields on Oahu. The next day, the United States entered World War II by declaring war on Japan. Within days, Japan’s Axis partners, Germany and Italy, declared war on the U. S. and the conflict became a global one for America. The destruction of the Pacific Fleet shocked America and left Hawaii and the U. S. Pacific Coast with drastically weakened defenses. Widespread fear of a Japanese attack swept through the West Coast population.

On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 which authorized the U. S. Secretary of War to designate certain areas around sensitive military and defense industries as exclusion zones “from which any or all persons may be excluded.” The order did not specifically name any nationality or ethnic group. Eventually, during World War II over one-third of U. S. land area was designated an exclusion zone. This Executive Order became the basis for the relocation and internment of Japanese (including nisei, i.e. U. S. citizens), and German and Italian aliens living in or near the exclusion zones.

According to the 1940 U. S. Census, there were 126,947 persons of Japanese ancestry living in the continental United States. Of these, 112,353 were living in the three Pacific Coast states (California, Oregon and Washington). California had the largest number, 93,717, which was three-fourths of the U. S. national total. Additionally, there were about 140,000 to 150,000 persons of Japanese ancestry living in the territory of Hawaii (37-percent — over one-third — of Hawaii’s total population).

Of the total Pacific Coast Japanese, 40,869 were “resident aliens” – termed “enemy aliens” when the U. S. is at war with the country they immigrated from. They were not U. S. citizens and were called issei. The remaining 71,484 were American-born (called nisei) and therefore were U. S. citizens by birth. [NOTE: as of January 1, 1942, there were also German and Italian “enemy aliens” living on the Pacific Coast – Italians=58,000; Germans=22,000; significantly, U. S. political and military leaders were also greatly concerned about the German and Italian aliens, not just Japanese. During WWII, about 15,000 German and Italian “enemy aliens” were interned, and in some cases the internees were voluntarily accompanied by their close relatives – mostly children – who were U. S. citizens by birth.]

1942. An Exclusion Order is posted at First and Front Streets in San Francisco, Calif., to direct Japanese Americans living in the first San Francisco section to evacuate. (National Archives)With Executive Order 9066 as his authority, Gen. John L. DeWitt, commander of the Western Defense Command headquartered in San Francisco, issued Civilian Exclusion Order Number 34 on May 3, 1942 which ordered all people of Japanese ancestry (citizens and non-citizens) still living in Military Area Number 1 (essentially the entire Pacific Coast to about 100 miles inland) to report to assembly centers from which they would be moved to relocation centers. Eventually, about 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry living on the U. S. West Coast were interned. Approximately 60-percent of these internees were U. S. citizens. [NOTE: of the 140,000 to 150,000 people of Japanese ancestry living in Hawaii, only about 1,200 to 1,800 were interned; of those, about 60-percent were U. S. citizens.]

In 1944, the U. S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the exclusion order (in re Korematsu vs United States, 1944). In two other earlier Supreme Court cases related to the exclusion order (in re Yashui vs United States and Hirabayashi vs United States, both 1943 and challenging the constitutionality of curfews imposed based on Japanese ancestry) the Court also upheld the Executive Order’s constitutionality.

During World War II, about 20,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry – including many who enlisted from relocation camps — served in the U. S. Armed Forces, most in the 100th Infantry Battalion (formerly a Hawaii National Guard unit) and 442d Regimental Combat Team (the 100th Battalion was incorporated into the 442d Regiment). The units fought in the European Theater of WWII and the 442d became the most highly decorated regiment in U. S. history (18,143 medals, including 21 Medals of Honor awarded to members of the unit – of the Medals of Honor total, 19 were upgraded from lesser-ranking medals in June 2000).

On January 2, 1945, the Exclusion Order was lifted and Japanese Americans were free to leave the relocation camps and to return to their former homes, or to any location they pleased. Some of the interned Japanese (1,327) who although U. S. residents were Japanese citizens, chose to emigrate to Japan (although the war was still on). The last relocation camp closed in 1946.

In 1948, some Japanese and Japanese Americans relocated by the Exclusion Order began receiving some compensation for losses due to relocation based on a U. S. law, the American Japanese Claims Act, passed that year. Congress appropriated $38 million to meet $131-148 million in claims from about 25,000 claimants. The final disbursement under this law occurred in 1965.

On February 19, 1976, President Gerald Ford formally rescinded Executive Order 9066.

In 1988, President Ronald Reagan signed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 that provided redress of $20,000 for each surviving internee, totaling $1.2 billion.

On September 27, 1992, President George H. W. Bush signed the Civil Liberties Act Amendment of 1992 which authorized an additional $400 million to ensure all surviving internees received the $20,000 payment. Bush also issued a formal apology on behalf of the U. S. government. A total of 82,210 Japanese Americans (or their heirs) received the $20,000 payments for a total of $1.6 billion paid out (1988-99).

ARGUMENTS AGAINST INTERNMENT

In the decades following the World War II Japanese-American internment, the major arguments presented condemning the action have been:

May 2, 1942. These young evacuees of Japanese ancestry are awaiting their turn for baggage inspection upon arrival at this Assembly Center in   Turlock, Calif.  (National Archvies)Racism, not National Security, Was the Real Motivation. White racial prejudice and hostility against Japanese Americans, particularly those living in the Pacific Coast area where the overwhelming majority of Japanese Americans in the continental U. S. resided, was widespread and dated back decades before the start of World War II. When the flood of Japanese immigration to the U. S. began at the turn of the 20th century, white Pacific Coast residents (where 90-percent of Japanese immigrants settled) immediately resented the influx of a people they saw as racially inferior. This prompted discriminatory laws, such as the 1905 California Anti-Miscegenation Law that forbade the marriage of Caucasians and “Mongolians” (referring to both Japanese and Chinese) and the 1906 San Francisco law that mandated Japanese and Chinese students attend segregated schools. In 1924, pressure from West Coast legislators forced Congress to pass the Oriental Exclusion Law that forbade Japanese from achieving U. S. citizenship (the major reason why 40,000 Japanese living in America for decades by 1941 were still not U. S. citizens when WWII began). Widespread racial prejudice was intensified by economic competition, since whites resented the success of Japanese farmers and businessmen. Indeed, in 1942, Austin Anson, president of the Salinas Vegetable Grower-Shipper Association told a reporter, “We’re charged with wanting to get rid of these Japs for selfish [economic] reasons. We do.” Racism seems obvious when it is considered that Gen. DeWitt’s original plan for relocation also called for including 44,000 Italians and 20,000 Germans – yet only the Japanese were relocated (except for some Italians and Germans on an individual, case by case basis). Racism very likely overrode any genuine national security concerns in the decision to relocate Japanese Americans in 1942.

Other Means Existed for Ensuring Security. The stated motivation of the Exclusion Order, which formed the basis for the relocation of Japanese Americans, was an overriding concern at the time for “national security” (i.e. the protection of military bases and key defense industry factories). Yet, the draconian measures taken – round up and relocation of 110,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans living within Military Area Number 1 was a gross overreaction and ignored the fact that other means of achieving adequate security existed. Military and civilian guards at bases and defense factories could relatively easily have detained any “suspicious” persons venturing too near a sensitive facility (and in particular, anyone of obvious Japanese ancestry would stand out), and all West Coast citizens had, beginning immediately after Pearl Harbor, been constantly encouraged to remain vigilant and to report any suspicious activity observed to the FBI for immediate investigation. No verifiable incident of espionage or sabotage by a Japanese American was discovered during the war. Even FBI director J. Edgar Hoover opposed the mass relocation of Japanese Americans because he was convinced that the most likely spies or potential saboteurs among that population had already been rounded up in the initial sweep of “enemy aliens” between December 7 and 13, 1941. During searches of Japanese American residences conducted by the FBI beginning in early February 1942, the Department of Justice reported that “We have not uncovered through these searches any dangerous persons that we did not otherwise know about.”

Constitutionally Protected Rights. Executive Order 9066 violated the constitutionally protected rights of the 71,000 Japanese Americans among the 110,000 relocated who were U. S. citizens (although the 40,000+ Japanese who were not U. S. citizens were not in this same constitutionally protected category). Specifically, the relocation targeting only those of Japanese ancestry violated the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment which prohibits depriving any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law. Even though the U. S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of Executive Order 9066 (in re Korematsu vs United States, 1944), the Court specified that its decision referred only to the constitutionally of the exclusion order itself, stating that the order’s provisions singling out people of Japanese ancestry was a separate provision outside the scope of the trial proceedings.

Evacuation’s Unnecessary Hardships. Even before arriving in the remote relocation camps, Japanese Americans suffered severe and unnecessary hardship due to the timing and conduct of the evacuation. Relocated Japanese Americans were given unnecessarily short notice, sometimes only hours, to report to collection centers for transport to the camps. Many were told to bring only “the clothes on their backs” and had to abandon virtually all of their personal property. Japanese farmers were in most cases forced to sell or abandon their farms, and only a few were able to enlist non-Japanese to look after their property while they were away. Those that were able to sell their farms usually had to suffer great financial loss, particularly when forced to sell their land to unscrupulous white farmers or land speculators who coveted the property. Although government provision was made to store their property, much of it was destroyed or looted while in government storage. The evacuation was particularly hard on the approximately 60-percent of Japanese Americans who were women and young children, forcibly uprooted from their homes and transported to the primitive living conditions in the internment camps. Although President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 which became the basis for the mass relocation on February 19, 1942, the military authorities delayed the issuing of the evacuation order until May, then demanded that Japanese Americans report immediately to collection centers. The evacuation itself caused unnecessary suffering in the manner in which it was announced and conducted.

July 3, 1942. A dust storm kicks up at this War Relocation Authority center in Manzanar, Calif., where evacuees of Japanese ancestry are spending the duration of the war. (National Archives)Deplorable Camp Conditions. The majority of the camps were established on Indian reservations in remote areas of the West where weather conditions were significantly more severe than the conditions on the Pacific Coast where most Japanese Americans who were relocated lived. In many cases, those relocated were not able to bring warm clothing to withstand the below zero weather encountered in the camps. Living conditions were primitive, with multiple families sharing austere, barracks-like quarters. Most common accommodations were non-insulated, tar paper-covered wooden barracks without cooking or plumbing facilities of any kind. Beds were cots, toilets were un-partitioned, and internees lived on a subsistence budget allocated at only 45-cents per day. Barbed wire enclosures surrounded the camps and armed guards manned watch towers to prevent internees from leaving. Schooling and social activities were minimal.

Physical and Emotional Distress. Internees suffered both physical and emotional distress during their internment. Armed guards constantly were on watch, and some internees were shot and killed by guards when they ventured outside the camp limits. One of these, James Wakasa, was shot and killed by a guard at Topaz internment center in Utah. Other internees died or suffered extreme physical problems due to inadequate medical care provided by the camp authorities. In addition to physical distress, many in the camps suffered severe emotional debilitation. Dillon S. Meyer, one of the camp administrators, reported in June 1945 that many of the internees suffered from depression, overwhelming feelings of helplessness and severe insecurity. No monetary compensation, as was done belatedly beginning in 1988, could make up for the physical and emotional suffering inflicted on the internees. The deprivation of individual liberty and the lost educational and business opportunities suffered by internees defy fixing any monetary compensation figure.

ARGUMENTS FOR INTERNMENT

Despite the solid arguments against the Japanese-American internment, some arguments in favor of it have been raised. The basis of these “for” internment arguments largely center on the actual situation existing at the time the evacuations were ordered – i.e. not those arguments made decades later when America was no longer under attack and with the full advantage of hindsight:

Threat to the U.S. Pacific Coast. A real threat to the U. S. Pacific Coast was widely thought to exist in the first months after Pearl Harbor. After the U. S. Navy’s Pacific Fleet was crippled by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, the American Pacific Coast was virtually defenseless if the Japanese had decided to launch attacks on the West Coast. Indeed, on February 23, 1942 (four days after President Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive order 9066), a Japanese submarine surfaced off the coast of Goleta, California and shelled the Elwood oil refinery complex causing widespread panic extending all along the coast to Los Angeles. Military and civilian leaders (led by California politicians) clamored for the government to create restricted zones around West Coast military bases and key defense plants (principally aircraft factories since many were concentrated in California in that era). As early as December 7 & 8, 1941, President Roosevelt directed the Army and the FBI to round up and intern Japanese, German and Italian “enemy aliens” (non-U. S. citizens) on the West Coast (831 were interned by December 13 – 595 Japanese, 187 Germans and 49 Italians). Further fueling public fears of espionage and sabotage was the January 25, 1942 release of the Roberts Commission report on the Pearl Harbor attack that cited “widespread espionage in Hawaii before Pearl Harbor, both by Japanese consular agents and by Japanese residents of Oahu." Although the report’s claim that “Japanese residents of Oahu” had committed espionage was proved false after the war, a widely publicized incident in which one Japanese resident and two Hawaiian-born Japanese American residents of Niihau had used violence against their neighbors to aid a downed Japanese pilot who had bombed Pearl Harbor incensed the public and inflamed fears that the West Coast was in danger of an enemy attack supported by Japanese Americans. Although, in hindsight, it is clear that the Japanese military never intended to attack the Pacific Coast, there was a genuine fear by U. S. political and military leadership, and the public at large, at the time that such an attack was imminent and that when it came it would be supported by espionage and sabotage by West Coast Japanese residents.

Historical Precedent. The Constitution is not a suicide pact, and a precedent for President Roosevelt suspending habeas corpus (in the case of the 71,000 West Coast Japanese who were American born U. S. citizens) exists in the actions of former Presidents. During another time of great threat to the country – the American Civil War – President Abraham Lincoln arrested and detained, without trial, thousands of suspected secessionists, closed newspapers hostile to his administration, and used military force to keep key Border States (e.g. Maryland and Missouri) in the Union. When the Chief Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court, Roger Taney, issued a writ of habeas corpus to force Lincoln to release imprisoned Maryland state legislators, Lincoln simply ignored it. Roosevelt’s genuine fear for the security of the Pacific Coast prompted his issuing Executive Order 9066, and in 1944 the order’s constitutionality was affirmed by the Supreme Court (unlike Lincoln’s actions which were not affirmed by the Court). Another presidential precedent, although directed against Germans and German-Americans living in the U. S., and also against any Americans opposing the war, are the actions by President Woodrow Wilson during America’s participation in World War I (April 1917-November 1918). Wilson pushed through Congress the passage of the Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918 which he used to suppress anti-British, pro-German and anti-war opinions in the American public and to deport foreign-born radicals. Using the acts, Wilson ordered the U. S. Postal Service to refuse to carry any written materials critical of the war, a move that seriously interfered with the circulation of dozens of newspapers whose position on the war Wilson objected to. He also encouraged the activities of the Committee on Public Information (Creel Commission), the National Security League and the American Defense Society which distributed propaganda, whipped up anti-German hysteria, harassed German-Americans and anti-war activists, questioned the loyalty of anyone who opposed the war, and engaged in “Gestapo-like” tactics in neighborhoods across the country to enforce support for Wilson and the war effort (with the help of the U. S. Dept. of Justice in many instances). Finally, Article 1, section 9 of the U. S. Constitution clearly provides for the suspension, in time of emergency, of the right of habeas corpus when it states “The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it."

Protection of Japanese-Americans. Whatever the merits (or lack thereof) of the white population’s suspicion regarding Japanese-Americans’ loyalties, such hostility existed even prior to the outbreak of the war against Japan in December 1941, but constantly increased in severity in the weeks after the Pearl Harbor attack. One early 1942 report from a Navy officer stationed in Los Angeles, for example, contained a typical of that period warning of imminent “outbreaks of riots and other civil strife” directed against the Japanese-American population. Therefore, the removal of Japanese-Americans from California and the western portions of Oregon and Washington state almost certainly prevented uncontrolled acts of mob violence being perpetrated against large numbers of Japanese-Americans, likely saving lives and preventing physical injuries to, potentially, thousands. Although it must be acknowledged that the conditions existing in this “protective custody” were harsh and primitive, it almost certainly prevented many injuries or death inflicted by a mindlessly enraged white population.

Sacrifice for the War Effort. All Americans during World War II were required to make sacrifices to aid the war effort, including the supreme sacrifice made by 416,800 American military personnel who died during the war. Rationing of items like food and gasoline, dislocation of large sections of the U. S. population due to war factory work, and the general disruption in normal civilian life impacted the lives of virtually all Americans during the war. Although the sacrifices required of Japanese-American internees were mandated by authorities and not voluntary, the living conditions in the relocation camps approximated those in military training camps and were not significantly more severe than those experienced by the 16,000,000 U. S. military personnel who served during the war. Indeed, the relocation camp conditions were much less severe than what military personnel endured overseas in combat theaters. And although the internees’ coming and going in the camps was severely regulated by the authorities, such regulation approximated that experienced by all military personnel serving in the armed forces during the war who had to get permission any time they wanted to leave training camps or the bases to which they were ultimately assigned.

Freedom of Movement. Eventually, prior to the January 2, 1945 official lifting of the exclusion order, almost all relocation camps permitted internees to go beyond the confines of the camps. By the end of the internment period in 1945, nearly one-quarter of internees had been permitted to leave the camps to live and work elsewhere in the United States outside the declared exclusion zones. Eventually, many were even allowed to return to their homes in the exclusion zones under sponsorship of a family or agency. Additionally, under the National Student Council Relocation Program, college age internees were permitted to leave the camps and attend colleges and universities, and by December 1943 the number of internees taking advantage of this program was 2,263.

Although this issue will undoubtedly remain a controversial event in American history, knowing the facts and the major arguments both “for” and “against” the Japanese-American internment will help provide a better understanding of how and why it happened.

FURTHER READING:
Here are some suggestions for those wishing to do further reading and study on this controversial issue:

“The Decision to Evacuate the Japanese From the Pacific Coast” by Stetson Conn, Chapter 5 in Command Decisions, edited by Kent Roberts Greenfield (Office of the Chief of Military History, U. S. Government Printing Office, 1960)

By Order of the President: FDR and the Internment of Japanese Americans by Greg Robinson (Harvard University Press, 2001)

A Tragedy of Democracy: Japanese Confinement in North America, also by Greg Robinson (Columbia University Press, 2009).

In Defense of Internment: The Case for Racial Profiling in World War II and the War on Terror by Michelle Malkin (Regnery Press, 2004)

37 Comments

  1. Here is what the for boils down to — we assume without any evidence that the Japanese-Americans are traitors to their own country, therefore we deny them their constitutional rights in a fit of prejudiced driven hysteria. Or if Hitler had said, just substitute German-Jew for Japanese-American and see if the argument still works. I just can’t believe that Weider is allowing drivel like this now.

  2. An interesting piece as far as it goes but somewhat theoretical. The role of intelligence was downplayed by the Commission on the Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians (or should I say ignored) and since then almost all discussions of the subject just assume there was none. (See comment before this.)

    For a brief overview of what was known about JA activities on the West Coast at the time of Pearl Harbor see http://www.internmentarchives.com/bainbridge . For a more detailed view of Japanese activities see Magic: The untold story of U.S. Intelligence and the evacuation of Japanese from the West Coast in WW II by David Lowman, former Special Assistant to the Director of the National Security Agency.

    One additional small point is that the minor children of Japanese citizen parents (enemy aliens under U.S. law) were moved with their families to keep those units intact. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to imagine the consternation that would be caused by separating children from parents. Not even the Imperial Japanese Army did this very often.

  3. While I do not consider the Japanese-American internment of WWII to be one of the brighter moments in the history of democracy in the US, I think it’s rather far-fetched to compare it in any way to what Hitler and the Nazi regime perpetrated in Europe during the same time period.

    The purpose of The Final Solution was not even remotely tied to concerns for national security in Germany- it was a systematic plan to destroy an entire race of people. The American camps were designed to isolate Japanese from areas of national security concern; the intent of the Nazi camps was to eliminate a race.

    There was racism involved by both, to be sure, but to equate them in any way by that simple logic is remarkably misguided.

    • Never mentioned the holocaust, just the use of concentration camps such as Dachau which were used to isolate so called enemies of the state. For example, Jews, Communists, Gypsies. This was also done by the British in South Africa, but at least in that case the Boars where enemies to British rule. If you substitute the Japanese-American with Jew or Black in this article, tell me how that will sound. The assumption was since they were of Japanese ancestry, they were enemies of the state i.e., traitors. The assumption in Germany was that Communist, Gypsy or Jew was an enemy of the state.

      • “never mentioned the holocaust ” aren’t you tricky. about
        46000 were citizens of Japan and the rest had dual citizenship by Japanese law.

  4. Thanks for the interesting article. I consider the internment a giant “black mark” in the history in the United States. My chief thought on the subject is that it is understandable to me how SOME internment could take place, but the number of people interned and the fact that many or most were interned for the duration, I find incredible. I see obvious parallels to the Guantanamo policy, where it seems many or most of the people were marginal, and they were held indefinitely. I think this is partly because it is an unfortunate aspect of human nature and sociology that when policies and organizations are formed, they become self-perpetuating.

    It would be interesting to study the way that Italians and Germans were handled by the government, and to compare it to the way the Japanese were treated.. I have tried to find information or books on
    this, but have not had much success. I developed an interest in that topic, when my father mentioned to me shortly before he died several years that he considered the internment policy against Italians to be shameful.

    Clearly there was there screening involved of these two groups, as only a minority were interned. I’d be interested in how this screening was done. I myself have the biased assumption that there was a much higher risk of German agents than Italian agents, given the activity and popularity of the German-American Bund, for one thing.
    On the other hand, we have the story of the deal the government made with Luciano to control the docks in New York.

    My last thought, is where was the US Congress in this, just letting their authority and responsibilities be assumed by others. This most certainly reminds of the events of the last ten years.

  5. Awesome site, I got all the information I needed!
    Thanks!

  6. i came here looking for info to help support my idea for a paper im wrighting were the question is do you think its ok to take away a persons rights in order to ensure the safety of others now my teacher brought up an interesting problem if mexico attacked america would we intern all the mexicans and i just had to say well since 75 percent of the mexican population here is not legal they are not entitled to those rights that are guarenteed to our citezens a large population of the japanese “american” ancestory were not truly american citezens and were never entitled to those rights so thats my opinion im gonna get a lot of hate but i would like to know your stand on the question stated

    • Your teachers question is not very bright. Of course the decision to intern in the event of war is based on the perceived threat, the situation and the likely benefits.

      You are right is saying a large number of Japanese were not U.S. citizens, about 36,000. They were subject to confiscation of property and imprisonment with out any question. Their kids went with them so families wouldn’t be separated.

      I know because I was a U.S. citizen in the Philippines and the Japs didn’t miss a lick in putting us in prison, one a lot worse than anything in the U.S.

      See internmentarchives.com for additional info. Good luck with your project.

  7. been looking for sites for a school projects and u guys have the best website of all the webs i’ve seen(a lot)thanks! (:

  8. It appears that the statement ” no verifible incident of espionage or sobatage by a japanese american was discovered
    during the war” is shown to be false, by the Niihau incident. I guess you are trying to say they did nothing wrong, how about giving aid and comfort to the enemy,
    armed insurrection and the burning of the captured aircraft. Lets be fair.

  9. I like the info!! 😀

    • You need to be more specific about what you info you like from it!!!! Suck a big one!!!!

      • rude o_o

  10. Can someone give me a source that confirms the statement that “no verifiable incident of espionage or sabotage by a Japanese American was discovered during the war”

    • The quote may be found in the second paragraph page 3 of Personal Justice Denied, the report of the Commission on the Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians. Here it is in full:
      “All this was done despite the fact that not a single documented act of espionage, sabotage or fifth column activity was committed by an American Citizen of Japanese Ancestry or by a resident Japanese alien on the West Coast.”
      By inserting the “West Coast” they exclude what happened in Hawaii. Also, in the Magic Addendum to the report a big deal is made about the intercepted messages not identifying by name those JA who were spying in aircraft plants and in the Army or those involved in watching and reporting on shipping etc.

      • The quote making that statement is wrong,as is the entire report that came from a political source and had a political purpose.

    • Takeo Yoshikawa was caught spying on Pearl Harbor, he was detained on the day of the Pearl Harbor attack and returned to Japan in a diplomatic prisioner exchange.
      Japanese Americans in Hawaii rescued and protected an Imperial Japanese airman that crashed during the Pearl Harbor attack.
      United States intelligence agents intercepted cables sent from Tokyo to the Japanese Consulate in Los Angeles and were able to break the code and read the messages. They revealed that there were a substantial number of Japanese Spy in the US Military, Defense Companies and other sensitive industries. (Declassified in 1978 The MAGIC Background of Pearl Harbor)
      There were also Japanese spies in Mexico and plans for a Biological attack on San Diego.
      Japan was also releasing weather balloons carrying incendiary bombs that they hoped would float in America, crash and start fires. One made it as far as Minnesota. It is thought that this was what caused the BATTLE OF LA in 1941.
      There also needs to be considered that there could be attacks on Japanese Americans by Chinese Americans upset with Japan’s atrocities in China.
      All of which was something the US could not afford to deal with at the time.
      Most of this has been hidden because the US needed Japan as an ally in the Pacific to contend with Communist China and the Soviet Union.

  11. i dont like studying

  12. there wss no case for internement, despite what michelle malkin ssys. some will site the niihau incident. if that was thr motivating factor, then why weren’t ja’s living in hawsii interned. not a single shred of evidence of espionage or treason was ever uncovered. not one person was convicted, or even charged, gor these crimes.

    • Those interned /relocated were not put on trial in the U.S. justice system ( so no records ). They were simply interned as allowed by Geneva Conventions . If we had put them on trial the Japanese would have done the same with the Thousands of Americans they were holding They did put American airman on trial for Tokyo raid
      and executed them.

    • At the time of the internment Hawaii was a territory of the US not a state therefore martial law could be declared and no need for internment.

  13. A little reading about other than the internment/relocation will
    show how ethnic Germans living in Norway helped the German army
    when they invaded and how ethnic Japanese living in the Philippines
    helped the Japanese Army when they invaded the Philippines.

  14. The German atomic bomb project was destroyed by one Norwegian
    agent who placed a bomb in the bilge of a ferry boat. Just
    one man could have cost us.

    • Don’t compare the Americans to one Norwegian. There is a Norse saying: “a thousands Swedes were chased through the field by ONE Norwegian.”

  15. Communists(FDR Admin.) disregard the Bill of Rights. Communists have infiltrated the Democratic Party, so be on your guard.

  16. I was 12 years old when the Japanese hit Pearl Harbor. My father was a Los Angeles County Administrator. One of his co-workers was a young Japanese man. I remember my dad inviting this co-worker and his wife to our house for dinner in the summer of 1941. I remember this man and his wife well – they were very pleasant and we enjoyed their visit. When war was declared and the Japanese internment began my dad told my mother and me that his co-worker had stolen the Los Angeles County plans for the county water supply system and had been discovered before being interred. To my knowledge this information was never made public. Nobody knows his intentions about the use of the water supply plans, but He had no legitimate reason to posses these plans according to my dad. So why did he get them? You can draw your own conclusions! If he had not been interred what might have happened in Los Angeles County? Again use your imagination. I don’t think we know of any other instances of possible sabotage but what if there were other Japanese who had the opportunity to do harm in our country? What if we had not imposed the internment? We can’t answer this question, but under the conditions of war I think it was the correct decision. We will never know for sure will we!

  17. I think that the whole internment “ORDEAL” was just a whole fraud, the fed gov’t never did this and that it shouldn’t be taught at Schools.

    • You are very ill informed. I bet you deny the holocaust too. Are you an “alternative truth” believer?

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