preview

Japanese Attack On Pearl Harbor Essay

Better Essays

Between 1942 and 1945, thousands of Japanese-Americans, regardless of United States citizenship status, were required to evacuate their homes and businesses. Sparked by rising fear and anxiety of the American people after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, a United States Naval base in Hawaii, Japanese-Americans were moved to remote areas on the West Coast, where they were isolated in internment camps organized and run by the United States Government. Despite the lack of any concrete evidence, the U.S. forced Japanese-Americans into internment camps, during World War II, due to Japanese involvement in Pearl Harbor; a rise in anti-Japanese paranoia sparked by economic success of Japanese-Americans; fear, anxiety and prejudice erupting within the United States government and amongst citizens; and a timid Supreme Court refusing to overturn internment orders. On Sunday, December 7, 1941, at 7:55 a.m., hundreds of Japanese aircraft and warplanes launched from Japanese aircraft carriers located just off the West Coast of the United States. The mission was to initiate a surprise attack on the United States Naval base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, particularly targeting the lot of American Pacific fleet located at the base, hoping to weaken the American and Allied military support. The attack was very successful for the Japanese, leaving a devastating toll on the American naval base and American lives in general. During the airborne attack, the United States lost eight battleships,

Get Access