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The Attack On Pearl Harbor

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The attack on Pearl Harbor, this caused many people to be afraid and angry of the Japanese, American or foreign. This escalated so quickly that President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1941(Timeline 6). The Executive Order declared that all people of Japanese ancestry were to be sent to internment camps away from the west coast( Timeline 6). The West coast had many military bases, and other places important to the war effort(Newsreel). With this information it can be can concluded that placing the Japanese people in the internment camps was unjustified. The internment of the Japanese was unjustified because The Germans and Italians were not sent to the internment camps as well, most of the Japanese …show more content…

In this article Howard explained that in the eyes of other American citizens Germans and Italians were considered “white”( Howard 3).. It was also mentioned that this may be a reason why the Germans and Italians were not in camps with the Japanese. In the article it also states that in the military’s eyes the only threat was the German and Italian people in the United States (Howard 3). Though the government didn’t take any action such as those that were taken to put the Japanese in the internment camps. The second reason why putting the Japanese in internment camps was that most of the Japanese population living in the West Coast were either farmers, fishermen, or small businessmen(Munson 2). This being said, there no way that any of the Japanese people would have been able to get access to the military bases. That means there was no one that had the ability to leak any important information to Axis in the first place (Munson 2). The Japanese people had been located near places that were important to the war effort. Though why worry about saboteurs when the probability of a Japanese person, whether it is an American citizen or a foreigner, getting important information like that is close to zero percent. “ ...In each naval District there are about 250 to 300 suspects under surveillance… only 50 or 60 people in each district can be classified as really dangerous” (munson 2). Thought there were people suspected none of the people were proven to be actual spies. As

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