History, asked by redhawk2004rk, 7 months ago

During World War II, the US government sent people of Japanese ancestry to internment camps based on how long they had lived in the US. whether they lived in an exclusion zone. how long they had lived on the East Coast. whether they had ever lived in Japan.

Answers

Answered by vedant00762
5

Answer:

whether they lived in an exclusion zone. how long they had lived on the East Coast. whether they had ever lived in Japan.

Explanation:

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Answered by brokendreams
5

During World War II, the US government sent people of Japanese ancestry to internment camps based on 2)whether they lived in an exclusion zone.

Why did the US government send Japanese-Americans to internment camps?

  • They feared for public safety as Japan was part of the Axis powers during the second world war.
  • They feared Japanese espionage.

When were the internment camps made?

  • Two months after the attack on Pearl Harbour, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 which approved the relocation of Japanese-Americans to internment camps.  
  • The relocation camps stayed from 1942 to 1946.

Hence, the US government sent Japanese-Americans to internment camps based on whether they lived in an exclusion zone.

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