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FDR AND JAPANESE AMERICAN INTERNMENT(罗斯福和日本美国拘留)
FDR AND JAPANESE AMERICAN INTERNMENT
Today, the decision to intern Japanese Americans is widely viewed by historians and legal scholars as a
blemish on Roosevelt’s wartime record.
Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the FBI arrested over 1200 Japanese aliens throughout
the United States. Over the next several weeks, President Roosevelt received contradictory advice about
further action.
FDR’s military advisers recommended the exclusion of persons of foreign descent, including American
citizens, from sensitive areas of the country as a safeguard against espionage and sabotage. The Justice
Department initially resisted any relocation order, questioning both its military necessity and its
constitutionality.
But the shock of Pearl Harbor and of Japanese atrocities in the Philippines fueled already tense race
relations on America’s West Coast. In the face of political, military, and public pressure, Roosevelt
accepted the relocation proposal. The Attorney General acquiesced after the War Department relieved
the Justice Department of any responsibility for implementation.
On February 19, 1942, President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 granting the War Department
broad powers to create military exclusion areas. Although the order did not identify any particular
group, in practice it was used almost exclusively to intern Americans of Japanese descent. By 1943, more
than 110,000 Japanese Americans had been forced from their homes and moved to camps in remote
inland areas of the United States.
The documents contained in this selection are from the collections of the Franklin D. Roosevelt
Presidential Library and Museum and are intended to reflect the many sides of this issue
Document 1: J. Edgar Hoover to Edwin M. Watson, December 10, 1941:
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover routinely forwarded information for the President through military
aide and presidential secretary General Edwin M. “Pa” Watson. Thi
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