Respuesta :

internment of Japanese citizens in camps... they did this because they were afraid that they were Spies for the Imperial Japanese army who had just recently attacked the U.S. at Pearl Harbor.

Internment of Japanese Americans.

During World War II, the internment of Japanese Americans in the United States was the overpowered relocation and confinement in concentration camps in the southwestern heart of the nation of among 110,000 and 120,000 people of Japanese heritage, who used to subsist on the Pacific coast. From 1942 to 1945, it was the system of the U.S. administration that people of Japanese origin would be buried in isolated camps.