One reason for the attack on Pearl Harbor can be traced back to the creation of the League of Nations, in which Japan felt considerably belittled by non-Asian member countries. The constant underestimation of Japan’s military power made the attack on Pearl Harbor an immense shock to the US and made them aware of the threat Japan posed. Following the attack, President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s executive order forbid the presence of Japanese American persons near military bases and areas because their ancestry made sabotage more likely (Zick). The next order forced the evacuation of 120,000 Issei and Nisei from their homes on the Pacific Coast into one of ten internment camps under the veil of “national security concerns” during World War II, a time period that struck Americans with a great amount of fear (Zick). However, since no specified threat warranted movement of a person to a camp, many incarcerations were made on the basis of race alone (Lilly). Paul Ohtaki, a camp survivor, gave his recollection of the first FBI raids in his hometown of Bainbridge Island, Washington. During the raids, federal agents discovered dynamite sticks in the homes of few Japanese families, who were used to clear farmland and replenish the fertile soil for the beginning of the strawberry season, and the heads of those households were …show more content…
United States was the first case in 1944 that questioned internment as a violation of the Fifth Amendment rights and it resulted in the Supreme Court upholding the constitutionality of the incarceration (Lilly). At the time, the military claimed there was no way of distinguishing a national menace from an upright civilian, and so the Fifth Amendment rights were subordinate to the president’s war powers at the high point of World War II (Lilly). During a 1983 appeal of the Korematsu case judgment, hidden Navy intelligence reports from 1942 were discovered that stated, “there was no military justification for the President's action,” still, as 37 years had already passed, the reparation claims were denied due to the six-year statute of limitations (Pawalek; Hessbruegge). It would be decades until Japanese Americans were compensated for their government-issued trauma when Congress passed the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which indemnified the remaining camp survivors with $20,000 each