World War II Day by Day World War II was the single most devastating and horrific event in the history of the world, causing the death of some 70 million people, reshaping the political map of the twentieth century and ushering in a new era of world history. Every day The Daily Chronicles brings you a new story from the annals of World War II with a vision to preserve the memory of those who suffered in the greatest military conflict the world has ever seen.

ROOSEVELT TOLD WEST COAST JAPANESE POSE NO SECURITY RISK

Washington, D.C. November 7, 1941

Relations between the U.S. and Japan grew chilly in mid-1941 after Presi­dent Frank­lin D. Roose­velt froze Japa­nese assets in the U.S. and embar­goed oil and gasoline exports to Japan in retal­i­a­tion for that coun­try’s occu­pa­tion of Indo­chinese air­fields in what is today Viet­nam. The year before Roose­velt had banned exports of avi­a­tion fuel, machine tools, and scrap iron and steel in response to Japan’s mili­tary incur­sions in China. Would piling sanc­tions on top of sanc­tions fire up U.S.-born and immi­grant Japa­nese living in the U.S. to a point where they could pose a danger to the inter­nal peace and secu­rity of the country? The president set to find out.

A wealthy businessman and State Depart­ment Special Repre­sen­ta­tive, Curtis B. Munson, was tapped to con­sult with “Naval and Army intel­li­gences and the F.B.I.” (Fed­eral Bureau of Inves­ti­ga­tion) as to whether U.S. resi­dents of Japa­nese descent—about 127,000 in the con­ti­nen­tal U.S. and Hawaii—posed a secu­rity risk. Munson spent a week in each of the 3 West Coast naval dis­tricts. He inter­viewed Japa­nese nationals, Japa­nese Amer­i­cans, as well as those who knew them well. He researched Japa­nese Amer­i­can racial, cul­tural, asso­ci­a­tional, reli­gious, and polit­ical factions and social divi­sions. The results filled several reports on what collec­tively was called the “Japa­nese Ques­tion on the West Coast,” which Munson sent to pres­i­den­tial envoy John Frank­lin Carter in Octo­ber 1941 and which Roose­velt also read. Carter sub­mitted Munson’s com­pi­la­tion of his West Coast notes to Roose­velt on this date, Novem­ber 7, 1941. Copies were for­warded to U.S. Navy brass and Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson.

In examining national security risks on the U.S. West Coast, Munson divi­ded resi­dents of Japa­nese ancestry into 3 groups. There were the Issei (pro­nounced “ee-say”), immi­grant first-gener­a­tion Japa­nese who remained citi­zens of Japan; they com­prised roughly 33 per­cent of the target com­mu­nity. Then there were the Nisei (pro­nounced “nee-say”) who were U.S.-born second-gener­a­tion Japa­nese; they com­prised close to 66 per­cent of the target com­mu­nity and were rapidly growing in num­bers. Lastly there were the Kibei (pro­nounced “kee-bay”); they were also U.S.-born second-gener­a­tion Japa­nese, but they spent all or part of their life in Japan. The Issei, age 55 to 65+, had weakened loyal­ty to the land of their birth by virtue of making their home in the U.S. and bearing chil­dren here. The Issei were strongly attached to the land as farmers, the sea as fisher­men, and to their U.S. busi­nesses and jobs, Munson wrote. The Nisei, age 1 to 30, “in spite of discrim­i­na­tion against them and a cer­tain amount of insults accu­mu­lated through the years from irres­pon­si­ble ele­ments, showed a pathe­tic [!] eager­ness to be Amer­i­cans.” Munson con­sidered the Kibei “the most dan­ger­ous” of the 3 groups, standing closer to the Issei than to the Nisei owing to their schooling in Japan. He partly walked back his warning about the Kibei, remarking “all a Nisei needs is a trip to Japan to make a loyal Amer­i­can out of him” because “[t]he Amer­i­can-edu­cated Japa­nese is . . . treated as a for­eigner and with a certain amount of contempt there.”

Recapping his findings, Munson ended his report by stating: “There is no Japa­nese ‘pro­blem’ on the [U.S. West] Coast. There will be no armed up­rising of Japa­nese . . . in case of a war between the United States and Japan. . . . There will be undoubt­edly some sabo­tage financed by Japan and exe­cuted largely by imported agents. . . . For the most part the local Japa­nese are loyal to the United States or, at worst, hope that by remaining quiet they can avoid concen­tra­tion camps or irresponsible mobs.”

Alas, in the wake of Japan’s Decem­ber 7–8, 1941, air and naval strikes on U.S. mili­tary assets at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the Philip­pines, and Wake Island, deten­tion camps sprang up almost over­night to incar­cer­ate all but a few Japa­nese nationals and Japa­nese Amer­i­cans living in Cali­for­nia, Oregon and Washing­ton states, and a third of Arizona. Under Roose­velt’s Febru­ary 19, 1942, Exe­cu­tive Order 9066, the U.S. com­mitted the worst offi­cial civil rights vio­la­tion in modern Amer­ican history. (See photo essay below.)

Executive Order 9066 Cleared the Way for the Forced Exile and Relocation of West Coast Enemy Aliens and Japanese Americans to a New Existence in Detention Camps Far from Their Homes

Executive Order 9066: U.S. internment camps for Japanese Americans and enemy aliens

Above: Map showing (a) the massive World War II exclusion area (Mili­tary Areas 1 and 2) and (b) dozens of sites of con­fine­ment in the conti­nen­tal U.S. for over 126,000 Japa­nese nationals (“alien enemies”) and Japa­nese Amer­i­can citizens (labeled “non-alien enemies”) who primarily resided in 4 Western states as well as for over 31,000 sus­pected enemy nationals and their fami­lies interned under the Enemy Alien Con­trol Pro­gram. Ten hastily built confine­ment sites, euphe­mis­tically called “relo­ca­tion centers,” are iden­ti­fied by black tri­angles. The relo­ca­tion centers were located in 7 states all west of the Mis­sis­sippi River and cost the govern­ment $40 mil­lion annually to oper­ate. All these centers were built in out-of-the-way places, many in deso­late high deserts or swamp land. Iden­ti­fied by stars are facil­i­ties admin­is­tered by the U.S. Depart­ment of Justice and the U.S. Army. It was to these often former Civil­ian Con­ser­va­tion Corps camps that Japa­nese arrested between Decem­ber 8, 1941, and early 1942 were exiled indef­i­nitely—that is, before Exec­u­tive Order 9066 was in place. Indeed, the full extent of war­time incar­cera­tion includes thou­sands of German and Ital­ian nationals living in the U.S. or deported from Cen­tral and South Amer­ica, plus relo­cated Alaskan natives, Japa­nese Latin Amer­icans, and some Japa­nese Hawai­ians. These unfor­tunate people, along with Japa­nese nationals and Japa­nese Amer­i­cans, were incar­cerated in 75 U.S. govern­ment-run facili­ties. On Decem­ber 17, 1944, the Roose­velt admin­is­tra­tion rescinded Exec­u­tive Order 9066, ending mass forced reloca­tion and allowing people who were incar­cer­ated to return to the West Coast exclu­sion area. Except for Tule Lake Segre­ga­tion Center in North­ern Cali­for­nia, the WRA camps would be emptied by the end of 1945. In the map legend WCCA = War­time Civil Con­trol Administration and WRA = War Relocation Authority, successor to WCCA.

Executive Order 9066: San Francisco newspaper headline, February 27, 1942Executive Order 9066: Posted exclusion order

Left: “OUSTER OF ALL JAPS IN CALIFORNIA NEAR!” San Francisco Examiner head­lines of Japa­nese relo­ca­tion, Febru­ary 27, 1942. Photo by Doro­thea Lange. Lange was 1 of 3 photo­graphers the WRA hired in 1942–1943 to take photos of the 10 WRA-run confinement camps. Two other photo­graphers were Clem Albers and Francis Stewart.

Right: Official notice of exclusion and removal, April 1, 1942. Photo­graph by Dorothea Lange. The posted exclu­sion order directed Japa­nese Amer­icans living in the first San Francisco sec­tion to evac­u­ate. Years before the Decem­ber 7, 1941, Japa­nese bombing of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the U.S. govern­ment had drafted plans to round up and incar­cer­ate some Japa­nese Amer­icans and Japa­nese nationals and had already placed some West Coast com­mu­ni­ties under su­rveil­lance. This in spite of year’s worth of FBI and naval intel­ligence data that attested to resi­dents of Japanese descent posing no national security threat.

Executive Order 9066: Mochida family awaits evacuation bus, May 8, 1942Executive Order 9066: Young Japanese American evacuee and baggage, Spring 1942

Left: With luggage tags affixed to their clothing—an aid in keeping family units intact during all phases of their forced removal—members of the Moriji Mochida family await an evac­u­a­tion bus in Hay­ward, Ala­meda County (San Fran­cisco Bay area), Cali­for­nia, May 8, 1942. On the lug­gage tags was written the family’s desig­nated iden­ti­fi­ca­tion num­ber. Mochida’s youngest child was 3. The Mochidas had oper­ated a 2‑acre/­0.8‑hectare nur­sery and 5 green­houses in San Lean­dro, Ala­meda County, before their incarceration. Photograph by Dorothea Lange.

Right: The forced exodus of Japanese in Los Angeles started in late March and April 1942. Staring into uncer­tainty 2‑year-old Yuki Oki­naga Haya­kawa, clutching a tiny purse and an apple with a few bites gone, waits with the family’s allot­ment of bag­gage before leaving a chaotic scene at Los Angeles’s Union Sta­tion. The child and her single mother even­tually arrived, like most Japa­nese Angelenos in March and April, at Man­za­nar War Relo­ca­tion Cen­ter, more than 200 miles/­322 kilo­meters north of LA in Cali­for­nia’s Owens Valley, which would be their home for the next 3½ years. Each dis­placed family mem­ber was permit­ted to take bedding and linens (no mat­tresses), toilet arti­cles, extra clothing, and “essen­tial per­sonal effects,” but nothing more; in other words, only what could be carried. Photograph by Clem Albers.

Executive Order 9066: Poster protests summary evacuation order, Spring 1942President Reagan signs 1988 Civil Liberties Act

Left: The Matsuda family of Oakland, California, closed this grocery and Japa­nese goods store in March 1942 following orders to persons of Japa­nese descent to vacate certain West Coast areas (Mili­tary Area 1; see map above). Son Tatsuro, a Uni­ver­sity of Cali­for­nia grad­u­ate, placed the “I AM AN AMER­I­CAN” sign on the family’s store front soon after the events at Pearl Harbor. Dec­la­ra­tions like this family’s were insuf­fi­cient to over­come the sus­pi­cion and con­tempt directed at people who looked like the enemy and who, it was com­monly assumed at the time, remained loyal to Japan and its em­peror Hiro­hito (post­humously referred to as Emperor Shōwa). Photo­graph by Dorothea Lange.

Right: In 1944 the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the consti­tu­tionality of the exclu­sion orders, described by many Amer­i­cans as the worst offi­cial civil rights vio­la­tion in modern U.S. history. After years of law­suits and nego­ti­a­tions, on August 10, 1988, Presi­dent Ronald Reagan signed the Civil Liber­ties Act of 1988, which formally acknow­ledged that the war­time exclu­sion, mass removal, and confine­ment of Japa­nese Amer­i­cans had been unrea­son­able and uncon­sti­tu­tional. The act granted $20,000 in repa­ra­tions to each sur­viving Japa­nese Amer­i­can (about 82,000 people), costing the U.S. Treas­ury $1.6 billion. It took a decade to locate all eligi­ble U.S. recip­i­ents and deliver them their checks and formal apol­ogy. A late 20th-cen­tury study con­cluded that the inter­nal govern­ment deci­sions that led to Presi­dent Roose­velt issuing Exe­cu­tive Order 9066 were based on racial preju­dice, war­time hysteria, and failed political leadership.

Injustice Camouflaged as Military Necessity: Japanese American Intern­ment During World War II