During World War II, how did the policy of internment affect people of Japanese descent in the United States? They were forced to relocate to assembly centers. They were forced to relocate to Japan. They were forced to join the military and fight Japan. They were forced to work for the US government.

History · High School · Mon Jan 18 2021

Answered on

1. During World War II, the policy of internment affected people of Japanese descent in the United States by forcing them to relocate to assembly centers. This policy was a result of fear-mongering and racial prejudice against Japanese Americans, whom the government suspected could be spies for Japan.


2. During World War II, the policy of internment affected people of Japanese descent in the United States in the following way:


They were forced to relocate to assembly centers.

Under Executive Order 9066, issued by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1942, people of Japanese descent, including American citizens and immigrants, were forcibly relocated from their homes to temporary assembly centers and then to internment camps. This relocation and internment were based on the fear and suspicion that individuals of Japanese ancestry posed a security risk to the United States during wartime. The internment deprived these individuals of their civil liberties, freedom, and property without due process, impacting thousands of innocent people solely based on their ethnicity.