The 1942 Internments and Today's Security Crisis
By Timothy M. Roberts History News Service
Following the terrorist attacks in New York and
Washington on Sept. 11, scholars, politicians and
journalists have reported and condemned acts of revenge
against Arab people living in the United States. To
emphasize the injustice of such vigilantism, these voices
refer to the infamous forced relocation during World War II
of some 120,000 Japanese-Americans and Japanese resident
aliens. Looking back on the Japanese internment allows us to
see what is unique about the threat to our national security
today and perhaps make better judgments on the treatment of
Arab-Americans.
Following the surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on
Dec. 7, 1941, hysteria gripped the United States. Americans
feared an attack on the U.S. mainland. Sporadic vigilantism
erupted against Japanese residents, whose race made them
seem possible conspirators. On Feb. 19, 1942, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered the designation of "military
areas" along the Pacific coast and the removal from them of
anyone deemed a national security threat. While the order
legally encompassed Germans and Italians, in practice only
the Japanese were removed; they were shipped to guarded
relocation centers in the interior.
The Japanese became the only targets because of their
relatively small numbers; the physical features that
identified them as "Japanese"; and the fact that nine of ten
Japanese on the U.S. mainland lived near the Pacific. All of
these factors made detaining them relatively simple.
The situation now is far different. There are an
estimated three million Arab-Americans in the United States.
They constitute about 1 percent of the U.S. population, ten
times greater than the Japanese-American proportion -- a
tenth of 1 percent -- in the 1940s. Although there are large
clusters of Arab-Americans in Los Angeles, Detroit, Chicago
and Brooklyn, they live in all states. Many Arab-Americans
are united by language and culture, but unlike the Japanese
they do not share a single "race" or one "Arab" physical
appearance. Even logistically -- never mind policy reasons
-- internment of Arab-Americans by the government would be
practically impossible.
Although the Japanese internment, once it began, was
relatively easy to accomplish, it met fierce resistance from
the U.S. attorney general at the time, Francis Biddle. A
month after Pearl Harbor, Biddle declared, "Every man who
cares about freedom must fight for the right of the
minority, for the chance for the underprivileged with the
same passion of insistence as he claims for his own rights."
The fact that an internment policy was not enacted until
some three months after Pearl Harbor reflects Biddle's
stubborn, if futile, resistance to the plan.
Currently, the attorney general, John Ashcroft, has
condemned retaliation against domestic scapegoats. On Sept.
13, Ashcroft warned, "Reports of violence and threats
[against Arab-Americans] are in direct opposition to the
very principles and laws of the United States and will not
be tolerated." Ashcroft's public defense of Arab-Americans
echoes the fight for protection of Japanese rights by his
World War II predecessor.
But while in 1942 the attorney general tried vainly to
protect Japanese civilians against a U.S. government
crackdown, today Ashcroft has warned only against private
reprisals against Arab people -- vigilantism. We cannot yet
know what the government itself may actually do. President
Bush spoke on Sept. 20 of the need to protect "homeland
security" with a "comprehensive national strategy" involving
FBI agents, intelligence operatives and military reservists.
He created a cabinet-level position to administer these
measures. All this implies a possible compromise of
important civil liberties.
Two overriding developments prodded the U.S. government
to go forward with Japanese internment. The Japanese
military won a frightening string of victories in the
Pacific in the weeks after Pearl Harbor. Hong Kong, the
Philippines, Guam and Singapore all fell by February 1942.
Stark news of these events confirmed for Americans the
reality of war as well as the need for extraordinary
security actions at home -- that is, the roundup of people
of Japanese ancestry.
Today, despite the president's claims, the United States
is not at war. The country is not engaged in resisting an
enemy army and navy openly committed to imperial expansion,
as were Japanese forces in World War II.
The other vital force prodding the government to crack
down on the Japanese in 1942 was American journalism. In the
first weeks after Pearl Harbor, U.S. newspapers and radio
echoed the attorney general's pledge to protect Japanese
civil liberties. But six weeks after Pearl Harbor, Walter
Lippmann, the most influential American journalist of his
age, began writing newspaper columns urging removal of all
persons from the entire West Coast who could not justify
their presence there. Japanese internment followed swiftly
after Lippmann and other opinion-shapers called for it.
The role of journalists at the present time is
potentially the same as it was in 1942. Journalists again
will influence whether a minority group will be denied
democratic protections as the United States fights for
abroad. If journalists begin calling for a crackdown on
Arab-Americans, we cannot be sure that the government will
resist. That is the most relevant lesson we should take
today from the failure of democracy within the United States
during World War II.
Timothy M. Roberts teaches history at The Metropolitan
State College of Denver and is a writer for the History News
Service.
[Timothy M. Roberts, 1771 South Forest St., Denver, CO
80222. Telephone: (303) 733-3218; fax: (303) 556-2671;
e-mail timandemily@mindspring.com.]
History News Service
Co-Directors:
Joyce Appleby: appleby@history.ucla.edu
Telephone: 310-470-8946
James M. Banner, Jr.: jbanner@aya.yale.edu
Telephone: 202-462-5655
Website designed and administered by Christopher
Bates.
This article was posted on October 11, 2001.
Pictured at top (left to right): Martin Luther,
Oliver Cromwell, Slave and author Olaudah Equiano, A wagon
train heads West, Mao Zedong, The Berlin Wall.
|