Inernment? and it was Japanese, or people of Japanese decendants, that lived in the U.S.
Pearl Harbor!
Japanese-Americans.
There were no US soviets, the US have senates.
the US camps supplied food and did not require hard labour or other hard conditions.
If you are talking about the Holocaust, some Jews were hidden by kind people, and some escaped the country before they got put in concentration camps. Some survived the camps.___________Many were beyond the reach of the Nazis - for example, those in the US.
US citizens of Japanese ancestry were put in camps because they looked different. The concern was that they would rise up and create civil disorder, though this was not thought of those with Italian or German ancestry.
Pearl Harbor!
After Pearl Harbor the Japanese Americans were rounded up and put into interment camps. They lost businesses, farms, and homes.
Although there is a general reference to 10 Japanese internet comps in the US during the second world war. The data on German and Italian camps is harder to find. There was also a camp for Alaskan natives.
Japanese-Americans.
The US joined WWII and put all Japanese people in internment camps.
The racist Americans of the 1940s realized they could not put all the Italians and Germans into internment camps to weed out spies. They would have had to put half of New York City citizens into internment camps. There were millions of them in the US at that time as there are now too. There were not as many Japanese so they put them into the camps illlegally.
An internet search did not find any US President with Milton as a middle name. President Nixon's middle name was Milhous.
It was an attempt to make the population feel safer, under the ruse of 'national security'.
FDR (Franklin Delano Roosevelt) signed a executive order that would put the Japanese Americans (most were loyal to the US, actually) in the internment camps.
Yes, sadly, they did. They were German Jews, but they were put in for being German. It was just sad and ironic that they happened to be Jewish.
Often through malnutrition and infectious diseases, Russian soldiers in German camps - and vice versa - and Allied soldiers in Japanese camps much more so than British and American soldiers in German camps. German prisoners of war were often shipped to the US and put to work there on farms and in factories.