In the aftermath of Pearl Harbor, a growing number of Americans began to direct their anger toward people of Japanese ancestry. In the days and weeks after Pearl Harbor, several newspapers declared Japanese Americans to be a security threat. President Roosevelt eventually responded to the growing anti-Japanese hysteria. In February 1942, he signed an order that allowed for the removal of Japanese and Japanese Americans from the Pacific Coast.

This action came to be known as the Japanese-American internment. More than 110,000 men, women, and children were rounded up. They had to sell their homes and possessions and leave their jobs. These citizens were placed in internment camps, areas where they were kept under guard. In these camps families lived in single rooms with little privacy.

About two-thirds of the people sent to live in internment camps were Nisei, Japanese Americans born in the United States. Many Japanese Americans argued that internment for racial reasons was unconstitutional. The Supreme Court, however, upheld internment throughout the war. However, in 1988 Congress apologized for the treatment of Japanese Americans during WWII and voted to pay survivors of the camps $20,000.

Question: When did the US government officially acknowledge that the wartime incarceration was the result of racism, hysteria, and failed political leadership and issue a formal apology to Japanese Americans?

A. 1950
B. 1960
C. 1975
D. 1988

D. 1988