Answer:
Option B.
Step-by-step explanation:
National security concerns over individual liberties, is the right answer.
In acknowledgement to the Japanese aggression on Pearl Harbor during the Second World War II, the U.S. government determined to order Japanese-Americans to march into relocation homes as a subject of state protection. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Franklin Roosevelt, the then U.S. President approved an Executive Order 9066. According to this order, Japanese-Americans had to move to the relocation camps and when a person Fred Korematsu denied following the order the Court stated that internment of Japanese Americans was legal.