Japanese internment camps in the United States during World War II were primarily focused on the forced relocation and confinement of Japanese Americans, often without due process, based on wartime hysteria and racial prejudice. In contrast, German concentration camps were sites of systematic extermination, forced labor, and brutal treatment aimed at genocide, particularly against Jews and other targeted groups. While both involved severe human rights violations, the scale and intent of the German camps were vastly different, with the latter being part of the Holocaust. Thus, the two types of camps were more different than similar in their objectives and outcomes.
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