Answer:
The question is incomplete. This is the complete question:
What territories did the US gain as a result of winning the Spanish-American War?
The territories gained by the US included Cuba, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines
Explanation:
The Treaty of Paris (1898)—which was a treaty signed by the US and Spain, and a product of the Spanish-American War—consisted of agreements and terms of negotiation that favored the US, and allowed it to gain the territories of Cuba, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines—which, prior to the Paris treaty of 1898, were controlled by Spain. The US became a major power and player in the Pacific region after it gained these territories.
Executive Order 9066 stated that all people (regardless of race, religion, ethnicity, etc.) from all military areas as "deemed necessary or desirable." Using this terminology allowed FDR and the federal government to not only move Japanese-American citizens but also German-American and Italian-American citizens. The reason why these three specific groups were targeted was because they were all part of the Axis Powers. So one of the correct answers would be the one that relates to the fact that all citizens could be moved by this act.
With the original terminology in mind, the military then declared the entire state of California as a war zone, allowing them to target a huge Japanese-American population (roughly 100,000+ people). However, there was no limit as to where the military could declare a war zone. Essentially, wherever the military saw fit, they could declare a war zone in order to move American citizens.
It was a respectful petition to King George III was to declare their right to approve laws passed by the parliament.