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groomit

Citizenship eligibility???

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Hi All,

Okie, this question has probably been asked a couple of times. :blush::blush: ...but here is the context.

Married in 10/2005, wife USC.

Got Green Card in 10/2006.

I was interested in NAVY's careers and went to see a recruiter. Unfortunately, only US Citizens are eligible to apply for job in NAVY. I explained my case and the officer told me that I could apply for citizenship right now without waiting for the 3-year green card expiration ???

He said that if I had a statement saying that my citizenship application was in process, I could then apply for job in NAVY...

So, question : has anybody heard about such a thing???

Thx,

Groomit

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

I have not heard of what you are describing being possible, but that certainly does not mean it isn't true.

I am sure someone else here on VJ will be able to give you an answer.

Good luck.

"THE SHORT STORY"

KURT & RAYMA (K-1 Visa)

Oct. 9/03... I-129F sent to NSC

June 10/04... K-1 Interview - APPROVED!!!!

July 31/04... Entered U.S.

Aug. 28/04... WEDDING DAY!!!!

Aug. 30/04... I-485, I-765 & I-131 sent to Seattle

Dec. 10/04... AOS Interview - APPROVED!!!!! (Passport stamped)

Sept. 9/06... I-751 sent to NSC

May 15/07... 10-Yr. PR Card arrives in the mail

Sept. 13/07... N-400 sent to NSC

Aug. 21/08... Interview - PASSED!!!!

Sept. 2/08... Oath Ceremony

Sept. 5/08... Sent in Voter Registration Card

Sept. 9/08... SSA office to change status to "U.S. citizen"

Oct. 8/08... Applied in person for U.S. Passport

Oct. 22/08... U.S. Passport received

DONE!!! DONE!!! DONE!!! DONE!!!

KAELY (K-2 Visa)

Apr. 6/05... DS-230, Part I faxed to Vancouver Consulate

May 26/05... K-2 Interview - APPROVED!!!!

Sept. 5/05... Entered U.S.

Sept. 7/05... I-485 & I-131 sent to CLB

Feb. 22/06... AOS Interview - APPROVED!!!!! (Passport NOT stamped)

Dec. 4/07... I-751 sent to NSC

May 23/08... 10-Yr. PR Card arrives in the mail

Mar. 22/11.... N-400 sent to AZ

June 27/11..... Interview - PASSED!!!

July 12/11..... Oath Ceremony

We're NOT lawyers.... just your average folks who had to find their own way!!!!! Anything we post here is simply our own opinions/suggestions/experiences and should not be taken as LAW!!!!

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Wales
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Might be confusing it with being able to get accelerated citizenship if you are in the armed forces, not the other way around.

PR's can join the Army, did not know the Navy was different.

“If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.”

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Russia
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Hi All,

Okie, this question has probably been asked a couple of times. :blush::blush: ...but here is the context.

Married in 10/2005, wife USC.

Got Green Card in 10/2006.

I was interested in NAVY's careers and went to see a recruiter. Unfortunately, only US Citizens are eligible to apply for job in NAVY. I explained my case and the officer told me that I could apply for citizenship right now without waiting for the 3-year green card expiration ???

He said that if I had a statement saying that my citizenship application was in process, I could then apply for job in NAVY...

So, question : has anybody heard about such a thing???

Thx,

Groomit

Well, military recruiters don't know much about immigration :)

Permanent residents can join the military, Navy is not an exception. However, they cannot get positions that require security checks, because the military can only perfom security checks on US citizens, so the choice of jobs will be severly limited. Also - and that's important - if you are a green card holder, the expiration date on your card should be further away in time than the date that you expect to be discharged from the military. The standard commitment is 4 years, so conditional residents probably can't serve at all! :angry: But I would look into it some more, cause the rules are very unclear. I don't think the military has adressed the issue of conditional residency very well :(

You cannot apply for citizenship now. The recruiter was wrong. Sure, you can file an application, but it will be denied. The recruiter probably said that because to qualify for government jobs (police, fire department, 911 operator), you need to be a US citizen OR have a pending citizenship application. In your case, you can't have a pending application, because it will be denied right away.

What I know for sure - permanent residents can join the military, and they qualify for citizenship after one year of service (active duty, not reserve).

Filed AOS from F-1
Green Card approved on 01/04/07
Conditions removed 01/29/09

Citizenship Oath 08/23/12

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
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not reserve???? the "army reserve" just came here the other day and offered citizenship to all the Dominican Republic students here that are U.S. Permanent residents.

so you have to be full-time active service and not reserve then?

Oct 29th 2004 -Met online
Oct 29th -First phone call
Dec 25th -She purposed and i said Yes!
May 10th I-130 Packet and Packet 3 sent off to me by the U.S. Consulate
May 16th -Received Packets 1-3 from the U.S. consulate
June 29th -I arrived in Puerto-Rico!
July 2nd -Married in Mayaguez, Puerto-Rico and also got our interview date for September 6th
August 17th -We arrived in Australia to file for Sep. 6th
September 6th - Filed DCF in Sydney and approved 1 hour later!
September 12 -Received my passport with the visa and yellow packet
November 24th -POE.......Guam,USA
December 12, 2005-Green Card arrived in the mail
September 11, 2007 -Filed I-751 on conditions
September 17 -VSC Receives my I-751 and issues NOA1
Oct 10 -Had biometrics taken in San Juan, Puerto Rico ASC
Oct 12 -Touched.
Aug 21, 2008 -Approved!...........finally
Sep 17, 2008 -Mailed off N-400
Oct 22, 2008 -Biometrics taken in San Juan ASC
Feb 12, 2009 -N-400 Interview
Feb 26, 2009 -Oath.....the end.

....................................*What we do in this life will have an echo in the life to come*...............................

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Filed: Country: United Kingdom
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not reserve???? the "army reserve" just came here the other day and offered citizenship to all the Dominican Republic students here that are U.S. Permanent residents.

so you have to be full-time active service and not reserve then?

hey Bret :)

There was an interesting thread with the detailed information not too long ago. I did not know that the different branches of the Services have different requirements (PR, CPR etc) for signing on. It might be worth crawling through the regs at uscis.gov in the Natz section for the answer to your Q.

Was wondering about you two the other day.. things looking up, I hope?

Now That You Are A Permanent Resident

How Do I Remove The Conditions On Permanent Residence Based On Marriage?

Welcome to the United States: A Guide For New Immigrants

Yes, even this last one.. stuff in there that not even your USC knows.....

Here are more links that I love:

Arriving in America, The POE Drill

Dual Citizenship FAQ

Other Fora I Post To:

alt.visa.us.marriage-based http://britishexpats.com/ and www.***removed***.com

censored link = *family based immigration* website

Inertia. Is that the Greek god of 'can't be bothered'?

Met, married, immigrated, naturalized.

I-130 filed Aug02

USC Jul06

No Deje Piedras Sobre El Pavimento!

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Well, military recruiters don't know much about immigration :)

Permanent residents can join the military, Navy is not an exception. However, they cannot get positions that require security checks, because the military can only perfom security checks on US citizens, so the choice of jobs will be severly limited. Also - and that's important - if you are a green card holder, the expiration date on your card should be further away in time than the date that you expect to be discharged from the military. The standard commitment is 4 years, so conditional residents probably can't serve at all! :angry: But I would look into it some more, cause the rules are very unclear. I don't think the military has adressed the issue of conditional residency very well :(

You cannot apply for citizenship now. The recruiter was wrong. Sure, you can file an application, but it will be denied. The recruiter probably said that because to qualify for government jobs (police, fire department, 911 operator), you need to be a US citizen OR have a pending citizenship application. In your case, you can't have a pending application, because it will be denied right away.

What I know for sure - permanent residents can join the military, and they qualify for citizenship after one year of service (active duty, not reserve).

This is an excellent post.

A little more info. To be an officer in military, you have to an U.S. citizen. If you plan on re-enlisting in the military after your original commitment, you have to be U.S. citizen.

Military naturalization is covered by sections 328 and 329 of the Immigration and Naturalization Act. You have to serve at least one year in the military to apply under section 328. This usually applies to active duty military. Under section 329, you have to serve during an authorized period of conflict (war). This applies to active duty or reserve military.

The original poster might want to speak to another recruiter.

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