Posted on Sep 10, 2014
If you serve in the military, should that give you a fast track to citizenship?
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So there have been several threads about service and citizenship.
My question is this, if a person swears to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States of America from all enemies, foreign and domestic", and they are not yet a citizen of the United States, should their military service put them on the fast track for citizenship?
I attended a citizenship service while on my mob, there were service members there from all branches, to include a couple of my Sailors. It was very moving and I was proud of all of them.
They raised their right hand and swore to support and defend our Country and Constitution, with the dream that one day they would become a citizen.
My question is this, if a person swears to "support and defend the Constitution of the United States of America from all enemies, foreign and domestic", and they are not yet a citizen of the United States, should their military service put them on the fast track for citizenship?
I attended a citizenship service while on my mob, there were service members there from all branches, to include a couple of my Sailors. It was very moving and I was proud of all of them.
They raised their right hand and swore to support and defend our Country and Constitution, with the dream that one day they would become a citizen.
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 28
If you are willing to serve the US Army, then you should have an easier way of becoming a citizen.
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I may be mistaken, but I was under the impression that they were already provided a less cumbersome (for lack of a better term) track for citizenship. If not, then I would agree that they should be granted faster processing.
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MSG Wade Huffman
SCPO (Join to see) , it would appear that they do.
http://www.uscis.gov/military/citizenship-military-personnel-family-members
http://www.uscis.gov/military/citizenship-military-personnel-family-members
Citizenship for Military Personnel & Family Members
USCIS recognizes the important sacrifices made by non-U.S. citizen members of the U.S. armed forces and their families. USCIS is committed to processing their naturalization applications in a timely a
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SFC (Join to see)
MSG, Every military post has a INS representative on it. They take care of military members trying to get citizenship and for spouses getting residency or citizenship. For a military member the filing costs and lawyer fees are waived and all paperwork is expedited rather than having to wait years for ins to contact you. As I mentioned before it took me 10 years to get my residency. As for spouses I am not completely sure what their SOP is for those circumstances.
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If an immigrant serves in the U.S. Military honorably, he or she should be given the fast track to citizenship. Having said this, I do not include illegal immigrants, though they probably would not enlist except under fraudulent conditions; false I.D. or other documents.
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I do not think that non US citizens should be allowed in the US military. I know that they do serve, and some do very well. I believe for security reasons they should not serve.
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Suspended Profile
YES! Some of the best service members I met were foreign nationals and they loved America. Most were great guys and they were willing to put on the uniform and had the courage to go into harms way.
Not sure if anyone has said this yet or not, but those young men and women who join the Marines take a package to Recruit Training and get their citizenship the day before they graduate. So it's in place. 13 weeks is pretty quick I think.
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I feel that it depends. There are a lot of jobs that come with minimal increased risk compared to the civilian equivalent. Especially in times of peace. In those instances, I say no fasttrack, instead just simplify the process or reduce the expense involved. For those who serve in increased hazard positions, especially in wartime, then I'd say you've earned a fasttrack ticket.
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Years ago, if you were an immigrant and served your 20 years in the US service, you were awarded citizenship
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