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Aim orginaly born in the United Kingdom, and now live in the states as a green card holder (Residental Alian), but if i want to work for Nasa or Lockheed I must become a US Citizen, but i dont want to give up my UK Citizenship. Is is possible for me to become duel Citizen?

If so anyone have any more information or can anyone point me in a direction? I been searching the net for a while and not been able to get a good answer, so thought i try Y! Answers.

Thanks in advance.

2006-07-10 09:51:24 · 9 answers · asked by MP 2 in Politics & Government Immigration

9 answers

You don't have to be a US Citizen to work for NASA or Lockheed, there are several people working for Boeing that are US Residents, or are contracted from other countries. You might have to sign alot of paper work NDA (Non Disclouser Agreement) saying you will not give out any company information to outside sources. Since companies like Lockheed have contracts with the US Government. You might have to clear their background checks first though, before working there

Yes, you can retain your UK citizenship. The US has several treaties with many countries allowing duel citizenship. The UK being one of them. You will not have any trouble becoming a US citizen since your from the UK.

However if you want you can go to the US Immigration office (most big cities have them) and ask for information you need at the front counter. But I found going to the Immigration office more like running around in circles and sometimes the person at the front counter does not have all the answers you need and you just end up being passed along to someone else. Also depending when you go you might have to take a number and wait your turn sometimes it's fast sometimes it takes forever. I'd recomend going to immigration attorney, who would know how to handles matters such as yours. If you dont' want to pay huge attorney fees you can go to your cities/county Bar Association webpage and look for legal clinics where attorneys do Pro Bono on immigration (since it's experience for them plus they get CLE credits for doing Pro Bono Work) and they can help you with any information you might have.

2006-07-10 10:23:50 · answer #1 · answered by rainy32 4 · 0 0

The UK is fine with it and the US looks the other way. Just don't flaunt it about was the advice I got from the immigration lawyer. How does one renounce their citizenship anyways? Not keep the passport up to date? It is not going to be a problem :)

Call your congressman and ask to speak to the immigration liaison, they will find out definitively for you.

2006-07-10 09:58:54 · answer #2 · answered by Midwife Jane 4 · 0 0

The US does not recognize dual citizenship. In fact as part of the oath of citizenship, you have to explicitly renounce any prior allegiances.

However, many other nations do recognize dual citizenship..like Mexico. I don't know if the UK does however.

2006-07-10 10:42:11 · answer #3 · answered by Gahrie 1 · 0 0

Yes.

I'm a duel citizen of the US and South Africa. I did become so at a young age, but still, you can become one at any point in life.

I would talk to your local UK embassy. Even talk to the people at Nasa or Lockhead- they might be able to aid you if you're qualified to work for them.

2006-07-10 09:55:49 · answer #4 · answered by lookdontlook 3 · 0 0

NASA or Lockheed are likely to want better spelling skills than you demonstrate here. "Dual" citizenship questions probably could be answered through your embassy.

2006-07-10 09:55:19 · answer #5 · answered by kingstubborn 6 · 0 0

Yes, legally, you may maintain dual citizenship. However, you may find it difficult to work with the organizations you listed, especially if the position requires a security clearance.

2006-07-10 10:05:11 · answer #6 · answered by Curious1usa 7 · 0 0

I think that depends on US and UK rules about such things. My brother was born in Greece, but the US doesn't recognize that, so I don't know if it works the other way or not.

2006-07-10 09:55:05 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2016-12-01 00:33:54 · answer #8 · answered by compo 3 · 0 0

Why don't you just pick one country? Might make life simpler...

2006-07-10 10:59:21 · answer #9 · answered by gokart121 6 · 0 0

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