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I'm sure that if a Canadian Hornet pilot offers his service in the States, they won't say no....
Max
Max
SupersonicMax said:I'm sure that if a Canadian Hornet pilot offers his service in the States, they won't say no....
Max
Dutch pilot was on attached posting flying the CF18.... not quite the same situationCougarKing said:Well that Hornet pilot would have to get his immigration status cleared away first in the States, since any US military branch is prohibited by law from assisting non-resident foreigners in the immigration process. Immigration status comes first, regardless of your qualifications- it's not like that Dutch Air Force pilot here in Canada who got into Aircom before getting citizenship (which he got recently), as mentioned in earlier in another thread.
rz350 said:Does that apply to USAF as well? And to officer? Or just NCM?
Towards_the_gap said:Just to clarify one minor point. There is no 'British Foreign Legion'. If you join the British Army/Royal Navy/RAF as a commonwealth citizen, you are enlisted on the same contract as the native brits, at the same rate of pay, and in the same unit. For an example, in my squadron at the moment there are: Nepalese (not a gurkha, from hong kong), St Lucian, Jamaican, South African, Zimbabwean, Ghanian, Ugandan, Canadian (me) and Kiwi.
When I joined the 5 year residency thing was mentioned, as it is now, on the website, but in reality, I arrived in London in Feb, went to the careers office after checking into a hostel, and 2 months later was on the train to basic training. The only proviso is that any citizenship/immigration needs are to be dealt with solely by yourself, for example, if I were to serve the full 22 year career, at the end of it, if I had not done anything about it, I would have 28 days following my discharge to leave the country, with no inherent right to stay. It normally takes 5 years residency to qualify for citizenship, and luckily time served out of the country but whilst in the forces does count.
ronnychoi said:Good thread here. I am personally waiting to get sponsored for citizenship by the U.S Marine Corps. They are very welcoming.. My friend is 22 years old and he has fought in Falluja already. Some stories he had were crazy to say the least. He said it was a good time...most of the time. There are many more armed organizations in the world other than the Canadians. Take your pick. :-\
Towards_the_gap said:the who?
GAP said:Is that what is required now?
I went down, the USMC sponsored me as a landed immigrant(1966), I was offered US citizenship 2 years later to comply with security regulations, but declined unless I could retain my Canadian citizenship.
ronnychoi said:Basically you just need to get sponsored by a higher up in the organization you are wanting to join. In my case I was born in Manitoba and I do not have dual citizenship. Its tough (as in tedious) to get a working visa but possible. I heard many a Canadian had served in the Vietnam conflict. As for health benefits and such, I can mooch the Canadian system if need be. Pension is available to me if I stay in for xx number of years. In regards to promotions, why would they put someone incompetent in front of a potentially excellent soldier?
Albeit this is my plan B. Plan A is the Canadian army, and plan C is the Royal Marines. Plan D is French-Serbo Legion.
Basically you just need to get sponsored by a higher up in the organization you are wanting to join
ronnychoi said:My friend is 22 years old and he has fought in Falluja already. Some stories he had were crazy to say the least. He said it was a good time...most of the time. There are many more armed organizations in the world other than the Canadians. Take your pick. :-\