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I live in the USA with a Green Card but am a citizen of the UK and a UK Passport holder. I am thus to the USA/US Immigration a foreign passport holder.
This is from the CBP.gov website... "Foreign nationals that are lawful permanent residents of the U.S. must present a Permanent Resident Card ("Green Card", INS Form I-551), a Reentry Permit (if gone for more than 1 year), or a Returning Resident Visa (if gone for 2 years or more) to reenter the United States. U.S. LPRs are not required by the U.S. to have a passport for travel, although most foreign destinations will require you to have one to enter their country. (LPRs that are out of the U.S. for more than 180 days are subject to new immigrant inspection procedures as per 8 USC 1101.)" So, should be no problem. The foreign country will check your passport, and the US will check your green card.
A passport from your country of citizenship
You may be able to obtain a passport from your country of citizenship, but not from the country that has issued you a green card: passports identify and verify citizenship. Visit your country's consulate if you're not living in your country of citizenship, or the passport office in your country of citizenship to verify your rights to a passport. It will be important to disclose that you are holding a green card from another country.
None - you need a passport. A Green Card is not a substitute for a passport.
I live in the USA with a Green Card but am a citizen of the UK and a UK Passport holder. I am thus to the USA/US Immigration a foreign passport holder.
You NEVER have to surrender your foreign passport. When you are sworn in as a US citizen at the oath-taking ceremony you do have to give up your permanent resident card (green card).
Any country than an American citizen can go to, but only from the US(show the Green Card and passport in destination country) and back to the US or your home country. Just don't forget your passport and a Green Card anywhere!
If you are South Africa: your green barcoded ID document or passport or drivers licence If you are foreign: your passport (for identification purposes)
No. NTSA guidelines require a passport (foreign or US), US passport card, green card or US drivers license or non-drivers license.
Yes, you always need a passport when you travel outside your country of origin.
Unknown what is meant by a "green passport." Residents of The Philippines are not US citizens and their entrance into the US is governed according to the applicable US laws controlling the entry of ANY foreign national into the US.