You can only apply for a Vietnamese passport if you are a citizen of Vietnam or eligible to be naturalized. So even if you have an alien residence card but is not eligible for citizenship, you can't get one.
Can a legal alien live in USA without a passport.
how can a alien resident update his passport? how can a alien resident update his passport?
Alien? If he or she is Alien then no. But if he/she human then yes need passport.
Passports are not required for travel inside the US. Anyway, non-citizens, legal or not, are not eligible for US passports.
Technically you only need your I-55I card to travel between Canada and the United States as a permanent legal resident although Canadian customs does state that carrying a passpost cannot hurt and can help speed things along.
you do not need to carry a passport as a permanent resident alien when traveling in the us, IF you have a state id, or drivers license. i have done it before, and never been asked about my passport. even when i gave up my green card, i still had a valid drivers license , which i used to at the airport.
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where do naturalized US citizens with a US passport find their alien registration number? Answer #2 if you are a naturalized US citizen with a passport you no longer have the alien registration number as you are a naturalized Citizen.
Yes. A latvian alien passport is the same as a Schengen Visa. This means that you can travel to any of the schengen states (include Norway), live for up to 90 days without any problems. For stays beyond 90 days, you need a visa from the state where you wish to reside.
An alien is not illegal as long as she/he has documentation of status. An alien who is documented to be a permanent resident is not illegal. If the alien does not have and never has had documentation of an immigration status, then that person is an illegal alien.
Japanese citizen wife, current alien registration, needs information on proper travel documents to travel to japan to establish residence. She does not have a current Japanese passport.
This is the same question as if you are a U.S. permanent resident, as the "Green Card" or permanent residence card is Immigration Form I-551. Essentially No, not until you fulfill and undergo requirements for U.S. citizenship by naturalization. Up until then you are a foreign national or alien.