Yes, you can apply for German citizenship and be a dual citizen regardless of the fact if your mother was still a German citizen or not.
Hitler's father, named Alios Hitler, was a citizen of Austria.
You need to contact the German consulate nearest you (or the German Embassy in Washington) for detailed instructions on how to document German heritage and apply for German citizenship. The rules have changed recently and are continually being updated.
No. Not even marriage to the father grants gives you citizenship. You have to apply for naturalization.
No, unless your father has acquired US citizenship prior to your birth, you cannot claim US citizenship by virtue of birth abroad to a US citizen.
You have an automatic American Citizenship as the father is an American citizen. It doesn't matter whether or not you are born on a military base or if your mother isn't a American citizen.
He is both Mexican and American. He has dual citizenship.
You may have dual citizenship, get in touch with the German Embassy and ask them. If you already own an American Passport that will be enough to visit other countries. If you decide to maintain dual citizenship, you could be called into the German Army for a 1 year assignment which is manditory.
Yes, the child will always be considered German by the German state, because the Mother is German, and American by the US because his father is an American citizen. If you did not apply for both passports when the child was born, you may have difficulty proving your claim. Simply apply for the missing passport and see what is required. Even if both parents are US-Citizen, but Baby is born in Germany. You can get a Dual Citizenship for the Baby. But by the age of 23, he or she has to pick either or Citizenship! Yes, Immigrants get a Social Security number. Immigrants need a Green card and a SSN to be able to live an work in the States. it soley depends on if the baby was born on an American base or in a German hospital if he is born in a German hospital he will always be German, if he is bron in a American base in Germany the baby will be an American and a German baby. Its complicated because in America you need a social security number to be a citizen and imigrants don't get those so i have heard By US law, if one of your parents are a US citizen or you are born on US soil you are a US citizen. By German law if one of your parents are a German citizen you are a German citizen. Also since 2001 if you are born on German soil you become a German citizen. If you get the German citizenship from being born in Germany you must choose which citizenship you want to keep when you turn 18.
This question is meaningless, it is missing punctuation. But the answer of the question "Would having only a birth certificate be absolute proof of citizenship, in the US, if your father was not a citizen and your mother did not meet the requirements for citizenship?" would be no. For example, Czech birth certificates have nothing to do with US citizenship.
Depends if you are also born in the United States. Check with the United States Citizenship and Immigration.
Yes, he does. His father was an American citizen serving military in Germany when he was born.
Yes, you can keep you and your son's duel citizenship and still marry the father of your son in the UK.