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They are not eligible for US Veteran's benefits. There should be no reason they cannot receive any British Veteran's benefits they are entitled to.
you aren't entitled to veteran's benefits through the VA. You could be entitled to benefits directly through the military IF he died on active duty
Your question is incomplete. That being said, we'll try to anticipate where you were going with it, and give an answer based on that anticipation. Assuming you're referring to the girlfriend of a veteran, they're not entitled to anything. No educational benefits, no SGLI benefits, nothing. A spouse or child would be; a boyfriend or girlfriend is not. If the girlfriend is the veteran, she is entitled to benefits - her boyfriend (or girlfriend, if applicable) would not be.
Short answer, no.
Any Veteran who has been honorably discharged.
There are scholarships available - http://www.military.com/benefits/veteran-benefits/georgia-state-veterans-benefits
Yes, the spouse of a veteran may be eligible for certain health care benefits through the VA, including prescriptions and medical care. Eligibility may depend on various factors such as the veteran's service-connected disability status and income level. The best way to determine eligibility and access these benefits is to contact the local VA facility or VA benefits office.
If she isn't a veteran, no. Only a vet can use the veteran benefits.
No
The Department of Veterans' Affairs, commonly called the VA. Yes, medical and disability benefits can be granted to a spouse. The spouse must need Aid & Attendence and can receive up to $140 a month. Also the DVA can grant (on a space available basis) health care in one of its hospitals. If the Veteran is rated 100% P&T or 100% IU, the spouse and children are entitled to CHAMPVA (if the veteran isn't a uniformed retiree - there are seven services USPS, NOAA, Army, Navy, MC, USCG, and USAF).
IF you are already using medical benefits from the VA then the date you were accepted will be on a form you filled out in order to enroll in that clinic. If you haven't yet applied then you became eligible for service the moment you became a veteran.
If you were served from 1957 to 1960 and weredischarged under other-than-dishonorable conditions then you are a qualifying veteran for VA purposes. However, veteran status does not in and of itself confer any benefit. If you have disability caused or aggravated by service, you are entitled to service-connected disability benefits. Because 1957-1960 was not a wartime period, you are not entitled to non-service-connected pension benefits. You may also be entitled to a home loan guarantee benefit, but any GI Bill education benefit you had was likely extinguished decades ago. See 38 CFR Chapter 3. http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=ecfr&tpl=/ecfrbrowse/Title38/38cfr3_main_02.tpl