Typically the child will have Dual Citizenship until they reach the age of 18, at which point they have to determine which citizenship they were going to go with.
YES, if the father has retained his american citizenship,no problem. In fact you can have dual citizenship Canadian AND American.
Never.
No you do not.The only person that doesn't have citezenship in America is the person from overseas.Another answer:Marriage to a foreign citizen does not affect one's own citizenship. If the new spouse wishes to obtain US citizenship, the laws of the home country determine whether or not that individual either gets dual citizenship or loses the original citizenship. For example, if a bride from New Zealand marries an American, she may gain US citizenship and retain her New Zealand citizenship. If a Chinese bride seeks US citizenship, though, China will not permit her to retain her Chinese citizenship.
The baby will have US citizenship.
The child will have dual citizenship in Canada and America. It depends on why the couple was in Germany. If he was stationed there for military reasons, the child will have no type of German citizenship.
An American cannot join the Chinese army unless they denounce their citizenship with America since China does not honor duel citizenship. You also have to be a legal resident of China.
Have you applied & received citizenship or were you born in America? Then you would be an American Citizen.
If your birth certificate was filed in the United States of America then you are automatically an American citizen. If you also claim citizenship with another country, the United States government asks that you choose your citizenship to one or the other.
America
it grants the child citizenship, but not the mother or father if they were not born in America.
No. He was born with dual citizenship British/American, his British citizenship was transferred to Kenyan when Kenya became independent and he lost his Kenyan citizenship at age 23 because he didn't renounce his American citizenship (Kenya doesn't allow dual citizenship). So currently and since age 23 he holds citizenship in only one country--The United States of America.
Contact the nearest US consulate, go there and register your child's birth. The certificate they will give you will act as citizenship certificate. Then apply for your child's passport so that s/he can travel to the US with you too.