United States Immigration News
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USCIS Holds First Military Naturalization
Ceremony on Kandahar Airfield in Afghanistan
Ceremony held closer
to where U.S. forces serve
KANDAHAR,
Afghanistan - For the first time since U.S. military forces deployed to
Afghanistan for Operation Enduring Freedom, 88 soldiers, sailors, airmen and
Marines from 37 countries became citizens of the United States during a special
naturalization ceremony on the Kandahar Airfield on Oct. 1, 2010. Before now,
all naturalization ceremonies in Afghanistan have been held on the U.S. military
airfield in Bagram.
Keeping with the U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) commitment to “bring immigration
services to the troops wherever they serve,” a three-member team from the USCIS
Bangkok District Office traveled to Kandahar to complete the naturalization
process and hold the ceremony close to the battlefields where the American
forces serve.
Steve Bucher, Deputy
Director of USCIS’s Refugee, Asylum and International Operations Directorate,
also traveled to Kandahar to preside during the ceremony. He explained that
while the citizenship candidates interacted with the three USCIS officers in
Afghanistan, completing the process involved a much larger effort and
coordination with USCIS offices in the United States.
That coordination also
involved working with the military’s Joint Sustainment Command in Afghanistan to
ensure that all the servicemembers scheduled to naturalize could travel to
Kandahar to complete the naturalization test and recite the Oath of Allegiance
to the United States.
After administering
the Oath, Bucher told the new citizens, "It is important for you to keep in mind
that citizenship is not the end of your journey. It is the beginning, both for
yourselves and for your families."
Since 2004, when the
overseas naturalization program began, USCIS has naturalized 583 members of the
U.S. military deployed in Afghanistan.
USCIS will continue to
bring immigration services to members of America’s armed forces and their
families stationed on military installations across the United States and
abroad. Since September 2001, USCIS has naturalized more than 63,800 members of
the military in ceremonies across the United States and in the following 21
countries: Afghanistan, Djibouti, China (Hong Kong), Cuba (Guantanamo), El
Salvador, Germany, Greece, Haiti, Honduras, Iceland, Iraq, Italy, Japan, Kenya,
Kosovo, Kuwait, Oman, Philippines, South Korea, Spain, and the United Kingdom.
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