I'm from a country whose passport-holders need to get visas to just about every foreign country.(the US excepted)
Whenever I visit German/France/Spain or other Schenge-visa countries, I always have to apply for a Schengen visa in advance. Even as a US permanent resident, I still need to do so. Once or twice, my visa will be rejected for reasons unknown to me. There was also an incident a couple years back that I was not permitted to enter one of the large Schenge countries solely because I was unable to show them proof of medical insurance with coverage for Europe(Blue Cross & Blue Shield in Northeast USA had not yet issued me a card yet because my company had just enrolled me)
Will this change once I become a U.S. citizen or will these Schengen countries still treat me the same way? Even with my US passport, I'm sure my name and birthday and country of birth will probably allow their computer systems to figure out that I'm still the same person, no?
Whenever I visit German/France/Spain or other Schenge-visa countries, I always have to apply for a Schengen visa in advance. Even as a US permanent resident, I still need to do so. Once or twice, my visa will be rejected for reasons unknown to me. There was also an incident a couple years back that I was not permitted to enter one of the large Schenge countries solely because I was unable to show them proof of medical insurance with coverage for Europe(Blue Cross & Blue Shield in Northeast USA had not yet issued me a card yet because my company had just enrolled me)
Will this change once I become a U.S. citizen or will these Schengen countries still treat me the same way? Even with my US passport, I'm sure my name and birthday and country of birth will probably allow their computer systems to figure out that I'm still the same person, no?