In USA
strip citizenship from any who live in enemy country and stop all Social Security, Medicare, disability, and other benefits they may be receiving.
ditto for any who go to fight for an enemy regardless of whom they are fighting.
Congress, the peoples’ house, shall determine who is our enemy, not the Department of State.
EXACTLY !!
The State Dept. and this administration has made so many International blunders, that now we are talking about bombing ISIS (formerly known as al Quada),
the very group that the StateDept. and CIA have been arming and training for the last four years .
ISIS now has our military vehicles ,weaons , and tactics, and has modified and refined them into a "scorched earth" policy of genocide.
Unfortunately, both houses of congress have depended on popular votes for a hundred years. Every member is loathe to risk alienating muzzie support. Keeping one’s job is job #1. There is no second.
Love that 17th Amendment.
This is the current law in the US:It took some digging but I found it:
POTENTIALLY EXPATRIATING ACTS
Section 349 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1481), as amended, states that U.S. citizens are subject to loss of citizenship if they perform certain specified acts voluntarily and with the intention to relinquish U.S. citizenship. Briefly stated, these acts include:
1.obtaining naturalization in a foreign state (Sec. 349(a)(1) INA);
2.taking an oath, affirmation or other formal declaration to a foreign state or its political subdivisions (Sec. 349(a)(2) INA);
3.entering or serving in the armed forces of a foreign state engaged in hostilities against the U.S. or serving as a commissioned or non-commissioned officer in the armed forces of a foreign state (Sec. 349(a)(3) INA);
4.accepting employment with a foreign government if (a) one has the nationality of that foreign state or (b) an oath or declaration of allegiance is required in accepting the position (Sec. 349(a)(4) INA);
5.formally renouncing U.S. citizenship before a U.S. diplomatic or consular officer outside the United States (sec. 349(a)(5) INA);
6.formally renouncing U.S. citizenship within the U.S. (but only under strict, narrow statutory conditions) (Sec. 349(a)(6) INA);
7.conviction for an act of treason (Sec. 349(a)(7) INA).