Pekka Savola wrote:
On Sun, 18 Feb 2007, Michael StJohns wrote:
At 06:29 PM 2/18/2007, Janet P Gunn wrote:
My guidebook says 6 months.
Feel free to argue with the US State Dept.. :-)
I don't think it's the US State Dept you will need to argue with but
rather the officials in Prague
On 2007-02-19 00:57, Michael StJohns wrote:
At 06:29 PM 2/18/2007, Janet P Gunn wrote:
My guidebook says 6 months.
Feel free to argue with the US State Dept.. :-)
The US State Dept web info is inconsistent with the Czech Embassy
web info. We are trying to get definite confirmation from
My guidebook says 6 months.
This is a PRIVATE message. If you are not the intended recipient, please
delete without
At 06:29 PM 2/18/2007, Janet P Gunn wrote:
My guidebook says 6 months.
Feel free to argue with the US State Dept.. :-)
Mike
___
Ietf mailing list
Ietf@ietf.org
https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf
On Sun, 18 Feb 2007, Michael StJohns wrote:
At 06:29 PM 2/18/2007, Janet P Gunn wrote:
My guidebook says 6 months.
Feel free to argue with the US State Dept.. :-)
I don't think it's the US State Dept you will need to argue with but
rather the officials in Prague Airport..
--
Pekka
There are some countries that require not just a *valid* passport, but
one which won't
expire for 6 months beyond when you visit a country. Is Prague in one
of these countries (for US citizens)?
I've heard conflicting things.
If it does have the requirement (that a passport has to be valid
http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_pa_tw/cis/cis_1099.html
3 months is the requirement.
At 09:03 PM 2/17/2007, Radia Perlman wrote:
There are some countries that require not just a *valid* passport,
but one which won't
expire for 6 months beyond when you visit a country. Is Prague in
one