Well, that seems to quick to keep a country safe, but the American process seems to take to long. There should be a middle ground.
I’m American, my DH is Belgian (Flemish). Initially, we planned to live in the US, as I’m very close to my family. Then we saw what was involved.
Instead, I moved to Belgium. We were engaged August 2006. I got all my papers together (birth certificate, letter from the SOS of the state I was born in, couple other forms, total cost about $30).
We went in person with my forms to the American Embassy in Brussels in January 2007 - a blast, by the way, the soldiers posted there are the definition of Southern gentlemen, all the clerks were friendly and helpful and professional, the mix of people in the waiting room soooo interesting. Anyway, that took a whole day and about 100 euros. I had to sign a bunch of new papers and swear an affidavit that I was who I said, and was not currently married to anyone else.
June 2007 I moved over here, and we had to register with his local district house for marriage, which is right around the corner. I think we went about 3 times, spending about 10 minutes each, mostly filing old papers/signing new ones.
Married August 2007, and formally announced the marriage at the district house.
September 2007 had a “spot-check” by a police officer who came by to verify I was indeed living here - it took 5 minutes, he looked at my passport, and we both signed a paper. DH’s grandfather was a police officer though, and we think that made it quicker than usual.
First week of October 2007 got my orange card (ie green card) stating I’m here legally as the spouse of a Belgian citizen. Early November I got into the health care system. I’m officially a resident alien (no plans on giving up my US citizenship).
I now have to do a mandatory integration program that includes 54 hours of social classes where you meet other expatriates and learn how to function in Flemish society, and take 5 months of Dutch language courses. There is an optional employment training course that I plan on taking in the future if my health improves - and I’ll be placed in a job I choose. This is all paid for by the government - if I want to take more Dutch classes after the 5 months, we’ll have to pay 80 euros.
Not complying with the classes means fines though, and not deportation. I’m also not allowed to leave the EU until February 2008, or I could possibly be refused re-entry. And there are supposed to be more random spot-checks by the police, but no one has shown up yet.
So total time, about 9-10 months, I’d say. Cost including train tickets to Brussels and whatnot is under 200 euros. I’ve heard that having a baby here is harder, if we desire dual citizenship (you have to bring the mother and baby to the American embassy in person within 14 days of the birth!). mostly it was a lot of signing our names and making sure we filed the correct forms in the correct order.
Edited to add that when my orange card expires in two years, unless I’ve been convicted of a felony or something, I automatically will be given permanent residency with no more interviews/paperwork/money.