Yes, absolutely.  For example, the Turkmen ambassador in Brussels is
accredited to both Belgium and the European Union. It's not hypothetical
at all, but rather very much real life.

On 11/12/2018 1:51 AM, Graeme Fitzpatrick wrote:
>
>
> On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 at 21:42, Allan Mustard <al...@mustard.net
> <mailto:al...@mustard.net>> wrote:
>
>       * target
>         <https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:target>=* where * is
>         thetwo-character ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code
>         <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2>for the
>         receiving (accrediting) country or organization or the
>         generally accepted English acronym for an international
>         organization (e.g., UN, OSCE, NATO, WTO). If a mission is
>         accredited to multiple countries or organizations, * will
>         constitute a semicolon-delimited list of tags, e.g., target
>         <https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Key:target>=US;CA
>         
> <https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/w/index.php?title=Tag:target%3DUS;CA&action=edit&redlink=1>
>  for
>         a mission accredited to both the United States and Canada.
>
> Thanks - once again sums things up beautifully - you must be good at
> this sort of stuff! :-)
>
> Just for the sake of asking a theoretical question that I know would
> probably never appear in real life :-)
>
> Would / could you also use the multi-letter codes as you show eg NATO,
> WTO, SEATO?
>
> & a mixture of them, so the British Ambassador to Belgium, who is also
> the delegate / representative to NATO (if there is such a thing?),
> would be
> country=GB
> target=BE;NATO
>
> Thanks
>
> Graeme
>  
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