In a dramatic policy shift, Iran’s football federation has withdrawn its threat to boycott the 2026 World Cup but firmly stands against playing in the United States. Mehdi Taj, head of Iran’s football, clarified that the national team remains committed to the tournament while boycotting American-hosted matches.
The tri-nation event, spanning June 11 to July 19 across the US, Mexico, and Canada, faced uncertainty after Iran’s earlier refusal to compete in the US due to security fears stemming from US-Israel hostilities. As an early qualifier, Iran wants to participate fully but on its terms.
Taj revealed plans for a Turkey-based training camp with friendlies ahead. ‘Our focus is on readiness, minus any US games,’ he stated via Fars News. This retracts Sports Minister Ahmad Donyamali’s prior claim of a total pullout. Iran’s group stage pits them against Belgium, Egypt, and New Zealand in the US.
FIFA insists on schedule compliance and is in dialogue with Iran. Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum noted the decision rests with the world body. With Iran’s principled stand rooted in perceived aggressions, the question lingers: can FIFA find a workaround to keep the qualifiers intact without escalating diplomatic rows?