Sign in
Edition of 06:00 CETThursday, 11 June 2026
287 outlets · 16 languages0 briefings today
Sunday, 7 June 2026 · Edition of 20:00 CET

Iran’s World Cup Squad Arrives in Mexico Amid Visa Row with Host United States

The Iranian football team landed in Tijuana after US authorities denied visas to key staff, forcing a last-minute training camp relocation and restricting entry to match days, casting a shadow over the tournament.

Sport30 outlets7 languages3 min readUpd. 21:10

Iran’s national football team touched down in Tijuana, Mexico, early on Sunday, establishing a base camp across the border from San Diego after a protracted visa dispute with the United States — a host nation formally at war with Tehran. The squad’s overnight flight from Turkey, where they had trained for three weeks, ended months of uncertainty over whether they would be able to compete in the World Cup at all. US officials confirmed on Friday that players and “necessary support staff” had been issued visas, but simultaneously warned that Iran would not be permitted to abuse the system to “sneak terrorists into the United States” [A29]. The team’s original plans to train in Tucson, Arizona, were abandoned in late May as the visa logjam grew [A12].

The diplomatic breakdown has left Iran’s delegation sharply truncated. Iranian sources said 15 administrative and technical staff — including the federation’s executive director, secretary general, and media director — were denied entry clearance [A2] [A6]. In a statement posted on social media, Iran’s embassy in Ankara decried “the worst possible form of politically biased interference in sport” and accused Washington of a “whitewash” [A1]. Iranian Ambassador to Mexico Abolfazl Pasandideh disclosed that the squad would be allowed to cross into the US only on match days, entering in the morning and forced to depart the same evening [A4]. Mexico’s government, which agreed to host the Iranian camp at FIFA’s request, said it saw no reason to refuse [A3].

The confrontation is unprecedented in the 96-year history of the men’s World Cup. Never before has a host nation been in open military conflict with a participating team. US and Israeli strikes on Iran in February, which killed Tehran’s supreme leader, have turned the tournament into a geopolitical flashpoint. Viewed from Western capitals, the visa restrictions are a security necessity; from Tehran, they are a calculated effort to humiliate and disrupt. “You have now escalated the deliberate and discriminatory treatment,” the embassy post read [A29]. Regional analysts note that the row extends beyond the team itself: international press groups say many Iranian and African journalists have also been denied US visas, hindering coverage of their own sides [A14].

The practical toll on Iran’s preparations is severe. Head coach Amir Ghalenoei thanked Mexico and FIFA for their support but complained that the team’s delayed arrival — which he said should have happened a week earlier — has left players struggling with a 12-hour time difference [A6]. FIFA has reiterated its pledge that all qualifying nations would be able to compete under normal conditions, yet the governing body is now under pressure from both Iranian officials and media rights organizations to intervene [A15]. With the World Cup opening in Los Angeles on 11 June, Iran’s disrupted build-up and the uncertain status of its support staff raise questions about competitive fairness.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa iraniana e affini · regimeStampa israeliana · sicurezzaStampa latinoamericana · bolivariana_progressista
Stampa iraniana e affini/ regimeindignazionevittimismo

Iran frames the visa denial for staff as politically motivated interference that betrays sporting ideals, pressuring FIFA to honour its promises. The episode shows how geopolitical tensions undermine fair participation at the World Cup.

Stampa israeliana/ sicurezzapragmatismoscetticismo

US visa restrictions on Iranian staff are cast as an essential security precaution to prevent hostile elements from exploiting the tournament. The emphasis is on the legitimacy of safeguards against a state regarded as a wartime adversary.

Stampa latinoamericana/ bolivariana_progressistaindignazioneallarme

The arrival of the Iranian squad in Tijuana highlights how US hostility has turned the World Cup into a geopolitical battleground. Mexico emerges as a supportive host that shelters a team caught in a war-driven dispute, while Washington imposes harsh entry restrictions.

This story appeared in

30 sources · 7 languages · 24h window

ExcelsiorJun 7, 18:01
Viva.co.idJun 7, 19:05
Le FigaroJun 7, 14:39
La NaciónJun 7, 20:15
France 24Jun 7, 12:20
Citizen TVJun 7, 12:21
MSNBCJun 7, 19:03
Al-Monitor Iran PulseJun 7, 18:04