The Asian Football Confederation confirmed that Iran has not formally withdrawn from the 2026 World Cup 1. Despite sports minister Ahmad Donyamali's 11 March declaration that Iran "cannot participate," no official notification has reached either the continental confederation or FIFA headquarters in Zurich. The gap between political rhetoric in Tehran and bureaucratic action is now five weeks and counting.
FIFA sources told ESPN that firm decisions are unlikely before the FIFA Congress on 30 April 2. That date falls six weeks before the tournament opens on 11 June. For Group G opponents Belgium, Egypt and New Zealand, the uncertainty is more than procedural. Training camps, tactical preparation and broadcasting arrangements all depend on whether they face a three-team or four-team group — and FIFA has given no indication of contingency scheduling.
The delay reflects two distinct institutional realities. Inside Iran, the power vacuum following Khamenei's death has left no single authority able to impose a unified position. Sports minister Donyamali and FFIRI President Mehdi Taj issued directly contradictory statements within eight days of each other — Donyamali declaring participation impossible, Taj insisting Iran would compete but boycott US venues 3. Inside FIFA, the organisation's governance structure provides institutional cover for inaction: the Congress is the supreme decision-making body, and president Gianni Infantino has no incentive to force a resolution before it convenes.
Historical precedent offers limited guidance. Yugoslavia was expelled from the 1992 European Championship under UN sanctions — an external legal bar. Afghanistan's Taliban government was suspended by FIFA on political grounds. Iran's situation — a qualified nation whose own government cannot agree on whether to compete — has no direct parallel in FIFA's history. The Congress on 30 April will either produce a resolution or push the question into the final weeks before kick-off, when the logistical cost of any change multiplies.
