On 9 May 2026, Mehdi Taj, president of the Iran Football Federation (FFIRI, the national governing body in Tehran), read a formal 10-point ultimatum on Iranian state television addressed to the United States, Canada and Mexico. FFIRI made 5 of the 10 conditions public; the remaining five stay private. The most consequential demands US visas for every member of the travelling delegation, including squad players who served mandatory Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC, a US-sanctioned branch of Iran's military) conscription, naming Mehdi Taremi, the Inter Milan striker who served in the IRGC Navy at Bushehr between 2010 and 2012, and Ehsan Hajsafi. The remaining published demands cover the national flag, the national anthem, treatment of staff, and security at airports and stadium routes. Taj closed with a line meant for domestic ears as much as Washington: "We will participate in the World Cup tournament, but without any retreat from our beliefs, culture, and convictions." 1
Iran has spent 38 days escalating. Antalya on 1 April delivered a private goodwill agreement . Marco Rubio, the US Secretary of State, narrowed the IRGC carve-out on 24 April to "support staff posing as journalists or trainers" . Canada Border Services Agency denied Taj himself entry at Pearson on 29 April under Canada's IRGC designation . Donald Trump endorsed Iran's participation in the Oval Office on 30 April , and FIFA president Gianni Infantino told the 76th FIFA Congress in Vancouver the next day that Iran would play . Three institutional rebuffs in four weeks have moved Iran from procedural goodwill to a written demand set with named players.
Pearson blocked an administrator on 29 April; the 9 May text names a Serie A striker. Iranian male conscription is universal, which means the ultimatum implicitly extends to any Iran international over thirty. The US State Department kept to script, telling reporters it would "adjudicate each visa application on a case-by-case basis after rigorous review" and declining to pre-clear anyone. Rubio's 24 April formulation, written around journalists and trainers, has no language that addresses an Inter Milan forward who completed naval conscription as a teenager.
The case for treating this as domestic theatre is real: Iran's training base at Kino Sports Complex in Tucson is still preparing for a 10 June arrival, FFIRI has not invoked Article 6 force majeure, and Trump's endorsement is on the record. The case against rests on the procedural facts: Taj's text was formal, written, broadcast on state media, and Washington has refused any pre-clearance for Taremi on the record. The next test is whether the State Department signals a Taremi adjudication before the squad's mandatory 10 June arrival window closes.
