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2026 FIFA World Cup
7JUN

Iran Arrives in Tijuana, 14 Staff Barred

3 min read
10:36UTC

Iran's squad landed in Tijuana with all 23 players holding US visas, but 14 federation officials were refused entry. The federation is preparing a FIFA complaint on level-playing-field grounds.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Iran's players are cleared, but 14 staff are barred and the squad can cross only on match day.

Iran's squad landed in Tijuana, the Mexican border city serving as its base camp, early on Sunday 7 June, all 23 players holding US visas, but 14 federation officials refused entry, up from the five reported on 5 June 1. Those denied include vice-president Mehdi Mohammad Nabi and secretary-general Hedayat Mombeini; federation president Mehdi Taj has been barred since Canadian officers turned him back at Toronto Pearson in April. The players flew in from Antalya via Spain after their federation's self-imposed visa deadline lapsed , the squad visas issued by the US embassy in Ankara on 5 June .

Iran's ambassador to Mexico, Pasandideh, says the squad may enter US soil only on match day and must leave straight after, for all three Group G fixtures against New Zealand, Belgium and Egypt 2. That means no acclimatisation and every team meeting held back across the border in Mexico. FFIRI, Iran's football federation, calls the staff denials "vindictive" and "completely political" and is preparing a complaint to FIFA under Article 4 of the World Cup regulations, which guarantees a level playing field; it has not yet been filed.

The on-record US answer came from Secretary of State Marco Rubio at a House Appropriations hearing. "We have no problem with the athletes... or their support staff," Rubio said. "What we're not going to allow is for them to embed in their delegation a bunch of people that we know have nothing to do with athletics and have ties to the IRGC" 3. The line settled the question of an on-record position without naming any individual, leaving striker Mehdi Taremi's clearance confirmed only by inference from the squad's blanket approval.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's football squad arrived in Tijuana, Mexico on 7 June, just across the border from California, with all 23 players having received US visas. But 14 officials from the football federation were refused entry to the US, including the federation's vice-president and secretary-general. The squad's president was already barred since April. Because all three of Iran's World Cup group matches are played on US soil, the squad can only enter the US on match days and must leave immediately after. The federation is preparing a complaint to FIFA arguing this creates an unfair disadvantage. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said publicly that IRGC-linked officials would not be allowed in, even as part of a sports delegation.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Secretary of State Rubio's House Appropriations testimony, cited as the first on-record US position, is structurally different from a consulate-level visa denial. By naming the IRGC nexus publicly, the State Department converted individual security screenings into a categorical policy announcement, making any administrative reversal politically costly for the Trump administration.

The 14-official figure (up from five initially reported) reflects how the US vetting process works: the initial denial covered the most visible delegation members identified in press and FFIRI's own communications. As the processing run-through expanded to lower-profile officials, the denial count grew.

The individual at the expansion frontier was not Mehdi Taj, barred since April , but the media director, whose role has no conceivable IRGC connection, suggesting the screening net is wider than the publicly stated rationale.

FIFO's structural constraint is that it awarded the tournament to a co-host whose State Department had flagged IRGC-linked sports delegation concerns as early as 2024. The Tijuana base-camp approval gave Iran an operational alternative; it did not resolve the delegation-access asymmetry the US created.

Escalation

Escalating. The official count rose from five to 14 between 5 and 7 June . Rubio's public IRGC statement forecloses quiet reversal. FFIRI's Article 4 complaint starts a formal FIFA process with no precedent for resolution before a tournament opens. Iran's match-day-only crossing terms are the operational ceiling for the rest of the group stage.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    FFIRI's Article 4 complaint cannot be resolved before the 15 June first match. If FIFA logs it as substantive and opens proceedings, it creates a precedent for any nation to challenge host-government access decisions in future tournaments, a structural change to FIFA's host-agreement architecture.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    The match-day-only crossing arrangement means Iran's coaching and tactical staff cannot conduct ground-to-stadium reconnaissance visits, pre-match venue walkthroughs, or post-match media commitments on US soil. The preparation handicap is real and unaddressed by any FIFA remedy so far.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Rubio's public IRGC-framing sets a pattern for future state-actor interventions in World Cup delegation accreditation. Every future host can cite the 2026 US precedent when refusing access to officials from nations under national security screening.

    Long term · Assessed
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