Iran will not participate in the World Cup this summer amid the ongoing U.S. and Israeli-ledstrikes on the nation, the country's sports minister said Wednesday.
Ahmad Donyamali, Iran's minister of Sport and Youth, made the announcement via the official state Islamic Republic News Agency, calling the conditions unsuitable for Iranian participation in the event.Iran's soccer team wasslatedto kick off itsWorld Cupcompetition June 15 in Los Angeles, facing off against New Zealand, the first of three scheduled group play matches.
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The FIFA website still lists the match on its official schedule for that day.
"What has happened in the past few months shows that the conditions for our national football team to participate in the World Cup do not exist and this team will not participate in the upcoming event," Donyamali said in a statement, according to IRNA.
In a separate statement to the semi-official Iranian Students' News Agency on Wednesday, Donyamali said "a rogue country is hosting the World Cup," adding that "we expect FIFA to react to this."
"Given that a corrupt government has come and assassinated our leader, we are not in a position to attend the World Cup," Donyamali stated, according to ISNA. "Our team members have no security at all to attend the World Cup."
The United States is co-hosting the 2026 World Cup with Canada and Mexico, with matches being played across all three North American nations.
President Donald Trump met with FIFA president Gianni Infantino on Tuesday and told him that the Iranian soccer team is welcome to participate atthis year's World Cup, a White House official and a source familiar with the conversation told ABC News.
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Sources described it as a "long" meeting that included the White House's World Cup task force executive director Andrew Giuliani, the son of former New York City mayor and former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani.
The Iranian women's soccer team has also faced uncertainty due to the ongoing war.
Seven members of theIranian women's national soccer teamwere granted asylum in Australia this week, as international concern grew around the fate of the team, who had been playing in a tournament there when the U.S. war with Iran started.
The team had faced criticism from Iranian state media after some of its players refused to sing along with their country's national anthem ahead of their March 2 match against South Korea.
FIFA has not yet responded to ABC News' request for comment.
ABC News' Nicholas Kerr contributed to this report.
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