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Football chief seeks Iraqi citizenship for Australian coach Graham Arnold

Former Australian national coach Graham Arnold has become a hero in the Middle Eastern country.

An older white man is held up by football players in a stadium. He waves an Iraqi flag and cheers.
Graham Arnold, Iraq's head coach, helped the team qualify for the FIFA World Cup for the first time in 40 years. Source: Getty / Hector Vivas

In brief

  • Sydney-born coach Graham Arnold has steered the Iraqi national football team to FIFA World Cup qualification.
  • Iraq's football body has requested Arnold receive national citizenship in celebration of the team's success.

Iraq's governing football body has told former Australian football coach Graham Arnold it has sought citizenship on his behalf, after he led their national team to their first FIFA World Cup in 40 years.

Arnold, who coached Australia at the 2022 FIFA World Cup, was appointed as Iraq's head coach in May last year and tasked specifically with helping the team qualify.

They did so by defeating Bolivia 2-1 in April, making the upcoming tournament in the United States the country's first since 1986.

In a video posted on social media, Iraqi Football Association president Adnan Dirjal thanked Arnold for his contribution to the country and wished him "continued success and prosperity" in the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which is just under a month away.

"A full year has passed, and today we enter the second year, and we are very proud of you," Dirjal says.

"Truly, and thank God, you achieved the dream for millions of Iraqis, for more than 46 million Iraqis — you and all the heroic young men who delivered an honourable performance despite all the challenges and circumstances over forty years."

The official then tells Arnold about the citizenship request, as the Australian appears surprised.

"And as we promised you after qualifying for the World Cup, we will make a request through the respected prime minister, who was and still is the biggest supporter in achieving this accomplishment and all our work in the federation during the past four years.

"I told you that we would request Iraqi citizenship for you, and we have sent a request to the prime minister regarding that."

In a separate video, Arnold speaks to the country's prime minister Mohammed Shia' al-Sudani, accompanied by Dirjal and a translator.

"I always believed we would win," Arnold says.

"And the Iraqi mentality was the main point, that we would win. The fighting mentality of the players. And that's what we need to take to the World Cup," he continues.

"Thank you so much for your support."

In a third video, Arnold is shown shaking hands with al-Sudani and tells him: "Now we will shock the world."

SBS News has contacted the Iraqi embassy for comment.

Arnold was met with wild scenes as he arrived back in Australia after securing Iraq's World Cup spot, as hundreds of Iraqi Australians cheered him and celebrated the win.

Many described the Australian as a "hero".

A former Socceroo, Arnold later turned to coaching, and took the head Socceroos role in 2018 after that year's FIFA World Cup in Russia.

He led the team until 2024, when he was replaced by Tony Popovic.

Iraq's World Cup campaign was complicated by the war in the Middle East, with travel for the team becoming a logistical nightmare.

Attention now turns to the World Cup being hosted by the US, Canada and Mexico, where Iraq will face France, Senegal and Norway in the group stage from 12 June.

This story was produced in collaboration with SBS Arabic.

You can watch all 104 games of the FIFA World Cup 2026™ live, free and exclusive on SBS, SBS VICELAND and SBS On Demand.

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4 min read

Published

By Jack Revell

Source: SBS News



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