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Despite the war, this US city is welcoming Iran’s national team with 'open arms'

Preparations are underway in Tucson, Arizona, to host Iran's World Cup squad despite uncertainty over the conflict.

A small city with mountains in the background
The Iranian national team's base camp for the FIFA World Cup is Tuscon, Arizona. Source: AFP / Rebecca Noble

In brief

  • Tucson is preparing to host Iran's national football team for the FIFA World Cup despite the war in the Middle East.
  • FIFA says Iran will participate as planned, though visa concerns and security uncertainties remain.

In the Strait of Hormuz, US warships menace Iran's oil tankers, while in Washington, US President Donald Trump demands "complete victory". But in Tucson, they're getting ready to welcome the Iranian football team as if nothing were amiss.

The city, an oasis of civilisation in the Arizona desert, is set to be the base camp for "Team Melli" when the world's biggest sporting spectacle, the FIFA World Cup, opens in the US, Mexico and Canada next month.

"We're just excited to host them here, and we're going to give them a positive experience," Sarah Hanna, director of the Kino Sports Complex, where the team will train, said.

Grass is being watered and cut to FIFA regulation height to ensure that players don't get any surprises when they take to the field in Los Angeles and Seattle, the venues for their group-stage games against New Zealand, Belgium and Egypt.

Hotel rooms and meeting spaces are locked in, and security is tight.

A middle-aged white woman smiling. She's leaning against a fence, a football pitch is behind her.
Kino Sports Complex director Sarah Hanna said the Iranian team would have a positive experience. Source: AFP / Rebecca Noble

"Right now, I'm probably averaging about 12 to 20 meetings regarding this training facility a week," said Hanna.

"From our concessionaire for food and beverage ... to lots of grounds meetings with FIFA coming out to check."

The flurry of activity in Tucson comes against the backdrop of a war between the US and Israel on one side and Iran on the other that is now in its 11th week.

Despite a shaky ceasefire in place for a month, hostilities are stubbornly unresolved, with Iran having virtually shut the Strait of Hormuz.

In March, Iran said it was unlikely the team would play in the World Cup unless its matches were moved from the US to Mexico.

Also in March, Trump cast doubt on their presence, saying that while the team was "welcome" to participate, it might not be a good idea.

"I really don't believe it is appropriate that they be there, for their own life and safety," he wrote on social media.

But FIFA organisers have insisted the team will take part in the tournament as planned, so Tucson has pressed ahead with its preparations.

"As far as we're concerned, it's 100 per cent on, and it's never been off," Hanna said.

"Since they've been identified as the team, we've been moving forward as them as our team, until we hear something different from FIFA."

Despite the official position, there's plenty of uncertainty.

On Friday, Iran's football federation president announced the team would participate, but laid down a list of requirements, including around the granting of visas and the treatment of staff.

Concerns are particularly acute for anyone with ties to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, the organisation seemingly in control of the country now, but which the US views as a terrorist group.

Locals in Tucson dismiss Trump's March implied threat about the team's "life and safety".

Male footballers training on a green pitch
There has been uncertainty about whether Iran would participate in the World Cup. Source: Anadolu / Suleyman Elcin

"Our president is known to be a bit bombastic in his use of social media," Jon Pearlman, president of local professional side FC Tucson, said.

"I don't think president Trump or any part of our government will make it their business to make them feel unwelcome or unsafe. I think it will do the opposite."

'With open arms'

At the Kino Sports Complex, Iranian players will have access to the club's weight training facilities, ice baths, and massage tables.

"We welcome them with open arms," Pearlman said.

A man wearing black trousers and a grey polo shirt sitting in front of lockers
FC Tucson founder Jon Pearlman said football was about bringing people together. Source: AFP / Rebecca Noble

"We are part of the world soccer community. We are part of what FIFA is trying to do, and we believe the game is something that brings nations together, not drives them apart."

It is a sentiment widely echoed throughout this multicultural city of 540,000, which leans Democratic.

"I hope that they still feel welcome here," Rob McLane, who plays indoor soccer, said.

"Even though we're doing what we're doing, which is ridiculous," he said of the military operation.

Even near the local military base — whose aircraft regularly fly over the fields where the team will practice — Republican voters drew a clear distinction between sport and geopolitics.

"I'm glad that they're coming," veteran Michael Holley, who thinks the war was necessary to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear bomb, said.

Trump only brought up player safety because he feared "that Iranian athletes would be punished by their own government if they had a voice of their own," the 68-year-old said.

"He didn't mean that the American people are a threat."

But not everyone in Tucson is thrilled about the prospect of the Iranian team being in town.

For some in the city's small Persian community, the players are little more than emissaries from a regime that launched a bloody crackdown on popular protests in January, killing thousands of people.

Ali Rezaei, a 68-year-old IT worker, said it would be "impossible" to support them.

"If there is a demonstration against them, I may go there."


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5 min read

Published

Source: AFP



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