Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

The beautiful shame

read original more articles
Why This Matters

The article highlights how restrictive US immigration policies have hindered international participation and access during the World Cup, revealing the broader implications of immigration enforcement on global sports and cultural exchange. These policies not only affect athletes and fans but also impact the US's reputation as an inclusive host for major international events.

Key Takeaways

While European tourists marvel at ranch dressing, Buc-ee’s, and other wonders of Middle America, would-be World Cup attendees from Africa, Asia, and the Middle East have experienced a different American pastime: exclusion. President Donald Trump’s nakedly racist immigration policies have prevented scores of people from traveling to the United States for the event — even, in some cases, the players themselves.

Swiss forward Breel Embolo wasn’t allowed to board the team’s flight to the US because of a criminal conviction from 2018 and had to apply for an emergency visa. In the wake of the US’s attack on Iran, the Iranian team moved its training base from Tucson, Arizona, to Tijuana, Mexico, after the State Department denied visas to several players. Customs and Border Protection agents detained Iraqi striker Aymen Hussein at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport, where he was questioned for seven hours and had his phone searched. The team’s photographer was also detained and was denied entry into the US. CBP denied entry to Omar Abdulkadir Artan, who would have been the first Somali referee in World Cup history, because of “vetting concerns,” even though he had already been issued a visa.

Fans, too, have been turned away. One Scottish visitor had his travel authorization revoked an hour before his flight took off. The Trump administration has justified these actions, emphasizing that traveling to the United States is a privilege, not a right — and suggesting that some of the athletes it has turned away are threats to America, despite being some of the world’s most gifted soccer players.

DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin — who also threatened to pull CBP from airports in so-called “sanctuary cities” ahead of the World Cup — defended the visa denials, as did Andrew Giuliani, executive director of the White House task force for the World Cup. “The players, in particular, if it wasn’t for the World Cup, they may not necessarily be allowed to enter the United States,” Giuliani, the son of Rudy Giuliani, told CBS News. Providing few details, Giuliani claimed that Artan, the Somali referee, was denied entry because officials discovered that he had been talking to “some very bad people.” Meanwhile, CBP officials have claimed that Artan was associated “with suspected members of terrorist organizations.”

Jules Boykoff, author of Red Card: The 2026 World Cup, Sportswashing, and the FIFA Greed Machine, described the Trump administration’s stance toward international travelers as an unusual break from World Cup practice. “When you bought a ticket to the Russia men’s World Cup in 2018 or the Qatar 2022 men’s World Cup, that was tantamount to getting a visa,” Boykoff said. “Your ticket was your visa. That is definitely not happening with the United States.”

Boykoff, a professor of political science at Pacific University, said the 2017 joint bid between Mexico, the US, and Canada for the World Cup promised that international travel would be smooth. In addition to claiming that fans would get free transportation to stadiums, the three countries promised that traveling across their borders would be easy for players and attendees alike.

Even FIFA president Gianni Infantino, who awarded Trump the first FIFA Peace Prize, claimed that traveling to the US would be smooth despite the president’s immigration policies. “Everyone will be welcome in Canada, Mexico and the United States for the FIFA World Cup next year,” he said in 2025. “This process will be smooth, and it will ensure that those that qualify will be able to come with their fans.”

“There were a lot of promises made that this was going to be smooth,” Boykoff said. “FIFA has this phrase that they overuse: ‘Football united the world.’ Well, Trump’s policy here for the World Cup in regards to immigration and visas very much divides the world.”

Last December, the Trump administration issued stringent travel restrictions for nationals of 39 countries. Some — including Haiti and Iran, both of which are playing in the World Cup — have had visas banned entirely, while others, like Cote d’Ivoire and Senegal, are subject to a “partial suspension” on visa processing, including for tourists and business travelers. The ACLU issued a travel advisory in April, warning travelers that the “deteriorating human rights conditions in the United States” could lead to arbitrary denials of entry, arrests, detention, and deportation of travelers. A federal judge temporarily blocked the travel ban in early June, but by that point it was too late for most fans to plan travel to the US, much less secure visas.

Days before the World Cup began, Iran’s federation had fan tickets revoked for its three US games, preventing thousands of fans from attending matches in Los Angeles and Seattle. Compounding the problem, Iranian player Mehdi Torabi received a single-entry visa to the US, meaning he wouldn’t be able to return to the country after leaving. Giuliani, of the White House World Cup task force, told The Associated Press that US officials worked with FIFA to ensure Iranian players can enter the country ahead of its matches. He added that some Iranian officials will be denied entry, saying, “as you can imagine, there are some people that claim that they are coaches that may not be coaches,” and implying that some people associated with the Iranian team have ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The US has since eased restrictions on the Iranian team, allowing players to enter the country two days before its Friday match in Seattle.

... continue reading