In short:Iran says it will "definitely" compete in the 2026 FIFA World Cup hosted in the United States.The national governing body has insisted players and staff who served their military service with the Revolutionary Guard will be given visas.What's next?All three of Iran's group matches will take place in the USA, with matches against Belgium, New Zealand and Egypt.Iran's football federation said on Saturday the country "definitely" would participate in the 2026 FIFA World Cup.However, they insisted that tournament hosts — the United States, Canada and Mexico — consider Tehran's concerns around the team's travel and how it will be treated."All players and technical staff, especially those who served their military service in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, should be granted visas without problems," Football Federation Islamic Republic of Iran president Mehdi Taj said, according to Iranian media.In the statement carried by the state-run IRNA news agency, Taj said on Friday that Iran had presented conditions tied to participation, including guarantees over visas, security and treatment of Iranian players and officials, and added that the Islamic Republic would take part "without retreating from our beliefs, culture and convictions".Iran is in a fragile ceasefire with the United States after the US and Israel sparked a war with attacks on Iran on February 28.Iranian citizens are currently subject to a travel ban imposed by the Trump administration.The remarks came after Canadian authorities last month denied entry to Taj ahead of a FIFA Congress, reportedly because of his past ties to Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guard, which both the US and Canada have designated as a terrorist organisation.Taj has repeatedly said that Iran would seek assurances from FIFA that Iranian officials and players, and the national flag and anthem, would be treated with respect during the World Cup.Concerns over issuing visas to people who had completed their mandatory military service in the Guard had been raised previously by others.The matter potentially could affect one of Iran's key players, Mehdi Taremi, team captain and a striker who had completed his mandatory military service in the Guard.In Iran, conscripts also can be assigned to the police or the army, often at random.Iran's team has drawn with Belgium, New Zealand and Egypt in Group G and opens the World Cup against New Zealand in Inglewood, next to Los Angeles.Iran has qualified for four consecutive World Cups and seven overall but has never advanced out of the group stage. Currently ranked number 21 in the world, Iran lost just one match in the Asian qualifying.APThe ABC of SPORTSports content to make you think... or allow you not to. A newsletter delivered each Saturday.
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