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Home Sports

World Cup 2026: The flag Iranians are not allowed to wave at stadiums

by Shaimaa Khalil
June 9, 2026
in Sports
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Two women wear t shirts and caps featuring the stylised lion symbol of the flag of Iran's pre-1979 Islamic revolution. They are also holding the flag between them.

Image caption,

The flag of the pre-1979 Islamic revolution, featuring a lion and a sun, is banned from stadiums at the World Cup

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Geopolitical Tensions and the Contestation of National Identity: The Case of SoFi Stadium

The intersection of international athletics and volatile geopolitics reached a critical flashpoint outside SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles on June 15. While the scheduled match between Iran and New Zealand was intended as a display of sporting prowess, the event served as a primary theater for deep-seated political dissent. For the significant Iranian diaspora in Southern California, the match provided a high-profile platform to challenge the legitimacy of the Islamic Republic. This manifestation of protest underscores a growing trend where international sporting venues become proxies for ideological warfare, forcing a re-evaluation of the relationship between national representation and state authority.

The atmosphere surrounding the stadium was characterized by a sharp visual and ideological dichotomy. On one side stood the official symbols of the modern Iranian state, and on the other, an organized movement of protesters utilizing historical iconography to signal their rejection of the current regime. This is not merely a localized grievance; it is a sophisticated attempt to disrupt the narrative of state legitimacy that the Iranian government seeks to project through its national teams. As the match progressed, the stadium’s perimeter became a microcosm of the decades-long struggle for the soul of the Iranian nation.

Symbolic Warfare and the Semiotics of Dissent

The most visible element of the protest was the ubiquitous presence of the Lion and Sun flag. This banner, which served as the official national flag prior to the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has been reclaimed by activists as a potent symbol of secular resistance and historical continuity. From a distance, the green, white, and red tricolor maintains a superficial resemblance to the current official flag, yet the central emblem is the crux of a profound dispute. For the organizers, such as Arezo Rashidian, the Lion and Sun represents the “real flag of Iran,” an artifact of an identity that predates and opposes the current clerical establishment.

In contrast, the official flag of the Islamic Republic,displayed on the national team’s jerseys,features a central emblem composed of four crescents and a sword, forming a stylized version of the word “Allah.” This is further framed by the repetitive Arabic inscription “Allahu Akbar” (God is the Greatest) along the edges of the color bands. To the protesters, these symbols are not inclusive markers of national heritage but are instead viewed as the branding of a repressive apparatus. The rejection of these symbols reflects a deeper refusal to acknowledge the government’s right to represent the Iranian people on the global stage. This semiotic struggle highlights how visual identity remains a primary battleground in the contest for political legitimacy.

Sports Diplomacy as a Tool for State Legitimacy

A central grievance voiced by those gathered at SoFi Stadium is the perceived use of “sportswashing”—the practice of utilizing high-profile athletic events to rehabilitate a government’s international reputation and distract from domestic human rights violations. Protesters argue that by participating in international fixtures, the Iranian national team acts as an inadvertent, or in some views complicit, ambassador for a regime that suppresses dissent through systemic violence. The goal of the protest organizers is to peel back this veneer of normalcy and project a counter-narrative of state-sponsored repression.

The strategic importance of Los Angeles as a site for this protest cannot be overstated. Often referred to as “Tehrangeles,” the city hosts the largest population of Iranians outside of Iran. This demographic concentration allows for a high level of organizational sophistication and ensures that the protest receives significant media attention. By targeting a match in the United States, activists are able to exert pressure on international sporting bodies and corporate sponsors, demanding that they recognize the political implications of their engagement with the Iranian state. The objective is clear: to make the cost of “business as usual” too high for the regime to maintain its presence in the international sporting community without addressing its domestic crises.

Geopolitical Fallout and the Accountability Crisis

The intensity of the protests outside SoFi Stadium is inextricably linked to the harrowing events that transpired within Iran during the early months of the year. References to the anti-government protests in January and February were frequent among the crowd, specifically regarding the heavy-handed response by state security forces. While official government figures acknowledged several thousand casualties, these numbers are widely disputed by independent monitors and human rights organizations. Reports from medical professionals and leaked mortuary records suggest a much more catastrophic scale of violence, including mass shootings and the targeting of peaceful demonstrators.

The protesters in Los Angeles emphasized that their presence was an act of solidarity with those who cannot speak freely within Iran. The discrepancy between state-reported data and the evidence provided by activist groups has created a profound crisis of accountability. For the diaspora, the national team’s jersey is stained by the blood of these domestic crackdowns. This context transforms the football match from a simple game into a referendum on the Iranian government’s human rights record. The demand for “regime change,” as articulated by the organizers, is fueled by a sense of urgency derived from the perceived brutality of the state’s efforts to maintain its grip on power.

Concluding Analysis: The Erosion of the National Brand

The events at SoFi Stadium illustrate a significant erosion of the Iranian national brand. When the symbols of a state become so inextricably linked to political repression that they are actively protested on the world stage, the state’s ability to project “soft power” is severely compromised. For the Islamic Republic, international sports have historically served as a rare bridge to the global community; however, this bridge is now being dismantled by the very citizens it claims to represent. The transition of the stadium from a venue of entertainment to a site of political resistance signifies a shift in the nature of modern conflict.

Ultimately, the protest highlights the limitations of state-controlled narratives in an era of global connectivity. The Iranian diaspora has proven capable of challenging the state’s monopoly on national identity, using the visibility of international events to ensure that domestic human rights issues remain on the global agenda. As long as the disconnect between the Iranian government’s international presentation and its domestic reality persists, sporting venues will continue to serve as volatile arenas for political expression. The game on the pitch may end after ninety minutes, but the struggle for the legitimacy of the symbols worn by the players remains an ongoing and increasingly visible global crisis.

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