Following the US military strike on Venezuela last week—which captured President Nicolás Maduro—the 2026 FIFA World Cup faces heightened ethical scrutiny as the primary host nation. FIFA's recent peace prize to President Donald Trump, awarded amid close ties with the organization, amplifies concerns over political neutrality just months before the tournament kicks off across 16 North American cities.
The US strike on January 3, 2026, detailed in prior reporting, prompted immediate international condemnation but no reaction from FIFA's Council. As the main host for the 2026 World Cup—the first in the US since 1994, spanning 11 US cities plus venues in Mexico and Canada—the action spotlights a geopolitical risk unprecedented for a host nation.
Trump, whose administration has launched strikes in seven countries this term, warned of Venezuela action days before receiving FIFA's inaugural Peace Prize from President Gianni Infantino at the December 2025 World Cup draw. Infantino's frequent White House visits and public support for Trump have fueled perceptions of bias.
Critics argue a nation waging unprovoked aggression—defined by the UN as armed force against another state's sovereignty—should not host. This marks only the third such case for a host, after the US 1989 Panama invasion (1994 World Cup) and Russia's 2014 Ukraine incursion (2018 World Cup). The US now engages in eight conflicts, surpassing its 1994 record.
Human rights group FairSquare labeled aggression 'the supreme international crime,' accusing FIFA of prioritizing revenue over ethics amid absent guidelines. FIFA's history of slow responses, like delaying Russia's 2022 suspension, draws parallels. Muted Western reactions and Venezuela's own governance issues complicate the narrative.
The 2017 joint US-Canada-Mexico bid, won post-FIFA scandals, included $625 million in US security funding and visa facilitations. However, existing travel bans already limit fans from countries like Haiti and Iran.