Skip to main content
The Morning Star Shop
Fifa's Infantino takes no action against Israel but says football should promote peace and unity
President of the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) Gianni Infantino speaks at the Global Citizen Awards ceremony, September 24, 2025, in New York

FACING growing global calls to suspend Israeli teams from international matches, Fifa president Gianni Infantino said today that the governing body must promote peace and unity and could not solve political issues.

In a febrile period for football politics, Infantino led a meeting of Fifa’s ruling council which did not have Israel formally on the agenda before 2026 World Cup qualifying games resume next week.

The strongest push against Israeli teams by European football leaders during the two-year genocide of Gaza was paused after a peace proposal on Monday in the White House by US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Infantino stressed to his 37-member council “the importance of promoting peace and unity, particularly in the context of the ongoing situation in Gaza,” Fifa said in a news release that did not refer directly to Israel.

“Fifa cannot solve geopolitical problems,” Infantino said in the statement, “but it can and must promote football around the world by harnessing its unifying, educational, cultural and humanitarian values.”

Fifa did not schedule a news conference and Infantino was not made available for interviews.

The Israel men’s team should now travel to play World Cup qualifiers against Norway in Oslo on October 11 and Italy in Udine three days later.

Norway was among European football federations urging Uefa to call a vote of its executive committee ahead of the Fifa meeting in Zurich on suspending Israeli teams from international competitions. Turkey’s football body directly called on Uefa and Fifa to suspend Israel.

According to The Associated Press, its sources said any vote of the 20-member Uefa panel seemed likely to pass despite opposition from members from Israel and Germany.

Fifa and Infantino — who has built close ties to Trump ahead of the US co-hosting the World Cup next year with Canada and Mexico — were never likely to follow any Uefa vote.

That prospect became even more distant last week when the US State Department said it would work to protect Israel’s status in football.

Trump and Netanyahu’s ultimatum to Hamas on Monday also was quickly welcomed by governments in the Middle East including Qatar, a key supporter of the Palestinian people and which has close ties to Uefa and its president Aleksander Ceferin.

The Fifa meeting today was attended by Ceferin and the head of the group of European football clubs, Nasser al-Khelaifi, who is president of Paris Saint-Germain, the Qatar-owned Champions League titleholder. Al-Khelaifi also is a member of Qatar’s government.

The head of the Palestinian football federation, Jibril Rajoub, also has been in Switzerland this week and met International Olympic Committee president Kirsty Coventry today.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.