Tuesday, June 09, 2026

The rise of the Unified China: A new world order emerging from the ashes of hegemony

 By Ahmed Moustafa

CAIRO – In the grand chessboard of international geopolitics, the board has been flipped. The era of unipolar hegemony, long dominated by the United States and its allies, is not just waning; it is being actively dismantled by the emergence of a "Unified China." This is no longer a prediction of the distant future but a reality of the present. We are witnessing the consolidation of a nation that has weathered the storm of containment, emerged victorious in the technological war, and restructured the global financial architecture to serve the Global South.

The recent, highly anticipated official visit of Donald Trump to Beijing was meant to be a show of force, a desperate attempt to renegotiate terms of engagement. Instead, it served as the funeral pyre for American coercive diplomacy. The mission failed not because of a lack of American bravado, but because China has fundamentally changed the rules of the game. While the American delegation arrived with a list of demands regarding Taiwan and trade balances, they were met with a polite but firm reality check: China is no longer dependent on the Western markets for its ascension, nor is it susceptible to Western intimidation.

The failure of this summit underscores a seismic shift in Chinese priorities. Beijing is no longer looking West for validation; it is looking South, East, and to the developing world. By prioritizing the Global South and establishing parallel financial and monetary systems—anchored in the digital yuan and independent of the SWIFT system—China has effectively inoculated itself against the sanctions-based warfare that Washington has wielded like a blunt instrument for decades. The BRICS expansion and the new financial corridors mean that the U.S. dollar’s stranglehold on the global economy is loosening by the day.

Nowhere is this shift more palpable than in the realm of technology and microchips. For years, the United States, Britain, and Israel attempted to strangle China’s rise by enforcing a blockade on high-end semiconductors, believing that technological supremacy was their "ace in the hole." They tried to bolster Taiwan as a fortress of silicon, a vital organ that the West could threaten to remove to bring Beijing to its knees. Yet, these tricks have failed spectacularly.

The narrative that the U.S. and Taiwan hold supreme dominion over IT and digitization is now a relic of the past. Huawei, the company the U.S. tried to bury, has not only survived; it has thrived. With the release of its latest processors, Huawei has effectively demonstrated that it is exceeding Nvidia—long considered the gold standard—in both price and quality. This technological leap renders the Western sanctions obsolete. China has achieved self-sufficiency in critical sectors, meaning that the "chip card" which Washington and London played to blackmail Beijing has turned into dust. The realization that China can produce superior, cost-effective hardware domestically has shattered the confidence of Western tech giants and panicked policymakers who underestimated the speed of Chinese innovation.

However, the technological and economic fronts are only part of the story. The military balance of power has undergone a radical transformation, precipitated by recent catastrophic miscalculations by the West. The confrontation between Iran and the United States served as a grim litmus test for American military prowess. The result was a shock to the system: the United States lost approximately 50% of its Airforce assets in the engagement. This staggering loss has exposed the vulnerability of American air dominance and the limitations of its defense systems.

While the U.S. military grapples with this depletion and the logistical nightmare of replacement, China has achieved monumental progress. The People's Liberation Army is not just modernizing; it is revolutionizing warfare. Reports from defense circles indicate that China has deployed electromagnetic submarines and possesses "greater distortion systems"—electronic warfare capabilities that disrupt and blind enemy radar and communications in ways the Pentagon has never encountered and does not fully understand. These systems create a "bubble of invisibility and confusion" around Chinese assets, rendering traditional U.S. tracking methods ineffective. This asymmetry is precisely why the U.S. and Britain are terrified; they realize they have lost the qualitative edge they once held.

It is in this context of Western desperation that we see the resurrection of the Xinjiang card. Unable to compete economically, outmatched technologically, and militarily vulnerable, the U.S. and Britain have returned to their old playbook: information warfare. Once again, they are trying to play on the matter of the Uyghur population in Xinjiang province, alleging that the Chinese regime and the Communist Party of China (CPC) are oppressing Muslims. This narrative is not a genuine human rights concern; it is a calculated distraction designed to mobilize the Muslim world and the Global South against Beijing at a time when China is deepening its ties with both.

The hypocrisy is staggering. The West cries crocodile tears for Muslims in Xinjiang while remaining silent on the plight of Palestinians in Gaza or the victims of Western airstrikes in the Middle East. The timing of these renewed allegations—coming immediately after the U.S. military setbacks and the failure of Trump’s visit—betrays their intent. It is an attempt to sow discord and delegitimize a rising superpower that they can no longer control.

This pattern of fabrication is not new. We must recall the chaotic days of 2020, when Donald Trump alleged that China was the main cause of the COVID-19 pandemic. In a moment of economic panic, facing a massive deficit, he attempted to propagate a narrative of global compensation from China, seeking to extract trillions of U.S.$ to fix the gaping holes in the American economy. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the global scientific community eventually denied these fabricated stories, citing a total lack of evidence. Yet, the damage was done, and the seeds of Sinophobia were planted. Today, the Xinjiang allegations are simply COVID-19 2.0—a baseless narrative designed to contain China through reputational damage.

Furthermore, at the Middle East level, the features of geopolitical alignment have become clearer than ever before. It has been said that Chinese President Xi Jinping recently stated a truth that many in the Global South feel, but few leaders have dared to declare: that Israel represents one of the causes of many global crises, and that its armament should be reconsidered. However, this bold position—despite the uncertainty surrounding it—reflects China’s alignment with the rising anti-colonial sentiment in the developing world. It is no secret that Israel has participated in sending weapons to Taiwan, making it an indirect tool for Western powers seeking to destabilize regional stability. By supporting separatist forces in Taiwan, while simultaneously engaging in Middle East conflicts, Israel has positioned itself as a disruptive factor to global stability.

Whereas President Xi Jinping’s Global Security Initiative (GSI) acts as the indispensable diplomatic framework underpinning the ambition of a "Unified China," fundamentally reshaping the definition of stability in a volatile world. Moving away from the zero-sum games of Cold War-era alliances, the GSI champions the principle that security is indivisible, thereby directly challenging the Western military encirclement—manifested through AUKUS and the Quad—aimed at fragmenting Chinese sovereignty.

This initiative posits that a unified, territorially intact China is not merely a national prerequisite but a cornerstone of global peace. By offering an alternative to hegemonic coercion, the GSI rallies the Global South behind a vision of cooperation that respects sovereignty, effectively neutralizing U.S. attempts to weaponize human rights or regional tensions to prevent reunification. Consequently, the GSI is more than a policy; it is the strategic catalyst that transforms China’s drive for unity from a bilateral struggle with Taiwan into a broader mandate for a multipolar world order, ensuring that the path to a "Unified China" is paved with international legitimacy and collective security rather than conflict.

China’s position is clear: peace cannot be achieved while actors like Israel continue to fuel conflicts and disrespect the sovereignty of nations. The Chinese leadership understands that a unified China—sovereign, technologically supreme, and militarily secure—is incompatible with a world order that allows such interference. The pivot to the Global South is not just about economics; it is about constructing a moral framework for international relations that rejects the double standards of the West.

The "Unified China" is a reality that the West must accept. The tricks have failed. The sanctions have backfired. The military threats have been neutralized by superior Chinese electronic and submarine capabilities. The recent visit by Trump ended in failure because the leverage the U.S. thought it had—from Taiwan’s chips to the might of the Air Force—has evaporated.

We are moving into a multipolar era where the dictates of Washington, London, and Tel Aviv carry less weight with each passing day. China has built its fortress on innovation, economic resilience, and alliances with the Global South. As the West continues to grasp at straws—reviving debunked pandemic claims and recycling human rights propaganda—the rest of the world is moving forward. The United States may still possess the remnants of its power, but the initiative has firmly passed to Beijing. The dragon has not only awakened; it has taken to the skies, leaving the outdated containment strategies of the 20th century far below.

Ahmed Moustafa is the director and founder of Asia Center for Studies and Translation and a non-resident research fellow at VIIMES 
(Vienna International Institute for Middle East Studies), Austria

The union of majesty and beauty: Reem Al-Wurimi on spiritual sovereignty of Tehran

 By Samaneh Aboutalebi

TEHRAN – In the wake of the recent US-Israeli aggression against the Islamic Republic of Iran, a voice from North Africa has emerged to articulate the spiritual and civilizational resilience of the Iranian nation. Reem Al-Wurimi, the acclaimed Tunisian poet and journalist, has captivated the Islamic world with her latest work, "Take Me to the Streets of Tehran."

The poem, which has gone viral across regional media platforms, serves as a bold manifesto for a new era of Islamic unity. In an exclusive interview with the Tehran Times, Al-Wurimi —a seasoned intellectual- shared the profound insights that led her to pen transformative poem.

The sanctity of Tehran streets

Reflecting on the genesis of her poem, Al-Wurimi noted that her inspiration was born from the sights of Tehran during the height of the conflict. For her, the city’s streets were not merely sites of transit, but venues of divine worship. 

“I saw Iranians spending their nights in the streets during the war. Instead of remaining in mosques on Qadr nights in Ramadan, they brought their devotion to the streets,” Al-Wurimi remarked. 

“I realized then that these are the most honorable streets history has ever witnessed. They became sacred to me because they transformed into open-air mosques where a nation stood against global arrogance. The nights of Qadr were being lived out in the open air, proving that resistance itself is a form of prayer.”

The ‘Banner of Honor’ and the shift of identity

Al-Wurimi’s poem has sparked intense debate, particularly in Arab media, for its provocative stance on the shifting leadership of the Muslim world. In her verses, she speaks of a departure from traditional "Arabism," suggesting that the "Banner of Honor" has been passed to Persian hands.

“Interpretation often depends on the inner nature of the listener,” Al-Wurimi told the Tehran Times regarding the backlash she has faced. “In the truth of Islam, sectarian and ethnic labels must fade. When I wrote about moving past my ‘Arabism’ or my ‘Sunni’ identity, my intent was to gather around the ‘Common Word’—the testimony of La ilaha illa Allah.”

She dismissed the malicious interpretations of her work by certain regional outlets, describing them as agents of a Zionist-driven project of "de-identification" aimed at stripping Muslims of their revolutionary spirit. “The line of Truth (Haqq) is the line of humanity championed by the Islamic Republic. Those with sickness in their hearts may threaten me, but God’s light cannot be extinguished.”

The union of majesty and beauty: Reem Al-Wurimi on spiritual sovereignty of Tehran

A mystical allegiance

Perhaps the most discussed aspect of Al-Wurimi’s poem is her explicit pledge of allegiance to the Leader of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Seyyed Mojtaba Khamenei. The Tunisian poet clarified that her stance is rooted in a deep theological and mystical understanding rather than mere political alignment.

Al-Wurimi offered a unique historical perspective on the Iranian leadership: “I see Imam Khomeini as the figure who equipped the material battlefield against the global demonic regime. Following him, the martyred Leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei came to nurture and elevate the souls of the believers.”

“Now, I see Ayatollah Seyyed Mojtaba Khamenei as the one who holds both the ‘Outer Banner’ and the ‘Inner Banner,’” she continued. 

“He represents a union of the majesty of the great Khomeini and the beauty of the great Khamenei. My allegiance is a spiritual and mystical union of souls.”

Art as the bullet, media as the chamber

As a journalist as well as a poet, Al-Wurimi emphasized the critical role of cultural production in the current conflict. She described art and media as a single, lethal weapon against falsehood. “Poetry creates the internal image, but the camera delivers it. Poetry is the bullet that must be loaded into the chamber of media to reach its target.”

She specifically praised the role of women and artists in Iran for preserving the "Culture of Resistance." According to Al-Wurimi, the primary goal of the enemy is "deculturization." By maintaining their multi-thousand-year heritage, Iranians have ensured that the foundation of resistance remains unshakable. “Every artist is a ‘culture-maker’ whose duty is to break the constructs of the enemy and rebuild a foundation based on Islamic thought.”

The reality of the post-war city

Concluding her interview, Al-Wurimi expressed her determination to dismantle the distorted images of Iran prevalent in Western and some Arab media. Having walked the streets of Tehran following the recent strikes, she spoke of a city that refused to be broken.

“I am eager to return and narrate the truth. While the media tries to show ruins, I saw a city where everything is clean, life is normal, and the civilization is thriving. You cannot erase this civilization from the minds of the people.”

She called on the Muslim Ummah to view the Iranian experience as a blueprint for the future. “What this nation has achieved should be written in gold and taught in our schools. In the Iranian person, I see the manifestation of the spiritual transcendence that the Holy Prophet and the Ahl al-Bayt (AS) desired for all humanity. We are not just observers; we are students of the Iranian nation.”

General Hollywood: Pentagon’s propaganda operation on silver screen: Part 2

 By Ali Hamedin

TEHRAN-Sci-Fi cinema, and especially the superhero genre, presents an opportunity that the Pentagon would never pass up. Since these stories often contain military themes and are heavily dependent on action sequences, many superhero genre films have relied on military production assistance. Among these films are the first two installments of the "Iron Man" trilogy, the "Hulk", "Captain Marvel", and others.

Superheroes as Pentagon’s PR

In the book "Superheroes, Movies, and the State: How the US Government Shapes Cinematic Universes", it is noted:

 “The reliance of superhero filmmakers on this assistance is a particular boon to the armed forces, as the genre is one of the best PR and propaganda vehicles available.”

Tom Secker and Tricia Jenkins explain in the book that superheroes are almost always exceptional individuals with powers beyond what any ordinary person can manifest or experience, and thus these protagonists function as individual metaphors not just for the DOD but for US exceptionalism more broadly. 

In these narratives, superheroes have not only the responsibility but also the right to visit large-scale, lethal violence on their opponents because someone special has to police a world that is full of threats, which is often how the DOD aims to position itself in global affairs.

That’s what Roger Stahl, professor of communication studies and the director of "Theaters of War" (2022) had mentioned in his interview with Tehran Times:

“On a grand scale, Hollywood narratives embrace US exceptionalism – that the US military is exempt from international law and that it is normal for it to routinely bomb others, violate sovereignty, and spread a web of bases everywhere.  That principle is sacred, and it is hard to think of a film that seriously challenges it.”

"Iron Man” fights for the War on Terror

The "Iron Man" franchise was aligned with Pentagon preferences in many ways, and perhaps no superhero franchise has been customized to such an extent. The character of Tony Stark — a billionaire weapons manufacturer who fights terrorism in Afghanistan using an advanced armored suit — became a full-fledged promotional symbol for the US Air Force. 

The book "Superheroes, Movies, and the State" reveals that, for the production of "Iron Man" (2008), the Air Force provided extensive support, including filming access at Edwards Air Force Base and the use of F-22 and C-17 aircraft, as well as HH-60 helicopters.

Stahl explained that during the research for the documentary "Theaters of War", one of the most surprising things he discovered was the depth of the script review process:

“Sometimes it's pages and pages of detailed script notes that excise sections and add whole characters.”

This was precisely the price that the "Iron Man 1" project paid in exchange for the Pentagon’s support: the producers were required to submit the screenplay to the Pentagon for final approval.

The result was that the final film became a neutered version of the original concept. Tom Secker and Matthew Alford note in the book "National Security Cinema" that the original 2004 screenplay for "Iron Man" was explicitly anti-war and anti-military-industrial complex. 

In that version, Tony Stark was unwilling to allow his inventions to contribute to the killing of civilians. Howard Stark (Tony’s father) and Justin Hammer were portrayed as two corrupt industrial-military tycoons who stole technologies and sold them to North Korea and other governments opposed to the US. However, through its exertion of influence, the Pentagon transformed Tony into a kind-hearted weapons manufacturer who merely removes a few “bad apples” from the system while leaving the broader structure untouched.

This "deradicalization" process continued during the 2007 script development. In a scene from Stark’s captivity, Raza, the head of the Ten Rings insurgent cell displays a large cache of weapons, including Stark Industries gear. When Stark asks where they came from, Raza replies in a foreign language without subtitles.

Director Jon Favreau later revealed that in the original version, Raza listed US presidents (Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush), followed by another insurgent saying, “They are all gifts”—a reference to decades of weapons flowing into the region under both political parties. These lines were removed in the final version because they were considered “very sensitive.”

As another example, in the script’s press conference scene, Tony delivers a line that calls into question not only his company’s role in the war in Afghanistan, but also the broader American mission in the country. He says: “I thought we were doing good here . . . I can’t say that anymore. The system is broken, there’s no accountability whatsoever.”

However, on set, this line was replaced with: “I saw young Americans killed by the very weapons I created to defend them and protect them.”

As a result, the scene was transformed into a one-sided reminder of the necessity of protecting Americans and safeguarding US interests.

Bad Arabs with AK-47

Many reviews described "Iron Man 1" as containing “a sprinkle of anti-war and redemption themes,” being a “pacifist statement,” or portraying a “militantly anti-war profiteer.” "National Security Cinema" notes that However, these interpretations overlooked one crucial point: that "Iron Man" continues to manufacture increasingly sophisticated weapons and deploys them for the exact same purposes as the Pentagon — namely, killing generic Muslim terrorists.

Aside from a handful of corrupt American "bad apples," the film’s remaining antagonists are nameless Muslim terrorists who do little more than shout and fire AK-47s, “in the proud Hollywood tradition of Reel Bad Arabs.” 

Afghanistan is also portrayed in the film as a land populated by innocent people whose lives are threatened by technologically equipped Arab terrorists — not by American attacks. 

In effect, the first “Iron Man,” despite all its advanced technology, became a two-hour advertisement for the necessity of the US military presence in Afghanistan. Director Jon Favreau stated that, in the scenes where the Ten Rings group attacks villagers, he deliberately emphasized the terrorists’ ability to use advanced weaponry.

Much like the Bush administration’s approach, the film also argues that the appropriate response to the terrorist threat is military-centered violence rather than diplomacy, thereby lending greater legitimacy to American intervention in the Middle East.

"Iron Man” fights against the War on Terror

However, by the third installment, the situation had completely reversed, and an unambiguous critique of the "War on Terror" appeared on screen. “Iron Man 3” (2013) was produced without any military involvement. In the film, a new threat emerges: the mastermind of a terrorist organization known as the "Mandarin" begins hijacking live television broadcasts to criticize the US for its cultural and military imperialism while claiming responsibility for a wave of recent retaliatory bombings.

At first, Stark assumes that the Mandarin is from the Middle East, and when his AI assistant traces the source of the latest broadcast, Stark asks: “What are we talking? Far East, Europe, North Africa, Iran, Pakistan, Syria?” These assumptions are clearly intended to remind the audience of the atmosphere of the first "Iron Man" movie — but the reality turns out to be something entirely different.

It is ultimately revealed that the Mandarin is nothing more than a British actor hired by Killian — an arms dealer — to create a “custom-made terror threat.” This allows Killian to intensify public fear in order to sell his highly advanced technologies to the Pentagon. In Killian’s words, “I’ll own the War on Terror. Create supply and demand.”

"Superheroes, Movies, and the State" describes this plot twist as a cinematic attack on the close relationship between the Pentagon, industrial corporations, and the "War on Terror." 

In other words, the film plays with the idea that the War on Terror is hollow, theatrical, and manufactured through media representations so that war profiteers, technology companies, and politicians can remain in power.

In the real world, the performative nature of this guiding slogan was also reflected by former US National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski in 2007, when he wrote that the phrase "War on Terror" was essentially meaningless, because it defined neither a specific geographical context nor a clearly identifiable enemy. 

He argued that this ambiguity was intentional, as it fueled a culture of fear and made it easier for demagogic politicians to mobilize public opinion in support of whatever policies they wished to pursue. Accordingly, the idea that politicians and corporations may manufacture fear in order to gain power or profit lies clearly at the heart of the narrative of "Iron Man 3".

Although such narratives criticizing the war-driven policies of the United States do exist, as Roger Stahl also noted, there are only a limited number of works in Hollywood that move against the dominant current. 

Perhaps that is why Mark McKinnon, a senior adviser to George W. Bush at the White House, stated in 2001 during a panel discussion titled "The Role of the Entertainment Industry in the War on Terrorism" regarding the occupation of Afghanistan:

“Hollywood was way out ahead of us in trying to do what it could to aid the effort. All we're trying to do right now is say, 'Fantastic. Thank you.'”

To be continued.  

Inside the structural collapse of Israel’s global legitimacy

By Garsha Vazirian

TEHRAN – Something fundamental has broken in the architecture of global opinion, and no amount of propaganda from Tel Aviv or cover from Washington can piece it back together.

According to Pew Research Center’s Spring 2026 Global Attitudes Survey, a median of 67 percent of adults across the 36 countries surveyed now hold an unfavorable view of Israel, compared with just 25 percent who see it favorably.

Drawing on interviews with over 44,000 individuals, this extensive study records a sea change in global public opinion.

Crucially, most interviews were completed in the shadow of February 28, when the United States and Israel launched their joint campaign of aggression against Iran, a date marking over two years from the start of Israel’s live-streamed genocidal campaign against Gaza.

The cracking of the Western firewall

The results indicate that the long-standing assumption that Western elite protection could indefinitely override popular discontent has run out of time.

The United States itself now sits at 60 percent unfavorable, a staggering historical reversal. In 2013, Israel enjoyed a positive 30 net favorability rating in America; today, it languishes at negative 23, a fifty-point swing in barely a generation.

This deep ideological fracture is concentrated, with 83 percent of American liberals holding an unfavorable view compared to 37 percent of conservatives.

Across the Atlantic, Europe’s unconditional defense has collapsed, with every surveyed nation registering a clear majority opposition to Israel.

Disapproval has reached 78 percent in Spain and Sweden, 76 percent in the Netherlands, and 69 percent in the United Kingdom.

The most politically loaded metric belongs to Germany. Berlin’s postwar political culture converted the defense of Israel into an institutional obligation, yet 73 percent of Germans now hold an unfavorable view, a sharp nine-point surge in negativity since 2025 alone. When public consensus shifts this drastically, official diplomatic immunity cracks.

A cross-spectrum global consensus

The geographic breadth of the data completely subverts the narrative that this pushback is isolated to traditional ideological adversaries.

While disapproval is near-universal across the surveyed Muslim-majority nations, led by Turkey at 97 percent, Pakistan at 95 percent, and Indonesia at 86 percent, the backlash in nations with no specific religious axis against Israel is equally severe.

Japan now records a striking 83 percent unfavorable rating, while Australia reaches 79 percent. In South Korea, negativity spiked by 10 points in a single year to hit 70 percent. Furthermore, this rejection has migrated past traditional partisan boundaries.

In Spain, while 96 percent of the left disapproves, 66 percent of conservatives also hold an unfavorable view. When a right-wing European demographic rejects Israeli policy by a two-to-one margin, it proves that the critique has solidified into a broad moral consensus.

Losing the future

The most serious long-term existential threat to Israeli propaganda is a widening, irreversible generational divide.

Among young adults aged 18 to 34 across wealthy democracies, alignment with Israel has vanished.

Unfavorable views among the youth have skyrocketed to 87 percent in Australia, 78 percent in the United Kingdom, and 74 percent in the United States.

Even in Hungary, the data reveals a massive 27-point generational gap, with 72 percent of young adults viewing Israel negatively compared to 45 percent of those aged 50 and older. Support for Zionism has entirely dried up among the next generation.

This generational rot tracks perfectly with the total global repudiation of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Majorities in nearly every surveyed country express zero confidence in his ability to handle world affairs. Only Kenya and the Philippines maintain majority confidence in his leadership.

Meanwhile, Italy’s share expressing total lack of confidence jumped from 45 percent to 62 percent in a year, and South Korea witnessed a 12-point drop in confidence.

Netanyahu now stands completely isolated, an ICC-indicted leader reviled by 83 percent of Germans and 59 percent of Americans alike.

The unmasking of impunity

Public sentiment is driven by undeniable material realities on the ground.

The international public is looking directly at a Palestinian death toll in Gaza that has exceeded 72,000, alongside ongoing settlement expansions and a systematic campaign of displacement.

The 2026 war on Iran has been overwhelmingly rejected by the global public, who have seen it as an unprovoked escalation against a sovereign nation.

By relying strictly on military violence and elite inertia while operating under active international legal scrutiny, Israel has transformed itself into a structural liability for its allies and a pariah in the eyes of the world.

The verdict has settled into the global conscience, and no military campaign can silence it.

The beautiful game, the ugly politics: U.S. visa row hits World Cup credibility

 By Farrokh Hesabi

TEHRAN - For decades, international sports governing bodies have promoted a simple principle: sport should unite people beyond politics, ideology, and diplomatic disputes.

FIFA has repeatedly championed the idea that football belongs to everyone and that all participating nations must enjoy equal conditions at the World Cup. Yet, as the 2026 FIFA World Cup approaches, events surrounding Iran's national team once again expose the uncomfortable reality that this principle often remains little more than a slogan.

The latest controversy stems from the U.S. government's refusal to issue visas for several administrative and executive members of Iran's World Cup delegation. The decision has created an entirely avoidable disruption just days before the tournament begins and has raised serious questions about whether the host nation is fulfilling its responsibilities toward all qualified participants.

What makes the situation particularly troubling is that FIFA officials had previously assured Iranian authorities that visa-related obstacles would not prevent the country's full participation in the competition. Those assurances now appear increasingly difficult to reconcile with reality.

The issue is not merely bureaucratic. Modern international football teams rely on a complex network of support personnel, including administrators, analysts, medical staff, logistics coordinators, and technical assistants. Their presence is often essential to a team's preparation and performance. Denying access to key members of a delegation inevitably creates competitive disadvantages and unnecessary uncertainty.

The consequences have already been felt. Concerns over the visa process forced Iran to abandon its original training plans in Arizona and relocate its World Cup preparation camp to Tijuana, Mexico. A major logistical adjustment of this scale, so close to the tournament, is hardly the type of disruption that any qualified nation should be expected to endure before the world's biggest sporting event.

Iran's Football Federation has condemned the decision as a violation of international sporting principles and announced that it will pursue the matter through FIFA. The federation argues that the host nation has created an unequal and discriminatory environment that directly contradicts the spirit of global competition.

The irony is impossible to ignore. Every major sporting event is accompanied by speeches about inclusion, fairness, and the separation of politics from sport. Yet when political tensions arise, those ideals often disappear. Football is repeatedly told to stay above politics, but politics continues to find its way onto the pitch through travel restrictions, diplomatic barriers, and selective treatment of athletes and officials.

To be clear, this issue extends beyond Iran. It concerns the credibility of the World Cup itself. If a host country can limit or delay access for members of a qualified national delegation, then the principle of equal participation becomes conditional rather than universal. That is a dangerous precedent for a tournament that claims to represent the entire football world.

Although reports indicate that visas for players and some essential personnel have now been approved, the broader controversy remains unresolved. The fact that FIFA has been forced into last-minute negotiations to secure the participation of members of a World Cup delegation should concern anyone who believes sport must remain independent from political disputes.

The 2026 World Cup was supposed to be a celebration of football. Instead, before a ball has even been kicked, it has already become another reminder that the promise of keeping politics out of sport is too often honored in rhetoric and ignored in practice. When access to the world's biggest football tournament becomes subject to political calculations, the integrity of the competition itself is placed under unnecessary scrutiny.

Iran Cancer Institute: West Asia's largest cancer hospital marks a giant leap in advanced oncology care

By Ivan Kesic

With the official inauguration of its new 18-story, 60,000-square-meter facility, the Iran Cancer Institute in Tehran is the largest cancer treatment hospital in West Asia, marking a historic milestone in the country’s commitment to advanced oncology care.

For nearly eight decades, the Iran Cancer Institute has remained Iran’s leading institution in the fight against cancer, evolving from a modest hospital established through a joint initiative between Tehran University Medical School and the Red Crescent Society into a comprehensive academic medical center of regional prominence.

On June 2, that enduring legacy entered a new chapter with the opening of a state-of-the-art building within Tehran’s Imam Khomeini Hospital Complex, replacing the aging facility that had served generations of patients.

The new complex includes 18 floors, spans 60,000 square meters, and has more than 610 inpatient beds, 19 operating rooms, 103 intensive care unit beds, and a national cell therapy laboratory, placing Iran among a select group of countries capable of delivering advanced cellular cancer treatments.

Completed in less than six years despite the challenges posed by three imposed wars, sanctions, and a global pandemic, the facility stands as the largest dedicated cancer treatment center not only in Iran but across the West Asia region.

It integrates surgical oncology, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, cell therapy, and gene therapy under one roof, while the former building will continue serving as a center for research and medical education.

Legacy of nearly eight decades

The roots of the Iran Cancer Institute trace deep into the country’s modern medical history. In 1949, a joint initiative between Tehran University Medical School and the Red Crescent Society led to the establishment of a cancer hospital that provided surgical, pathological, and outpatient services to referred patients from across the country.

A radiotherapy unit was added the following year, and in 1951, under an agreement with the World Health Organization, Iran’s first cobalt therapy unit was installed, introducing radiotherapeutic services that had previously been unavailable in the country.

By 1970, the facility had been renamed the Iran Cancer Institute and evolved into a fully equipped center encompassing pathology, surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, medical genetics, and an experimental research laboratory.

Over the following decades, the institute developed into a national referral center, receiving patients from every province and even from neighboring countries and becoming one of Iran’s leading sources of cancer epidemiology data.

The establishment of the Tehran Cancer Institute Data System Registry laid a critical foundation for epidemiological research, while the launch of one of Iran’s earliest academic telepathology programs in the early 2000s underscored the institute’s commitment to scientific innovation and advanced care.

By 2012, academic literature had identified the Cancer Institute of Tehran University of Medical Sciences as the country’s oldest and only comprehensive cancer treatment center at the time.

Today, the institute comprises 14 departments, including surgical oncology, medical oncology, radiotherapy, cancer research, radiology, pathology, genetic counseling, specialized laboratories, rehabilitation, and palliative care.

Three specialized research centers operate under its umbrella: the Cancer Research Center, established in 2003; the Cancer Biology Research Center, founded in 2014; and the Radiation Oncology Research Center, launched in 2015. Together, they coordinate research spanning basic science, epidemiology, and clinical medicine.

Historically, the institute has provided inpatient and outpatient care to approximately 10,000 cancer patients annually, a figure expected to increase significantly with the expanded capacity of the new facility.

Old institute building on the eastern side of the Imam Khomeini Hospital Complex

Old building: service under constraint

Before the inauguration of the new facility, the Iran Cancer Institute operated from a building on the eastern side of the Imam Khomeini Hospital Complex that had served patients for decades but struggled under mounting capacity constraints.

The aging facility housed approximately 200 inpatient beds, seven active operating rooms, and basic diagnostic and therapeutic equipment that, while sufficient for many years, could no longer keep pace with the rising cancer burden in a nation of more than 85 million people.

The surgery unit functioned through three departments spread across four inpatient wards, but waiting lists for essential cancer operations had, in some cases, stretched to four months, delaying critical interventions and intensifying patient hardship.

The radiotherapy and chemotherapy departments, staffed by highly dedicated specialists, operated at full capacity, while research centers and educational programs continued their work in facilities that had seen little significant expansion since the 1970s.

Despite these limitations, the old building remained a place of hope and healing, saving thousands of lives and reuniting countless patients with their families.

Multidisciplinary tumor boards covering general oncology, head and neck cancers, gastrointestinal malignancies, breast cancer, and sarcoma continued providing expert consultation for complex cases, while residency and fellowship programs in pathology, radiation oncology, medical oncology, cancer surgery, and palliative care trained successive generations of Iranian oncologists.

Over time, however, the old facility became increasingly inadequate for the scale and complexity of the country’s growing needs, making the construction of the new center not simply an upgrade, but an urgent necessity.

The new Iran Cancer Institute building

New building: West Asia’s largest cancer hospital

The new Iran Cancer Institute building, inaugurated on June 2 during an impressive ceremony attended by the Minister of Health and other senior officials, represents a transformative leap in the country’s oncology infrastructure.

Rising 18 stories and spanning 60,000 square meters, the facility was completed in less than six years, an achievement made even more remarkable by the challenges posed during that period, including the coronavirus pandemic, three imposed wars, and severe economic pressure and inflation caused by illegal Western sanctions.

The project was supported by charitable contributions, most notably from Gholam Hossein Motahari, who funded the construction in memory of his late mother, Najmolmouk Motahari. The hospital now bears the name Khairsaz Cancer Institute Hospital.

By any regional measure, the scale of the facility is extraordinary. It includes more than 610 inpatient beds dedicated exclusively to oncology care, among them 103 intensive care unit beds, 12 emergency beds, and six home care beds for patients requiring long-term or specialized support.

Its surgical capacity has expanded to 19 operating rooms, alongside six endoscopy suites and 96 dedicated chemotherapy beds. The hospital encompasses 37 specialized departments covering every major area of cancer treatment, including pediatric oncology, geriatric malignancies, hematologic cancers, bone marrow transplantation, head and neck cancers, and other complex diseases.

The intensive care capacity has increased tenfold compared to the previous facility, while bone marrow transplant capacity has doubled, marking a major advancement for patients suffering from hematologic malignancies.

The technological infrastructure of the new complex is equally sophisticated. The hospital is equipped with 11 advanced imaging and radiotherapy systems, including the first CyberKnife unit installed in a government medical center in Iran.

This state-of-the-art robotic radiosurgery system delivers highly precise radiation to tumors while minimizing damage to surrounding healthy tissue, allowing physicians to treat previously inoperable or difficult-to-access lesions.

The facility also includes advanced MRI systems, linear accelerators, and comprehensive diagnostic imaging services, including radiology, sonography, and mammography. A national cell therapy laboratory has likewise been established within the complex, with equipment procured through support from the Presidential Vice Presidency for Science and Technology.

The laboratory places Iran among a select group of countries capable of delivering advanced cellular cancer treatments such as CAR-T cell therapy, which genetically engineers a patient’s own immune cells to target and destroy cancer.

Beyond clinical treatment, the new building addresses the broader supportive care needs of cancer patients, recognizing that effective oncology care extends far beyond surgery and medication alone. The facility includes nutrition clinics, genetic counseling services, palliative medicine units, and rehabilitation centers.

The hospital has also adopted a health-promoting approach with a strong emphasis on tobacco control, given that tobacco use accounts for nearly 35 percent of Iran’s cancer burden.

Meanwhile, the old building has been preserved as a dedicated education and research center, ensuring the institute’s longstanding academic mission continues uninterrupted while the new complex focuses primarily on advanced clinical care.

Interior of the new building

Regional and global standing

With the inauguration of its new facility, the Iran Cancer Institute has emerged as the largest cancer treatment hospital in West Asia, a region home to more than 350 million people.

Among comparable regional institutions, the King Hussein Cancer Center in Amman, Jordan, is internationally recognized for its accreditation and research profile but operates with approximately 350 beds.

Türkiye’s Hacettepe Cancer Institute in Ankara and Anadolu Medical Center in Istanbul provide comprehensive oncology services, though on a smaller scale than the newly expanded Tehran complex.

Likewise, the National Center for Cancer Care and Research in Doha, Qatar, serves a significantly smaller population base. With more than 610 dedicated oncology beds, the Iran Cancer Institute now ranks as the region’s largest specialized cancer treatment center by capacity.

Globally, some of the world’s leading cancer hospitals include the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, which operates roughly 750 inpatient beds within a vast network of research and outpatient facilities.

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York with approximately 500 beds; the China National Cancer Center in Beijing with more than 1,500 beds spread across multiple campuses; and the National Cancer Center Hospital in Tokyo with nearly 600 beds.

Although the Iran Cancer Institute does not claim to exceed the largest global institutions in overall scale, its new facility is comparable in size and capability to major cancer centers across Europe, Japan, and North America. Its emergence as the largest cancer hospital in West Asia, therefore, represents a major medical and scientific achievement.

The institute has also developed extensive international collaborations with organizations and universities including the International Agency for Research on Cancer, the International Union for Cancer Control, the US National Cancer Institute, Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet, the University of Toronto in Canada, Maastricht University in the Netherlands, Cancer Registry Norway, the University of Greifswald in Germany, Morgan State University in the United States, and the University of Pavia in Italy.

These partnerships facilitate scientific cooperation, data sharing, professional training, and capacity building across multiple fields of cancer prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and research.

Sign at the entrance

Service capacity and academic mission

The new building began operations nearly two months before its formal inauguration, with approximately 300 patients already hospitalized at the time of the official ceremony.

The hospital receives patients from across Iran and is also positioned to attract international patients through medical tourism programs, offering advanced oncology services at costs estimated to be nearly one-tenth of those charged by centers in Europe or North America.

The facility is designed to treat all forms of cancer in both children and adults, with many of the country’s leading specialists delivering care across surgical, medical, and radiation oncology disciplines.

Despite its major clinical expansion, the academic mission of the Iran Cancer Institute remains central to its identity. The institute continues to offer residency and fellowship programs in pathology, radiation oncology, medical oncology, cancer surgery, and palliative care. Each year, it accepts three fellows in cancer surgery, one breast surgery fellow, one head and neck surgery fellow, and one oral and maxillofacial surgery fellow.

The surgery department also hosts general surgery residents from all Tehran University of Medical Sciences centers on a rotating basis, while residents from other universities participate as observers or active trainees.

Its weekly multidisciplinary tumor boards function as specialized forums for collective decision-making on complex cancer cases while simultaneously providing valuable educational opportunities for fellows and residents across multiple subspecialties.

Meanwhile, the institute’s three major research centers continue their work within the preserved old building. The Cancer Research Center, established in 2002, serves as the secretariat of the National Cancer Research Network, linking and coordinating more than 40 cancer-related research centers throughout the country.

The Cancer Biology Research Center focuses on preclinical research, including in vitro cell culture, molecular oncology studies, in vivo animal models using conventional and immune-deficient mice, and patient-derived xenograft tumor models.

The Radiation Oncology Research Center conducts research into ionizing radiation in cancer treatment, radiation health effects, radiobiology, dosimetry, and clinical oncology.

The institute’s Hospital-Based Cancer Registry, established in 1996 as Iran’s first hospital-based cancer registry, continues collecting demographic and medical data on cancer patients for submission to the Ministry of Health as part of the National Cancer Registry Program.