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미국, 이란 축구 대표팀에 비자 거부하며 보안 위협 우려 표출

Opinion | Trump lost his war. Now he’s treating Iran’s World Cup team as a national security threat. - MS NOW

2026.06.25 19:00 번역됨
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이란과의 지opolitical 긴장감이 증가하였으나, 시장에 직접적인 영향은 미미하여 중립적인 입장을 유지합니다.

핵심 요약

미국은 이란 대표팀에게 하루 전 입국과 경기 후 즉시 출국을 강요하며 보안 위협을 우려하고 있습니다.

핵심요약

  • 이란 대표팀 20명의 멤버에게 비자 거부
  • 팀은 경기 하루 전에만 미국 입국 가능
  • 내국안보부 장관, 이란 대표단의 테러리스트 입국 시도 주장
  • 증거 제시 없이 주장만 제기

도입

이란 축구 대표팀의 미국 입국 제한은 투자자들에게 지정학적 리스크를 상기시키며, 중동 지역의 불안정성이 글로벌 경제에 미칠 영향에 대한 관심을 높이고 있습니다. 특히, 이러한 정치적 긴장이 에너지 시장에 미칠 파장을 고려할 때, 투자자들은 주의가 필요합니다.

본문 1: 지정학적 리스크의 시장 영향

미국이 이란 대표팀의 일부 멤버들에게 비자를 거부함으로써, 중동 지역의 정치적 긴장이 다시 한번 부각되었습니다. 이는 에너지 수출에 의존하는 국가들의 경제 안정성에 영향을 미칠 수 있으며, 특히 석유 수출국들의 주가 변동성에 영향을 줄 수 있습니다. 이러한 지정학적 리스크는 투자자들에게 추가적인 불확실성을 제공하며, 포트폴리오의 다각화를 고려해야 합니다.

본문 2: 단기적 vs 장기적 관점

단기적으로는 미국과 이란 간의 긴장이 에너지 시장에 영향을 미칠 수 있지만, 장기적으로는 이러한 정치적 긴장이 해결될 가능성이 있습니다. 그러나, 투자자들은 단기적인 변동성에 대비하기 위해 헤지 전략을 고려해야 합니다. 특히, 에너지 관련 주식이나 상품에 대한 노출을 줄이는 것이 현명할 수 있습니다.

본문 3: 글로벌 경제에 미치는 영향

지정학적 리스크는 글로벌 경제에 영향을 미칠 수 있으며, 특히 중동 지역의 불안정성은 국제 무역에 영향을 줄 수 있습니다. 투자자들은 이러한 리스크를 고려하여 포트폴리오를 조정해야 합니다. 특히, 에너지 수출국들의 경제 상태를 주시하며, 변동성에 대비하는 것이 중요합니다.

결론

미국과 이란 간의 정치적 긴장은 투자자들에게 추가적인 불확실성을 제공하지만, 장기적으로는 해결될 가능성이 있습니다. 투자자들은 단기적인 변동성에 대비하기 위해 헤지 전략을 고려해야 하며, 지정학적 리스크를 감안한 포트폴리오 조정이 필요합니다. 향후 중동 지역의 정치적 상황과 에너지 시장의 동향을 주시하는 것이 중요합니다.


원문 링크: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMie0FVX3lxTE5lYUFwYVRyY0NWLWZBMVRSc3NOblRrTEpreWJiRzJzT05OSEJ1VGJhOFdjZ0xhWDdIZzg4TmFjMnpDMC1ucXlOSEs0WEhveHJlZHZzQkN0TXpQUnpWY2JYVWtncVpiVl9PeFBiQUxuUEcwdk11N21NbE5yQQ?oc=5

Original Article

Opinion | Trump lost his war. Now he’s treating Iran’s World Cup team as a national security threat. - MS NOW

As President Donald Trump desperately tries to end the disastrous war of choice he launched on Iran — which seems certain to conclude with the terror-supporting theo-fascist regime being rewarded with more riches, sanctions relief and global influence than it could have dreamed of four months ago — the U.S. government isn’t taking any chances with what it sees as a crucial national security threat to the homeland.  I’m speaking, of course, about the Iranian men’s national soccer team, currently competing in the World Cup hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico.  The team was originally supposed to have its base camp for training and lodging in Tuscon, Arizona, but was compelled to relocate to Tijuana, Mexico, after the United States denied visas to members of the Iranian delegation. While the U.S. approved visas for Iran’s players, Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum confirmed to reporters, “The United States doesn’t want the Iranian national team to stay overnight in the United States.” Since the tournament started earlier this month, the Iranian team has only been permitted to enter the U.S. one day before its scheduled matches in Los Angeles, and was required to leave immediately afterward. The U.S. will now magnanimously allow the Iranians to arrive two days before their next match in Seattle. They will still have to leave the country right after they’re done playing. A Trump administration official told MS NOW earlier in June, “We will not allow the Iranian team to abuse this system to sneak terrorists into the United States under false pretenses.” Earlier this week, Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin told Fox News the Iranian delegation tried to smuggle into the country someone with “direct ties” to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, and he credited Trump for denying Iran the ability to activate terrorist “sleeper cells” on U.S. soil. Mullin provided no evidence to back up this claim.  If the idea seems absurd that Iran would attempt a devastating attack on the U.S. during the World Cup — carried out by cunning terrorists disguised as soccer officials under the watchful eye of the U.S. government — consider the larger context. Iran’s rulers are among the world’s worst state supporters of terrorism, including being the primary funders of Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza and the Houthis in Yemen. They backed Bashar Assad’s murderous regime in Syria until it fell in 2024. They have oppressed their own people for nearly half a century and earlier this year killed thousands (perhaps tens of thousands) of citizens protesting their sadistic rule. Iran is without a doubt a menacing threat to Israel and numerous U.S. allies in the Middle East. Making the Iranian team travel just one day before a match, then offering the players no time to recover afterward, makes the U.S. look like a small and petty competitor. The war that Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu launched in February was based on the unsubstantiated premise that the regime was about to have a nuclear weapon. And yet, the war has brought an even more extreme set of rulers to power in Iran. Worse, America and Israel’s fiasco is poised to make the regime hundreds of billions of dollars richer, with fewer sanctions and less diplomatic isolation. Most crucially, the war handed Iran a new weapon it could conceivably deploy forever: the threat to close the Strait of Hormuz and hold the global economy hostage.  In short, Trump started a war, swiftly lost it and he appears willing to do almost anything to end it and return to something worse than the Feb. 27 status quo. Meanwhile, his administration is harassing a soccer team — ostensibly for national security. As Trump sheepishly tries to spin his calamitous defeat into a “peace through strength,” the government’s harsh scrutiny of the Iranian men’s soccer team delegation looks like security theater of the most pitiful kind. And making the Iranian team travel just one day before a match, then offering the players no time to recover afterward, makes the U.S. look like a small and petty competitor. It’s loser behavior from a losing, war-making president.

Source: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMie0FVX3lxTE5lYUFwYVRyY0NWLWZBMVRSc3NOblRrTEpreWJiRzJzT05OSEJ1VGJhOFdjZ0xhWDdIZzg4TmFjMnpDMC1ucXlOSEs0WEhveHJlZHZzQkN0TXpQUnpWY2JYVWtncVpiVl9PeFBiQUxuUEcwdk11N21NbE5yQQ?oc=5

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