For most nations, qualifying for the FIFA World Cup is cause for national celebration. But when Morocco sealed its place at the 2026 edition in September 2025, there were no mass gatherings nor collective jubilation. The country was not indifferent — it had simply come to expect it.
After reaching the semi-finals in Qatar 2022, the Atlas Lions, named after the mountain range, that anchors Morocco's Amazigh identity, had become an unexpected standard-bearer — World Cup qualification had been recalibrated from exceptional to routine.
Football in Morocco runs deeper than sport. During Qatar 2022, people took to the streets from Dakhla to Dubai, projecting an image of a competent, ambitious, and capable Morocco, to audiences that no diplomatic communiqué could have reached. Once established, this image became an asset.
These achievements reflect more than a decade of institutional investment. The transformation began with a national overhaul in 2008, followed by the creation of the Mohammed VI Football Academy in 2009. Under Fouzi Lekjaa's leadership since 2014, the FRMF professionalized its governance, restructured national leagues, integrated diaspora-born players who brought European technical standards, and built a continental network of 47 cooperation agreements with African football federations — positioning Morocco as Africa's indispensable footballing partner.
FIFA has opened its first permanent regional office in Africa near Rabat, and CAF opened new headquarters in Marrakech. Lekjaa himself stated before the king in council that the 2030 World Cup represents “a unique opportunity to accelerate economic growth, create job opportunities, develop tourist appeal, and promote the values of peace and sustainable development”. For Rabat, the football project is an integral part of its foreign and domestic policy.
Morocco made five failed bids between 1994 and 2026 — each defeat exposing the same structural gap: passion and geography without the infrastructure or influence to prevail. Rather than abandon the ambition, Rabat treated each failure as a diagnostic, investing in stadiums, transport networks, and hospitality capacity until Qatar 2022 provided the on-pitch credibility to match what had been built off it.
Soft power — the ability of a state to attract and influence rather than coerce — operates across three registers in Morocco's case.
- Domestically, sustained success legitimizes the state project that produced it: the Mohammed VI Academy, the institutional reform of the FRMF, and the integration of the Moroccan diaspora into the national setup;
- Regionally, Morocco's hosting of AFCON 2025 demonstrated that its investment in world-class stadiums and infrastructure has translated into genuine continental projection capacity — Morocco enters 2026 as the anchor of a North Africa that, for the first time, sends four qualified teams simultaneously;
- Internationally, Moroccan communities across North America, Europe, and the Middle East function as audience multipliers, extending the tournament's visibility into the cities where political and economic partnerships are built. Among them, Moroccan Jewish communities in Israel have followed the Atlas Lions' recent achievements with particular pride — reflecting the monarchy's longstanding openness toward its Jewish heritage.
Across these three registers, Morocco's sustained sporting credibility builds the image of a stable, capable, and globally connected state - the kind of partner that governments and investors choose to back for the long term.
Morocco's Ambassador to the United States, Youssef Amrani, precisely captured this logic when he stated that football had become “a major instrument of soft power and international engagement,” arguing that sport and economic development are “two faces of the same coin” — a relationship he distilled into a single formula: “90 minutes of football is worth more than 2 years of diplomacy.”
On June 13, the Atlas Lions open their 2026 campaign against Brazil. The five-time world champions against the semi-finalists of 2022. Whatever the result, the fixture itself encapsulates Morocco's trajectory: a country that no longer qualifies for the World Cup but expects to compete at its highest level.
For most nations, qualifying for the FIFA World Cup is cause for national celebration. But when Morocco sealed its place at the 2026 edition in September 2025, there were no mass gatherings nor collective jubilation. The country was not indifferent — it had simply come to expect it.
After reaching the semi-finals in Qatar 2022, the Atlas Lions, named after the mountain range, that anchors Morocco's Amazigh identity, had become an unexpected standard-bearer — World Cup qualification had been recalibrated from exceptional to routine.
Football in Morocco runs deeper than sport. During Qatar 2022, people took to the streets from Dakhla to Dubai, projecting an image of a competent, ambitious, and capable Morocco, to audiences that no diplomatic communiqué could have reached. Once established, this image became an asset.
These achievements reflect more than a decade of institutional investment. The transformation began with a national overhaul in 2008, followed by the creation of the Mohammed VI Football Academy in 2009. Under Fouzi Lekjaa's leadership since 2014, the FRMF professionalized its governance, restructured national leagues, integrated diaspora-born players who brought European technical standards, and built a continental network of 47 cooperation agreements with African football federations — positioning Morocco as Africa's indispensable footballing partner.
FIFA has opened its first permanent regional office in Africa near Rabat, and CAF opened new headquarters in Marrakech. Lekjaa himself stated before the king in council that the 2030 World Cup represents “a unique opportunity to accelerate economic growth, create job opportunities, develop tourist appeal, and promote the values of peace and sustainable development”. For Rabat, the football project is an integral part of its foreign and domestic policy.
Morocco made five failed bids between 1994 and 2026 — each defeat exposing the same structural gap: passion and geography without the infrastructure or influence to prevail. Rather than abandon the ambition, Rabat treated each failure as a diagnostic, investing in stadiums, transport networks, and hospitality capacity until Qatar 2022 provided the on-pitch credibility to match what had been built off it.
Soft power — the ability of a state to attract and influence rather than coerce — operates across three registers in Morocco's case.
Across these three registers, Morocco's sustained sporting credibility builds the image of a stable, capable, and globally connected state
Morocco's Ambassador to the United States, Youssef Amrani, precisely captured this logic when he stated that football had become “a major instrument of soft power and international engagement,” arguing that sport and economic development are “two faces of the same coin” — a relationship he distilled into a single formula: “90 minutes of football is worth more than 2 years of diplomacy.”
On June 13, the Atlas Lions open their 2026 campaign against Brazil. The five-time world champions against the semi-finalists of 2022. Whatever the result, the fixture itself encapsulates Morocco's trajectory: a country that no longer qualifies for the World Cup but expects to compete at its highest level.