Yes. If a pharmaceutical company's article (with better expertise in this area than the average HNer) isn't enough to convince someone here's an article from UNESCO:
Confusingly, the one graphic in that article shows the soap binding to dirt and viruses and washing them off and away. It does not show the tearing/destruction of the lipid shells, though the article also talks about it.
The article itself has spelling and grammar mistakes in it. The lack of attention to detail does not build confidence in the content.
I was taught about the hydrophilic/hydrophobic nature of soaps and detergents in university decades ago; this is not new information, and is uncontroversial. As others have pointed out, it’s even easy to observe in simple home experiments.
I have never heard of soap disrupting the phospholipid shell of viruses; this is new and “interesting if true”.
The astoundingly bad handling of government communications during the pandemic makes me automatically skeptical of arguments from authority.
However, the takeaway of “wash your hands thoroughly to inhibit disease vector transmission” has amply been proven in the last century.