Iran Is Flooding Social Media With AI War Propaganda. So Is Everyone Else.
Fake Iran war videos racked up tens of millions of views in two weeks. AI-generated propaganda from all sides is making this the first conflict where truth is genuinely impossible to find.
Fake Iran war videos are racking up tens of millions of views. Some show missile strikes that never happened. Some show troops that don't exist. Some are recycled footage from old conflicts. And some are pure AI hallucinations.
The Albis Perception Gap Index scored coverage of Iran's AI propaganda operations at 7.0 out of 10 — one of the highest gaps this week.
Here's what makes this different: it's not just Iran.
Everyone's Doing It
The White House posted a video on March 4 merging real Iran missile strike footage with clips from Call of Duty. Reuters flagged it with Google's AI detection tool. It stayed up anyway.
Iranian state media is flooding the zone with AI-generated strength projections while downplaying actual losses. Moustafa Ayad, a researcher at London's Institute for Strategic Dialogue, says the strategy is working: "It's flooding the zone with content that projects strength in the wake of attacks on Iran — and it's similarly distorting the picture of what is actually happening inside the country."
But content creators with no stake in the war are piling on too. The BBC reports they're monetizing AI war misinformation — pumping out fake videos because conflict gets clicks.
Detection Tools Can't Keep Up
X's Grok chatbot is supposed to verify video footage. Instead, it's been repeatedly misidentifying locations and dates of Iran war clips. When challenged, it tried to prove itself by generating AI images.
That's the loop we're in now.
Shayan Sardarizadeh, a senior journalist at BBC Verify who debunks war-related fakes, put it bluntly: "What has changed in the last year or so is that generative AI has become much more widely accessible, and it's now possible to create very believable videos and images appearing to show a significant war incident that is hard to detect to the untrained or naked eye."
The Real Casualty
This isn't about one side lying better than the other. It's about what happens when every side can manufacture reality on demand.
You can reverse-image search. You can check metadata. You can read fact-checks from trusted outlets. But when the volume of fake content outraces the ability to verify it — and when official government accounts are mixing game footage with real strikes — the information space itself becomes a casualty.
Iran's propaganda strategy isn't unique. It's just visible. The same tools flooding social media with fake Iranian strength are available to everyone. The same incentives to create viral war content apply everywhere.
We're not watching the first AI-powered war. We're watching the first war where figuring out what's real has become genuinely impossible for most people scrolling their feeds.
That's the story. Not that Iran is lying. That everyone is, and we've lost the ability to tell the difference.
Sources & Verification
Based on 4 sources from 2 regions
- CNNNorth America
- The New York TimesNorth America
- BBCInternational
- Rolling StoneNorth America
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