Minutes after Donald Trump introduced that the US and Israeli governments had launched a “major combat operation” in opposition to Iran within the early hours of Saturday morning, disinformation concerning the assault and Tehran’s response flooded X.
WIRED has reviewed hundreds of posts on X, a few of which have racked up thousands and thousands of views, that promote deceptive claims concerning the places and scale of the assault.
Elon Musk’s social media platform is a verifiable mess: In some instances, alleged video footage of the assault shared in posts on X are literally months or years outdated. In a number of posts, video footage of obvious assaults have been attributed to incorrect locations. Various photographs shared on X seem like altered or generated with AI. Different posts try to pass off video game footage as scenes from the battle.
X didn’t reply to a request for remark. Under Musk’s stewardship, X has turn out to be a haven for disinformation, particularly throughout main world breaking information occasions. Originally of the Israel-Hamas warfare, and extra just lately throughout anti-immigration enforcement protests in LA, the platform has drowned in inaccurate and defective posts.
Nearly the entire most viral posts reviewed by WIRED on Saturday got here from accounts with blue verify marks, meaning they pay X for its premium service and may very well be eligible to earn cash based mostly on how a lot engagement their posts generate, even when the content material is fake. Whereas some posts with disinformation have a community note appended beneath them to appropriate the report, they continue to be up on the positioning, and it’s unclear how many individuals considered them earlier than the notes appeared.
One video posted by a blue verify mark account claimed to indicate ballistic missiles over Dubai; the clip really confirmed Iranian ballistic missiles fired at Tel Aviv in October 2024. The post has been considered over 4.4 million occasions.
Some of the viral clips shared on X within the hours after the assault claims to indicate an Israeli fighter jet being shot down by Iranian air protection programs. The video has been shared by dozens of accounts, together with one post which has been considered greater than 3.5 million occasions. The provenance of the video is unclear, however there have been no credible stories of any Israeli jets being shot down over Iran on Saturday.
One other account that claims to be an knowledgeable in open supply intelligence posted a video exhibiting explosions, alongside the caption: “6 Iranian Hypersonic Missiles hit the Indian-invested Israeli Haifa port. Huge damages reported.” The video has been considered 64,000 occasions, however the footage was really captured last July and reveals an Israeli assault on the protection ministry in Damascus, Syria.
In quite a lot of instances, pro-Iranian accounts have been utilizing photographs and pictures from Saturday’s assaults to falsely declare profitable strikes in opposition to Israel. “IRANIAN MISSILE IMPACT IN TEL AVIV RIGHT NOW,” the Iran Observer account wrote in a publish that includes a picture of Dubai. The post had been considered over 200,000 occasions earlier than it was deleted, however dozens of different posts sharing the identical picture and making the identical claims stay on X.
Tehran Occasions, a information outlet aligned with the Iranian authorities, posted what seems to be an AI-generated image on X which claims to indicate that “an American radar in Qatar was fully destroyed right this moment in an Iranian drone strike.” The usage of AI generated photographs was flagged on X by Tal Hagin, a senior analyst with open supply intelligence firm Golden Owl. Whereas there are stories that drone and missile assaults focused the US Navy’s fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain, there aren’t any stories but of comparable profitable assaults in Qatar.
A professional-Trump account, which additionally contains a blue verify mark, posted photographs claiming to indicate the earlier than and after photos of the palace of Iranian Supreme Chief Ali Khamenei, which was focused throughout Saturday’s missile assaults. (In a publish on Reality Social, Trump claimed Khamenei was killed in an assault.) Whereas the after image seems to precisely present the palace after the assault, the earlier than image reveals the Mausoleum of Ruhollah Khomeini, which is situated on the opposite facet of Tehran. The post has been considered 365,000 occasions.

