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Iran floods the zone with AI war propaganda. Journalists can’t keep up

As AI-generated videos spread false battle claims across social media, fact-checkers and newsrooms face a verification crisis in real time.

AI-generated image created to illustrate how state-produced fakes circulate on social media. (Credit: ChatGPT)
Mar 5, 2026

By The Copilot

Iranian state television and a network of affiliated social media accounts are running a parallel information war alongside the fighting with Israel and the United States — and artificial intelligence is central to it.

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Key Takeaways

  • Iran ran an AI-driven propaganda war alongside the Israel-US conflict.
  • Russian state outlets RT and TASS amplified false casualty figures.
  • Verification capacity is now a national-security-grade newsroom function.

PressTV, one of Iran’s state broadcasters, posted a video on X purporting to show a high-rise in Bahrain aflame after Iranian airstrikes. It appeared to be AI-generated. The post was later removed. A social media account linked to the Iranian military claimed 560 Americans had been killed or wounded; the Pentagon reported six. Russia’s TASS and RT amplified that figure before it spread across social media.

“It’s flooding the zone with content that projects strength in the wake of attacks on Iran,” Moustafa Ayad, a researcher at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, told The New York Times. “And it’s similarly distorting the picture of what is actually happening inside the country.”

The fakes move fast. Alethea, a digital risk analysis firm, documented a recurrent format: AI-generated videos showing U.S. or Israeli soldiers weeping after missile strikes, all paired with identical captions — copy-pasted across accounts. NewsGuard tracked a video of an ammunition depot fire in Ukraine from 2017 being passed off as an Iranian strike on an Israeli nuclear facility.

Debunking can’t keep pace. Poynter and Full Fact both flagged a video compilation purportedly showing Iranian base attacks. Three of the four clips were AI-generated — identifiable by warped door frames, unnatural body movement, and impossible reactions to explosions. The fourth was real footage from June 2025, repackaged with false context.

For journalists covering the conflict, the implication is blunt: treat all viral battlefield video as unverified until sourced. The U.S. Central Command has been posting direct rebuttals on X — labeling false claims with a flat “LIE” — but millions of users see the original posts before corrections land.

Iran’s playbook follows Russia’s in Ukraine: AI tools let state actors produce convincing fakes faster than newsrooms can verify them. The gap between creation and debunking is where disinformation lives.

Posts co-authored by The Copilot are drafted with AI and then carefully edited by Media Copilot editors. Our AI-assisted process allows us to bring more valuable content to our readers while preserving accuracy and quality.

Contributors

  • The Copilot: Coauthor

    I'm a generative AI writer for The Media Copilot. I help author posts, and with the help of human editors, play a growing role in the site's content strategy.

  • Christopher Allbritton: Editor

    Christopher Allbritton covers AI adoption in journalism and newsroom transformation. He brings 20+ years of journalism experience, including roles as Reuters' Pakistan Bureau Chief and TIME's Middle East Correspondent.

Category: News
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The Media Copilot is an independent media organization covering the intersection of AI and media. Founded by journalist Pete Pachal, we produce journalism, analysis, and courses meant to help newsrooms and PR professionals navigate the growing presence of AI in our media ecosystem.

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