What Iranians are being told about the war
6 hours ago Reha Kansara ,BBC Global Disinformation Unitand Soroush Negahdari ,BBC Monitoring The first reports appeared on foreign screens, beyond the reach of most Iranians.
Iranians watching state television, however, encountered silence.
Government officials would neither confirm nor deny Khamenei's death.
He dismissed news of Khamenei's death as "baseless rumours", which would "soon be revealed. " It took until the following morning before Iranian state media reported the death of Khamenei, hours after US President Trump publicly announced it on social media.
Although millions of Iranians follow foreign-based Persian-language satellite TV channels, accessing independent information can be difficult. Internet blackouts, censorship, and restricted channels leave Iranians largely cut off from the outside world during unrest and conflict. The BBC followed the first week of coverage of the war by the Iranian state media and found that they have centred their reporting on civilian suffering, calls for retaliation against its "enemies", pushes for public loyalty to the Islamic Republic, whilst giving little attention to military and government facilities struck by Israel and the US. We also found examples of disinformation. Iran's media apparatus According to media watchdog Reporters Without Borders, Iran is one of the world's most repressive countries for press freedom.
Although the regime's main platforms are TV and radio, it also operates online – through news websites and networks like Instagram, Telegram, and X. Access to these social media platforms from inside Iran typically requires a virtual private network (VPN).
"It is that they are quite victorious and that their military is very strong. " Multiple Iranian state media outlets have reported that Iranian forces killed or injured hundreds of American troops, inflating the number of enemy casualties.
It quoted a spokesperson from the IRGC.
The claim was picked up by global news outlets from countries like India, Turkey and Nigeria. At the time, the Pentagon had confirmed the death of six US soldiers.
On 13 March, the US Central Command confirmed the death of an additional seven US service members.
Distorting reality New technology is also helping state media push propaganda.
"Smoke rises from a high-rise in Bahrain following Iran's attack," read the description.
Like much of the AI slop about the war that's flooded social media, it's unclear who made it and where it came from.
Much of this imagery is hyper unrealistic and intended to glorify rather than mislead.
The White House and US president Donald Trump also routinely share glorifying AI-generated images or videos meant to glorify. Israeli prime-minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently shared on Instagram an AI-generated image depicting himself, Trump, and wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill in a triumphant pose.
The post was added by a news outlet through the social media platform's collaboration feature.
Kernels of truth Iran's track record of feeding kernels of truth alongside false information has sown doubt among many critics of the regime inside and outside the country.
Opponents of the government claimed the funeral had been AI-generated.
But the image was real.
We geolocated it to a cemetery about 3.
3 miles) from the school, confirming that the trees, road layout and a nearby building matched those visible in satellite imagery. "We have to hold two truths at the same time," Mahsa Alimardani, from Witness, says.
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: