The AI Netanyahu Images Iran Spread (and AI or Not Detected)
AI-generated images of Netanyahu dead in rubble spread across social media but were detected by AI or Not.

Netanyahu bloodied and motionless in a pile of rubble, rescue workers crouching over his body. In another, his figure wrapped in a burial shroud, Iranian flag bearers standing solemnly on either side. Both spread fast across Instagram, X, Bluesky, and Telegram in the first days of March 2026 during the ongoing conflicts in the middle east.
They were all AI generated.
We ran the images through the leading AI detector, AI or Not, which flagged the rubble image as AI-generated. Neither image showed a real person. Neither showed a real event.
That's the short version. The longer version involves a state-affiliated Iranian news agency, 62 fake social media accounts pretending to be Scottish independence supporters, and even a deepfake video.
Netanyahu Deepfakes Spread but Detected
The rumors began circulating on March 2 and 3, 2026, claiming Netanyahu had been killed or seriously wounded in an Iranian counterattack. The claim didn't originate from any credible journalist. It spread through coordinated social media activity and got a boost from Iran's Tasnim News Agency, which is affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Tasnim didn't publish photographs of a body or a verified military source. Instead, it published what it framed as circumstantial evidence: Netanyahu hadn't appeared on video recently, security arrangements had reportedly tightened, a planned visit from American envoys Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff had been postponed, and a readout of a call with French President Macron was undated. From this, the agency speculated that Netanyahu might be dead or injured.
What really spread the lies were AI generated images: Netanyahu in rubble with a soldier nearby, and Netanyahu surrounded by rescue workers. Both looked photorealistic at a glance. Both fell apart after going through an AI checker.
There was also a deepfake video of a TV presenter claiming Israeli media had confirmed Netanyahu's death. The lip movements didn't match the audio.


What AI or Not Found
When we put both images through AI or Not's leading detection models, neither passed.
The detector also flagged it for deepfake traits. Netanyahu's face looked composited onto the scene, not generated from scratch.
The rescue worker image came back as AI-generated as well with a deepfake flag. Independent fact-checkers working separately reached the same conclusion on both images.
The deepfake video showed the same technical tells that deepfake detection tools are built to catch: audio-visual desynchronization and synthetic voice artifacts.
Key Takeaways
Netanyahu death images were confirmed as AI-generated by AI or Not.
A deepfake video of a fake news presenter also circulated, with detectable lip sync failure and a fabricated voice.
Tasnim News Agency (IRGC-affiliated) amplified the misinformation using circumstantial claims, not verified evidence.
62 fake social media accounts linked to the IRGC helped spread the content, posing as Scottish independence supporters, Irish nationalists, and Latina women.
Netanyahu made multiple verified public appearances between March 1 and March 10, 2026, confirming he was alive.
The Proof That Netanyahu Is Alive
For anyone who wanted to check, the evidence wasn't hard to find.
On March 1, the Israeli Government Press Office released imagery of Netanyahu in a security meeting at the Kirya military headquarters in Tel Aviv, with the defense minister, the IDF chief, and the Mossad director present. On the evening of March 2, while the death rumors were actively spreading, Netanyahu appeared live on a Fox News YouTube broadcast.
After that:
March 5: A confirmed phone call with French President Macron.
March 6: The Israeli government portal listed Netanyahu visiting an impact site in Beersheba.
March 7: An official statement published by the Prime Minister's Office.
March 10: Netanyahu's representatives officially confirmed he was not dead.
Netanyahu also issued a public statement during this period: "These are painful days. Yesterday here, in Tel Aviv, and now in Beit Shemesh, we lost dear people. I send my wishes for a speedy recovery to the wounded," he said via the PM's Office.
Generative AI is the Fuel for Misinformation's Fire
The Netanyahu death hoax fits a pattern that's been building since at least 2024. Someone generated a fake Burj Khalifa fire. Fake satellite photos of military bases popped up on X. Synthetic airstrike footage got passed around as breaking news. The common thread isn't technical sophistication. It's speed and plausibility at first glance.
Most people encountering this content aren't running it through a detector. They're scrolling, and a photorealistic image of a world leader dead in rubble is going to stop thumbs. By the time the debunking catches up, the claim has already done its work in the feeds of people who will never see the correction.
And this wasn't about swaying an election. Nobody was casting a ballot based on these images. People were trying to understand whether a head of state had been killed during an active war, and the fakes muddied that in real time across multiple countries. The images were designed to look like the kind of chaotic breaking-news footage that circulates before official accounts can respond.
The 62 fake accounts are gone now, or at least deactivated. The images are still circulating. And the generators that made them have gotten better since the last time this happened.
FAQ
Were the Netanyahu death images real photographs?
No. Both widely circulated images were confirmed as AI-generated by leading AI detector AI or Not.
Who spread the Netanyahu death hoax?
The hoax was amplified by Tasnim News Agency, an IRGC-affiliated Iranian outlet, and by a network of 62 fake social media accounts linked to the IRGC. The accounts posed as Scottish independence supporters, Irish nationalists, and Latina women.
Was there a deepfake video too?
Yes. A video circulated showing a fake TV presenter claiming Israeli media had confirmed Netanyahu's death. The lip movements as mismatched with the audio and identified the voice as generated.
How do we know Netanyahu is alive?
Multiple verified appearances were documented between March 1 and March 10, 2026: a government press office photo from a security meeting, a live Fox News appearance, a confirmed call with Macron, a site visit in Beersheba, and official statements from his office.
How can I tell if content like this is AI-generated?
Running it through a tool like AI or Not is the most direct method. Visual tells include hand deformities, inconsistent shadows, blurred background text, and facial artifacts, but these are getting harder to spot as models improve.
The rubble image that flagged as artificial is still circulating on Telegram channels and social media as of this writing. With every verified AI image, 3 more get made in a never ending battle of truth vs misinformation.