
Image of Obama bowing to Khamenei is doctored
"Sums it up," says a June 22, 2025 post sharing the image on Facebook.
Image
Screenshot from Facebook taken June 24, 2025
The post comes from conservative comedian Terrence Williams, whom AFP has previously fact-checked for spreading other misinformation.
Similar posts spread across X after Trump said June 21 that the US military had executed a "very successful attack" on three Iranian nuclear sites, including the underground uranium enrichment facility at Fordo. The operation, dubbed "Midnight Hammer," added to a more than week-long Israeli campaign that also targeted Tehran's top military brass, fueling fears of a wide regional conflict.
The US president announced a fragile ceasefire in the war between Iran and Israel June 23 after Tehran fired ballistic missiles at a US base in Qatar.
The escalation came almost a decade after Obama and other permanent members of the United Nations Security Council sealed a deal with Iran called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. The agreement placed significant restrictions on Iran's nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.
in 2018 during his first term, and his administration had been seeking to chart a new deal before Israel's June 13 strikes on Iran.
The US president had long criticized his predecessor's signature foreign police achievement and campaigned in 2016 on torpedoing the deal.
But the image purporting to show Obama bowing to Khamenei is a fake, with two separate photos edited together to create a composite picture that has circulated online for years.
Reverse image searches revealed that the original photo of Obama is a famous shot, captured by then-official White House photographer Pete Souza, of the Democrat bending over so that the young Black son of another White House staffer could feel his head and see if they had the similar hair (archived here and here). Souza took the photo in May 2009 -- years before Obama signed the Iran nuclear accord in 2015.
Image
Screenshot from Flickr taken June 24, 2025
An AFP photojournalist snapped the picture of Khamenei even earlier, in August 2005, during a ceremony to inaugurate former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who served until 2013. In the real photo, Ahmadinejad is standing to Khamenei's left -- not Obama.
Image
Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei (C) attends the presidential inaugural ceremony of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran August 3, 2005 (AFP / ATTA KENARE)
AFP has debunked other misinformation about Iran here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


AFP
26 minutes ago
- AFP
Video shows Malaysia factory fire, not Iranian attack on Israel's air defence system
"The Israeli air defence system in Tel Aviv was destroyed by Iranian missiles," reads Thai-language text on a TikTok video published on June 20, 2025. The video shows people watching a fire behind a building in the distance before an explosion appears to launch a fireball into the air. It surfaced a day after a hospital in southern Israel and buildings in the central towns of Ramat Gan and Holon, close to coastal hub Tel Aviv, were struck after a barrage of Iranian missiles (archived link). Iran said the main target of the attack in Israel's south was a military and intelligence base, not the hospital (archived link). Iran had been firing daily missile barrages at Israel since a wide-ranging Israeli attack on the Islamic republic's nuclear installations and military bases on June 13 triggered the war. A US-proposed ceasefire announced on June 24 appeared to be holding, bringing an end to the 12-day conflict which has killed more than 600 people in Iran and 28 people in Israel (archived link). Image Screenshot of the false TikTok post captured on June 23, 2025, with a red X added by AFP The same footage was also viewed millions of times in similar X posts. But the video does not show an air defence system destroyed by Iran. Unrelated video A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared video led to the same footage posted on TikTok on April 25, weeks before the start of the Iran-Israel war (archived link). The clip was posted by the user "hamidhudson937", whose handle can be seen in the top-left corner of the falsely shared video. The video used in the false posts appears to be a slowed down version of the TikTok clip, and onlookers can be more clearly heard saying in Malay: "The gas cylinder is flying." Image Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (left) and the TikTok video posted in April (right) Subsequent keyword searches on Google led to similar footage of the blaze posted on TikTok on April 24 with the Malay-language caption, "A factory fire in Senai's Desa Idaman" (archived link). AFP geolocated the factory to an industrial town in southern Malaysia (archived link). Image Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (left) and Google Street View imagery (right), with corresponding elements highlighted by AFP Local media outlets Buletin TV3 and The Sun reported that three men were injured in the fire (archived here and here). AFP has previously debunked other false claims related to the Iran-Israel war.


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
Israel-Iran war live: Trump slams claim that strikes only set back Iran nuclear programme by months
President Donald Trump on Tuesday rejected reports of a preliminary US intelligence assessment that found the strikes carried out on Iranian nuclear facilities this weekend have set back Tehran's nuclear programme by only a matter of months. Trump claimed the nuclear sites in Iran were 'COMPLETELY DESTROYED' on Truth Social. Follow our live blog for the latest developments. Iran 's president announced 'end of 12-day war ' as ceasefire holds through its first day. Israel said Iran's nuclear programme set back 'by years', campaign 'not over'. Iran Revolutionary Guards said it arrested a European person accused of spying on 'military' sites. A US intelligence assessment suggested US strikes on Iran did not destroy the country's nuclear sites, only setting back Iran's nuclear program a few months.


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
AI fakes duel over Sara Duterte impeachment in Philippines
Neither were real. The schoolboys and elderly woman making their cases were AI creations, examples of increasingly sophisticated fakes possible with even basic online tools. "Why single out the VP?", a digitally created boy in a white school uniform asks, arguing that the case was politically motivated. The House of Representatives impeached Sara Duterte in early February on charges of graft, corruption and an alleged assassination plot against former ally and running mate President Ferdinand Marcos. A guilty verdict in the Senate would result in her removal from office and a lifetime ban from Philippine politics. But after convening as an impeachment court on June 10, the senior body immediately sent the case back to the House, questioning its constitutionality. Duterte ally Senator Ronald dela Rosa shared the video of the schoolboys -- since viewed millions of times -- praising the youths for having a "better understanding of what's happening" than their adult counterparts. The vice president's younger brother Sebastian, mayor of family stronghold Davao, said the clip proved "liberals" did not have the support of the younger generation. When the schoolboys were exposed as digital creations, the vice president and her supporters were unfazed. "There's no problem with sharing an AI video in support of me. As long as it's not being turned into a business," Duterte told reporters. "Even if it's AI... I agree with the point," said Dela Rosa, the one-time enforcer of ex-president Rodrigo Duterte's drug war. Five minutes' work The video making the case for impeachment -- also with millions of views -- depicts an elderly woman peddling fish and calling out the Senate for failing to hold a trial. "You 18 senators, when it's the poor who steal, you want them locked up immediately, no questions asked. But if it's the vice president who stole millions, you protect her fiercely," she says in Tagalog. Both clips bore a barely discernible watermark for the Google video-generation platform Veo. AFP fact-checkers also identified visual inconsistencies, such as overly smooth hair and teeth and storefronts with garbled signage. The man who created the fish peddler video, Bernard Senocip, 34, told AFP it took about five minutes to produce the eight-second clip. Reached via his Facebook page, Senocip defended his work in a video call, saying AI characters allowed people to express their opinions while avoiding the "harsh criticism" frequent on social media. "As long as you know your limitations and you're not misleading your viewers, I think it's fine," he said, noting that -- unlike the Facebook version -- he had placed a "created by AI" tag on the video's TikTok upload. While AFP has previously reported on websites using hot-button Philippine issues to generate cash, Senocip said his work was simply a way of expressing his political opinions. The schoolboy video's creator, the anonymous administrator of popular Facebook page Ay Grabe, declined to be interviewed but said his AI creations' opinions had been taken from real-life students. AFP, along with other media outlets, is paid by some platforms including Meta, Google and TikTok for work tackling disinformation. 'Grey area' Using AI to push viewpoints via seemingly ordinary people can make beliefs seem "more popular than they actually are", said Jose Mari Lanuza of Sigla Research Center, a non-profit organisation that studies disinformation. "In the case of the impeachment, this content fosters distrust not only towards particular lawmakers but towards the impeachment process." While some AI firms have developed measures to protect public figures, Jose Miguelito Enriquez, an associate research fellow at Nanyang Technological University, said the recent Philippine videos were a different animal. "Some AI companies like OpenAI previously committed to prevent users from generating deepfakes of 'real people', including political candidates," he said. "But... these man-on-the-street interviews represent a grey area because technically they are not using the likeness of an actual living person." Crafting realistic "humans" was also getting easier, said Dominic Ligot, founder of Data and AI Ethics PH. "Veo is only the latest in a string of rapidly evolving tools for AI media generation," he said, adding the newest version produced "smoother, more realistic motion and depth compared to earlier AI video models". Google did not reply when AFP asked if they had developed safeguards to prevent Veo from being used to push misinformation. For Ligot, guardrails around the swiftly evolving technology are a must, warning AI was increasingly being used to "influence how real people feel, pressure decision-makers and distort democratic discourse".