Iran’s state-controlled PressTV has been pumping out propaganda videos and satellite images claiming the IRGC is “winning” the war, but they just got caught in one of the most amateurish blunders imaginable.
In the lower right corner of the images they released, the Google Gemini AI logo is clearly visible. They forgot to crop it out. That single detail proves the entire thing is fabricated — AI-generated fake footage and imagery designed to fool their own people and the world into thinking Iran is holding its own against U.S. and Israeli strikes.
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This is what desperation looks like. The regime is taking heavy losses, its leadership has been decimated, and its military infrastructure is crumbling. Instead of admitting reality, they resort to cheap AI tricks and hope no one notices the watermark. It’s the propaganda equivalent of showing up to a knife fight with a participation trophy.
The Iranian people aren’t stupid. They know their country is being systematically dismantled. These fake “winning” videos are meant to prop up morale and keep the mullahs in power a little longer, but the lie is falling apart in real time.
Israel and the United States have made it clear they will not tolerate a nuclear-armed Iran or an IRGC that continues to export terror across the region. The regime’s media operation is part of that terror machine — spreading lies to justify attacks on civilians and holy sites. Some have openly suggested that Israel should target those propaganda centers directly. At this point, it’s hard to argue against the logic.
The mullahs are losing badly, and their own propaganda is now working against them. Every time they try to spin a victory, the world sees the Gemini logo and knows it’s all fake. The end of this regime is coming, and no amount of AI-generated satellite images can stop it.
**Opinion Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article, including criticism of Iranian state propaganda and support for decisive action against the regime, reflect a critical perspective and may not align with all readers. Facts are based on the publicly shared images and reported events; readers should form their own conclusions.**






