June 30, 2026 9:12 pm

Foreign trolls are stealing your uniform online to spread Iran propaganda

Disinformation networks linked to Iran use affinity fraud to mimic U.S. veterans, spreading deceptive Middle East narratives.
From nukes to nap charts, how social media warps reality

(Liberty Shield Network) –

Online disinformation networks tied to Iran are increasingly impersonating U.S. military veterans, service members, and military families to spread deceptive narratives regarding Middle East conflicts, according to researchers and media literacy advocates.

The sophisticated influence operations rely on a psychological tactic known as affinity fraud, where foreign actors mimic specific demographics to bypass the natural skepticism of social media users. By fabricating profiles that feature military insignia, patriotic slogans, and veteran identifiers, these networks exploit the high level of public trust traditionally granted to the military community.

According to digital forensics experts, a primary objective of these campaigns is not necessarily to convince audiences of a specific geopolitical stance, but to trigger immediate emotional reactions that encourage rapid sharing. This strategy allows foreign propaganda to be amplified organically by authentic social media users before fact-checkers or platform moderators can intervene.

Common content markers identified in these operations include fabricated testimonials from purported service members criticizing leadership, emotional posts from alleged military spouses opposing deployment strategies, and unverified, sensational battlefield footage. Many of these posts use conspiratorial framing designed to make users feel they are accessing censored information.

To counter these influence operations, cybersecurity and media literacy organizations are urging internet users to apply rigorous verification standards to their social media feeds. Experts recommend evaluating the digital footprint of accounts sharing polarizing military content, checking registration dates to see if profiles were created immediately prior to a conflict, and verifying unusual claims through established, independent news outlets.

Advocates also suggest cross-referencing suspicious viral narratives with dedicated verification platforms, such as the Rumor Guard, Poynter’s MediaWise initiative, and the Google Fact Check Explorer.

For more tips and tricks on how to help win the information battle through solid media literacy, go here.


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