Sudeshna Mohajan Arpa

Research Associate, Dismislab
Images claiming U.S. soldiers captured by Iran are AI-generated

Images claiming U.S. soldiers captured by Iran are AI-generated

Sudeshna Mohajan Arpa

Research Associate, Dismislab

Several photos recently circulated on Facebook claim to show U.S. Delta Force members captured by Iran after a failed secret mission. However, a Dismislab fact-check found that the images were generated using artificial intelligence and do not depict any real event.

On March 6, 2026, a personal Facebook profile posted four images of what appear to be American soldiers. In the first image, a soldier is shown parachuting from a helicopter. The second shows several soldiers walking in a line with their hands behind their backs, accompanied by a masked man in military attire. The third image depicts three soldiers kneeling with masked gunmen standing over them, against a wall displaying the Iranian flag and a portrait of the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The final image shows a larger group of soldiers kneeling before armed guards, with the Iranian flag visible in the background.

Fact-check: AI-generated images falsely claim to show U.S. Delta Force soldiers captured by Iran after a failed mission circulating on Facebook.
Screenshots of social media posts sharing AI-generated images falsely claiming that U.S. soldiers were captured by Iran.

The post’s caption claimed that a Delta Force mission inside Iran had failed and that many U.S. soldiers had been taken captive. It further alleged that Iran had issued a warning, saying, “This is Iran, not Venezuela. There is a price to be paid for such operations.” By the time of reporting, the post had received more than 19,000 reactions, over 1,200 shares, and more than 400 comments.

The same images were shared by multiple Facebook profiles, pages, and groups (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10), often with identical claims. Reverse image searches found these same images circulating in several other countries (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) as well.

Fact-check: AI-generated images falsely claim to show U.S. Delta Force soldiers captured by Iran after a failed mission circulating on Facebook.
Screenshots of reverse image search results showing the same images shared on social media in multiple countries with identical claims, some displaying visible AI-generation logos.

Upon close examination, Dismislab observed clear indicators that the images were AI-generated. Reverse image searches showed that each of the photos had appeared individually on social media, separate from one another. In the second, third, and fourth images, a faint white logo for Google’s Gemini AI appeared in the bottom-right corner. This watermark is automatically applied when images are created or edited using Google’s AI tools. In the versions circulated in Bangladesh, these Gemini watermarks had been cropped out.

  • Fact-check: AI-generated images falsely claim to show U.S. Delta Force soldiers captured by Iran after a failed mission circulating on Facebook.
  • Fact-check: AI-generated images falsely claim to show U.S. Delta Force soldiers captured by Iran after a failed mission circulating on Facebook.

Further verification using Google’s SynthID feature confirmed that each image had been created or altered using Google’s AI model. The AI-content detection tool Hive Moderation also identified the images as almost certainly AI-generated.

  • Fact-check: AI-generated images falsely claim to show U.S. Delta Force soldiers captured by Iran after a failed mission circulating on Facebook.
  • Fact-check: AI-generated images falsely claim to show U.S. Delta Force soldiers captured by Iran after a failed mission circulating on Facebook.

Additionally, no credible national or international news outlet has reported that U.S. Delta Force soldiers were recently captured by Iran. There is no evidence of any such incident.

In short, the images circulating online claiming that U.S. soldiers were detained by Iran after a failed mission are not real. They were produced using artificial intelligence and have no connection to any current military operation. Similar claims circulating in other countries have also been debunked by multiple fact-checking organizations (1, 2), confirming that the images are AI-generated.

It is worth noting that the U.S. Delta Force did fail during a mission in Iran once before—during the 1980 hostage rescue attempt—but the viral images have no relation to that event or any recent development.