Gulf News

Russia’s ‘terror aid’ picture said to be fake

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The Russian defence ministry has been accused of creating fake news by asserting that the US was cooperatin­g with Daesh in Syria.

It attempted to pass off an image from a video game as “irrefutabl­e evidence” of a US-Daesh link with a Facebook post and tweet Tuesday that showed a picture of an “ISIS [Daesh] automobile convoy” fleeing Al Bu Kamal, Syria, under US protection on November 9.

In fact, it was taken from a 2015 promotiona­l video showing AC-130 Gunship Simulator: Special Ops Squadron, a mobile game in which players fire at ground targets from a US warplane.

The discovery was made by Eliot Higgins, founder of Bellingcat, an investigat­ive website, who noticed a large red “fire” button in the corner had been cropped out of the picture.

Another image purporting to show the same convoy in Syria was actually taken from a 2016 video published by Iraq’s defence ministry, of a Daesh convoy fleeing Fallujah, investigat­ors found.

The Russian ministry post with the fake images claimed: “This is the irrefutabl­e evidence that there is no struggle against terrorism as the whole global community believes. The US are actually covering the ISIS [Daesh] combat units to recover their combat capabiliti­es, redeploy, and use them to promote the American interests in the Middle East.”

The defence ministry later removed the images. But Russian state media was already republishi­ng the fake pictures and reporting the claims as fact.

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