Fact Check: AI Image Does NOT Document Tel Aviv Under Air Attack By Iran In June 2025 -- Wrong Skyline And Light Streaks Resemble Meteors, Not Missiles

Fact Check

  • by: Dean Miller
Fact Check: AI Image Does NOT Document Tel Aviv Under Air Attack By Iran In June 2025 -- Wrong Skyline And Light Streaks Resemble Meteors, Not Missiles No Towers

Does a viral image of a town's nighttime skyline under air attack show Iran's attacks on Tel Aviv during the hostilities between the two countries in June 2025? No, that's not true: Authentic coverage of the battle showed defensive weapons streaking upward and far fewer falling projectiles. Also, Tel Aviv's skyline is defined by more than 50 tall towers, while the image shows a low-slung town. Independently, multiple news agencies have photojournalists covering the missile and drone attacks, and images published do not resemble asteroid showers, as does the viral image.

The image was posted on X.com on June 16, 2025 (archived here) on the @WhiteGhost187 account with a caption that read: "This is not AI." It continued:

This is Tel Aviv

This is what the post looked like on X at the time this fact check was written:

TelAvivPost.jpg

(Source: X.com screenshot by Lead Stories)

The image was published on the fourth day of Israel and Iran launching missiles and drones at one another in June 2025 (archived here), implying it documented damage inflicted on Tel Aviv (archived here), in retaliation for Israel crossing into Iran to kill generals and nuclear scientists (archived here).

Lead Stories submitted the image to Google's reverse search tool, (archived here) and found the same image used on dozens of accounts, none operated by evidence-based news organizations:

Image Search TA.jpg

(Source: Google.com screenshot by Lead Stories.)

The image does not depict Tel Aviv, a 9-mile strip of land along the Mediterranean coast. Tel Aviv is Israel's tallest city, with 59 buildings in excess of 300 feet tall that define its skyline, as can be seen in the New York Times' coverage of Iran's night-time attacks on Tel Aviv:

NYT TelAviv.jpg

(Source: Newyorktimes.com screenshot by Lead Stories.)

Similarly, CNN's footage of attacks on Tel Aviv (archived here) was framed by the city's famed skyline, where air defense missiles shot upward and there was no curtain of meteors falling:

CNNTelAviv.png

(Source: CNN.com screenshot by Lead Stories.)

Readers can find more Lead Stories fact checks related to the Israel/Iran conflict here.

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  Dean Miller

Lead Stories Managing Editor Dean Miller has edited daily and weekly newspapers, worked as a reporter for more than a decade and is co-author of two non-fiction books. After a Harvard Nieman Fellowship, he served as Director of Stony Brook University's Center for News Literacy for six years, then as Senior Vice President/Content at Connecticut Public Broadcasting. Most recently, he wrote the twice-weekly "Save the Free Press" column for The Seattle Times. 

Read more about or contact Dean Miller

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