Thu, 25 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 25, 2026 · 19:05
India News Updated Jun 25, 2026

Indian Army Launches Fact Check Account to Combat Deepfake Threats

The Indian Army has launched an official Fact Check Account on social media to combat misinformation, disinformation, and deepfakes. Citizens are urged to verify information before amplifying it and to trust only official sources. The move follows the debunking of AI-generated deepfake videos of Army Chief General Upendra Dwivedi and former Army Chief Manoj Pande, circulated by Pakistani propaganda accounts. The PIB fact-check unit has clarified that these manipulated videos falsely attribute statements about India and the Taliban to the Army chiefs.

Deepfake videos: Indian Army launches official Fact Check Account

New Delhi, June 25

The Indian Army on Thursday cautioned citizens against amplifying unverified information related to the military and released details of its official Fact Check Account on social media.

In an official announcement, the Additional Directorate General of Public Information, IHQ of Ministry of Defence (Army), said, "Follow @MythbusterXX for verified updates, swift rebuttals, Misinformation, Disinformation, Malinformation, and Deepfakes pertaining to the Indian Army."

"Official Fact Check Account of Indian Army. @MythbusterXX. Be Aware and Stay Alert. Verify before you amplify. Trust only official sources. Stand with truth," said the announcement.

Earlier on June 1, the Indian government debunked false claims circulating on social media and warned about an AI-generated deepfake video of the Chief of the Army Staff, General Upendra Dwivedi, being shared by Pakistani propaganda accounts to mislead the public.

The fact-checking unit of the Press Information Bureau (PIB) highlighted that Pakistani propaganda accounts are using AI to falsely attribute statements about India funding the Taliban.

"Pakistani propaganda accounts are circulating a digitally-manipulated video falsely claiming that Indian Army chief, General Upendra Dwivedi, made remarks regarding India's engagement with the Taliban," the PIB fact-check said in a statement.

"This claim is fake. Indian Army chief General Upendra Dwivedi did NOT make any such statement. The viral clip has been digitally manipulated to falsely attribute remarks to the Chief of the Army Staff," it added.

In another earlier instance of AI-generated deepfake video, content attributed to former Chief of Army Staff, Manoj Pande was circulated online by Pakistani propaganda accounts with misleading claims about the Indian Army.

An official Fact Check issued against the said manipulated content said that the video falsely portrays Gen. Manoj Pande (Retd.) making controversial remarks regarding the functioning and conduct of the Indian Army.

"Pakistani propaganda accounts are circulating a digitally manipulated video, falsely showing the former Chief of Army Staff, Gen Manoj Pande (Retd.), making false statements regarding the Indian Army. Beware! This is an AI-generated deepfake video," a PIB Fact Check stated, clarifying that the former Army chief has not made any such statement.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

It's alarming how AI is being misused. My uncle in the village got almost confused by a similar deepfake about the army last month. These fact checks are essential. But I hope the army also invests in educating people about digital literacy—many older folks still forward unverified WhatsApp messages.

Vikram M

Finally! Our army is fighting a real information war. These Pakistani accounts are relentless. I've seen multiple fake videos of General Dwivedi and General Pande being shared. The @MythbusterXX account is a must-follow for every patriotic Indian. Also, great that PIB is coordinating.

Sarah B

As someone who works in tech, this is both impressive and terrifying. Deepfakes are getting too sophisticated. Kudos to the Indian Army for taking proactive steps. I just hope this account has enough manpower to respond quickly. The fake news spreads faster than the truth these days.

Kavya N

This is really needed. In our colony WhatsApp group, someone shared a deepfake of General Dwivedi last week claiming India is funding Taliban! My father was about to forward it before I stopped him. We need more awareness. Also, please make the verification process more transparent—I don't want to blindly trust any account.

David E

Good initiative. As an expat living in India, I've noticed how quickly misinformation spreads here. The deepfake videos are especially dangerous because they use respected figures like Army chiefs. This fact-check account is a step in the right direction. I hope it gets widely promoted.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked