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Memes, satires flood cyberworld as West Asia war drags​

Memes, satires flood cyberworld as West Asia war drags​

New Delhi, April 15 (SocialNews.XYZ) A large part of the volatility in West Asia has reflected online with an explosion of a different kind, where the World Wide Web has intensified the use of memes, spoofs, and satirical digital content to mock the United States, particularly targeting President Donald Trump and the American military.​

Iran particularly appears to have turned the social media platform into a meme battlefield, where embassies and state-linked accounts use humour, satire, and artificial intelligence-generated content to undermine Washington’s credibility.

 

On the other hand, United States officials have uploaded visual messages, some comical, against Tehran.​

Last month, days after the Iran attack escalated, the White House posted montages of Top Gun, Braveheart and Breaking Bad on its social media handles with the caption “Justice the American way”. In another, named “Touchdown”, American football players are shown tackling each other and “exploding” on contact. Creativity itself is turning explosive in the cyber world.​

From SpongeBob SquarePants jokes to edited video‑game clips, United States accounts and those supporting Tehran have been trading viral posts that pull down each other while rallying for support and shaping public opinion.​

In March, a video posted by the United States Central Command commander for Operation Epic Fury, Admiral Brad Cooper, stated that artificial intelligence had played a crucial role in the over 5,500 strikes on Iran.

Operation Epic Fury is the United States military operation that began on February 28, claiming to dismantle Iran's military capabilities and regime.

​The adversaries posted satirical videos depicting United States officials begging for regime change in Washington, flipping the American narrative about Iran. ​

Meanwhile, Iranian embassies appear to have unleashed a string of memes, mostly ridiculing the United States President. These often “tag” each other in meme battles, jokingly reprimanding one another for stealing content. This coordinated trolling creates a sense of camaraderie and amplifies the narrative that Iran is united in mocking the United States power.​

On the intervening Tuesday-Wednesday night (India time), Iran’s Embassy in Tajikistan released a viral spoof video mocking Donald Trump’s controversial artificial intelligence-generated post of himself as Jesus. The parody added a “Jesus climax” in which Jesus himself appears and strikes him, sending him into a fiery pit.​

Just the day before, the United States President’s social media account posted an artificial intelligence-generated image depicting him as Jesus Christ, later claiming it was meant to show him as a doctor with the Red Cross.

The post sparked backlash, particularly after Trump criticised Pope Leo XIV for his reaction to the President’s comments on the Iran war. President Trump later deleted the image but refused to apologise.​

Tehran seems to have deployed teams and tools to create spoof videos of United States officials, amplifying ridicule on social media. Content circulates across X-handles, Telegram, and Instagram, which mostly share sarcastic posts mocking Trump’s Truth Social updates.​

One viral meme read: “Trump, please talk. We’re bored” – an apparent jab at his frequent online postings. Another featured Trump portrayed as a confused gamer, calling it “rage-quitting” after losing to Iran in a digital war simulation.​

Also going viral are Lego-style animations, caricatures, and edited visuals on social media handles, turning online trolling into a weapon of influence in the ongoing conflict. Viral videos depicted United States pilots and soldiers as clumsy Lego figures, often being chased or defeated by Iranian forces.​

A widely shared Lego animation showed an Iranian pilot chasing down a United States F-35 pilot, with the American jet depicted on crutches. Another Lego skit mocked United States soldiers struggling to assemble their weapons, while Iranian forces easily dismantled them.​

However, the real war is no laughing matter. Behind the memes and satires is the reality of lives and properties being lost, even as the global economy faces a grave threat from uncertainty in maritime traffic.

Source: IANS

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Memes, satires flood cyberworld as West Asia war drags​

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