Trump made 'false, unsubstantiated' claims on Iran war
CNN's fact-check revealed President Trump made multiple "false" and "uncorroborated" claims regarding the Iran conflict and his foreign policy record during a recent press conference.
- World
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 10:13 | 07 April 2026
US President Donald Trump made a series of "false" and "uncorroborated" claims about the Iran conflict and his foreign policy record during a recent press conference, according to a fact check by CNN on Monday.
CNN reported that Trump repeated a long-debunked claim that he had called for the killing of Osama bin Laden in a 2000 book. The book mentions bin Laden only in passing, and the al-Qaida leader was killed in a 2011 US operation ordered by then-President Barack Obama.
Trump also inaccurately claimed that most US aircraft losses in the Iran conflict were due to friendly fire. CNN reported that multiple aircraft were shot down by Iranian fire, including an F-15 and an A-10, while an E-3 surveillance plane was destroyed in a separate strike.
The president further repeated a claim that he had "ended eight wars," which CNN said is false, noting some cited conflicts were not wars or did not end.
Trump also renewed an unsubstantiated allegation that Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro sent large numbers of prisoners to the US. Experts previously told CNN there is no evidence supporting that claim.
Additionally, Trump overstated US troop levels in South Korea and repeated a false claim that former Vice President Kamala Harris never visited the US-Mexico border.
CNN said some of Trump's other assertions could also not be independently verified.