Library

10 published verifications about Israel Israel ×

“As of April 17, 2026, Israel is directly engaged in military conflict with Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and is exchanging missile and drone strikes with Iran.”

Misleading

The claim significantly overstates the military situation on April 17, 2026. A 10-day Lebanon ceasefire began April 16–17 and was reported as holding, Gaza operations were occurring under a ceasefire framework with only limited reactive strikes, and the most recent evidence of direct Israel-Iran missile exchanges dates to April 12–14 — not April 17. While broader regional conflict is real, all three fronts were in ceasefire or negotiation phases on the claimed date, making the assertion of simultaneous active direct engagement misleading.

“As of April 23, 2026, Japan has banned entry to tourists from Israel.”

False

No evidence supports the claim that Japan banned entry to Israeli tourists. The claim rests on a fundamental confusion between Japan's outbound travel advisories — which warn Japanese citizens against traveling to Israel — and Japan's inbound immigration rules, which are an entirely separate policy. As of April 23, 2026, Israel remained on Japan's visa-exemption list, the U.S. State Department confirmed no nationality-based entry bans existed for Japan, and The Japan Times explicitly debunked this rumor.

“As of April 18, 2026, Israel has conducted widespread explosions targeting infrastructure in the southern Lebanese towns of Qantara, Khiam, Naqoura, al-Bayada, Chama, and Houla, breaking a ceasefire.”

Misleading

The claim significantly overstates what the evidence confirms. While credible sources — including Le Monde and the Lebanese military — document Israeli ceasefire violations after April 17, including bombardments in Khiam, the specific assertion of "widespread explosions" across all six named towns (Qantara, Khiam, Naqoura, al-Bayada, Chama, and Houla) is not substantiated. Evidence for Naqoura and al-Bayada dates to April 4–5, before the ceasefire, and Qantara, Chama, and Houla lack any post-ceasefire corroboration.

“Israel has a greater than 40% probability of winning the Eurovision Song Contest in 2026.”

False

The available betting data directly contradicts this claim. The most current odds aggregation (Oddschecker, April 14, 2026) places Israel's outright win probability at approximately 8%, with Finland leading at 40%. The higher figures sometimes cited for Israel (26–36%) refer exclusively to winning the televote component, not the overall contest. No credible market source places Israel's overall win probability anywhere near 40%.

“There exists a coordinated plan by the United States and Israel, led by Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu, to destabilize and redesign the Middle East, with Turkey as a primary target aimed at weakening or dividing its unitary national structure.”

False

No credible evidence supports the existence of a coordinated US-Israel plan to destabilize or divide Turkey. The most authoritative sources — the US State Department, NATO, and Turkey's own Ministry of Foreign Affairs — explicitly deny any such effort, and multiple reports show Trump actively mediating between Israel and Turkey and at times siding with Erdoğan against Netanyahu. The claim conflates broad regional geopolitical rivalry with a specific conspiracy, relying on low-authority speculative commentary that lacks primary evidence.

“Several member states of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, including the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, normalised relations with Israel under the Abraham Accords despite OIC resolutions condemning Israeli occupation, and did not face any sanctions from the OIC as of April 10, 2026.”

Mostly True

The core assertions of this claim are well-supported by the evidence. The UAE and Bahrain did normalize relations with Israel under the 2020 Abraham Accords despite OIC resolutions condemning Israeli occupation, and no formal OIC sanctions — such as suspension, penalties, or loss of membership rights — have been imposed on them as of April 2026. However, the claim omits that the OIC has issued increasingly forceful communiqués urging all members to sever ties with Israel, which constitute political pressure short of formal sanctions.

“A photograph purportedly showing Benjamin Netanyahu ordering a strike on Iran was taken before February 28, 2026, which is claimed as evidence that the attack was pre-planned.”

False

The claim that the Netanyahu strike-order photo predates February 28, 2026 is not supported by credible evidence. Lead Stories traced the alleged early date to a known Google Images glitch and found no verified instances of the photo appearing before Feb. 28. The only sources asserting a pre-Feb-28 date are anonymous social media accounts offering unverified metadata claims. The photo was actually released by the Israeli Prime Minister's Office in mid-March 2026 amid rumors about Netanyahu's health.

“Joe Kent, head of the U.S. National Counterterrorism Center, resigned in March 2026 over the U.S. and Israel's war on Iran.”

Mostly True

The claim is largely accurate. Joe Kent served as Director of the U.S. National Counterterrorism Center, and he resigned in mid-March 2026 citing opposition to the ongoing U.S.-Israel war on Iran. His authenticated resignation letter confirms this. Two caveats: the phrase "U.S. and Israel's war" slightly simplifies Kent's emphasis on U.S. involvement driven by Israeli pressure, and CBS News reports Kent was already under FBI investigation for alleged classified leaks before resigning — context the claim omits.

“Joe Kent resigned due to his opposition to the United States and Israel's military campaign against Iran.”

Mostly True

Joe Kent did resign, and his own resignation letter — quoted across 15+ major news outlets — explicitly states he opposed the war in Iran and blamed Israeli lobby pressure for driving US involvement. The claim accurately captures his stated reason. Two minor caveats: Kent's framing specifically targeted Israeli lobby influence rather than describing a co-equal US-Israel campaign, and a pre-existing FBI leak investigation may have been a contributing factor, though no source connects it to his resignation decision.

“NBC News correspondent Richard Engel was injured while reporting in Israel in early March 2026.”

False

This claim is false. Richard Engel was not injured while reporting in Israel in early March 2026. Engel himself called the injury rumors "totally not true" on a March 10 podcast and posted a video on March 12 showing him healthy and working. Snopes confirmed the rumor originated as AI-generated misinformation spread on Facebook. Multiple sources document Engel actively reporting from Israel throughout early March with no signs of injury, and NBC News issued no injury announcement.