On September 23, President Donald Trump falsely claimed on Twitter that Iran had “test-fired a Ballistic Missile,” presumably based on a report from Iranian state television that turned out to be fake. Trump frequently uses the term “fake news” to delegitimize journalists and news outlets, but he has repeatedly pushed stories that are truly fake news such as the Iran missile story. In January, Trump invoked a fake news story that “thousands” of members of the group Bikers for Trump came to his inauguration, and, in February, a fake news story was shared on his Facebook page claiming Kuwait had imposed a Muslim ban similar to the one he sought to enact. Trump has also been accused of helping to craft a false story for a Fox News article about slain Democratic National Committee staffer Seth Rich. Other Trump aides have pushed fake news, such as White House social media director Dan Scavino, who shared a fake video of flooding during Hurricane Irma, and Michael Flynn Jr., a transition staffer who was forced to resign after he pushed the baseless Pizzagate conspiracy theory.
On the September 26 edition of CNN’s Wolf, host Brianna Keilar and national security correspondent Jim Sciutto discussed the latest perplexing example of Trump spreading misinformation by “tweeting about a missile launch that didn’t take place”: