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Storm-1516: Fake Hezbollah video threatening Bastille Day attack possibly Russia linked

A social media video emerged ahead of this year's Bastille Day in which alleged Hezbollah militants threatened attacks on French soil. The video turned out to be fake, and researchers say it could be linked to a well-known Russian disinformation campaign.

READ MORE : http://www.euronews.com/2026/07/16/storm-1516-fake-hezbollah-video-threatening-bastille-day-attack-possibly-russia-linked

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Transcript
00:03You're watching Euronews' fact-checking show The Cube.
00:06Ahead of France's annual Bastide celebrations on the 14th of July, this video surfaced on social media,
00:13allegedly showing Hezbollah militants who threatened to carry out attacks on French soil.
00:18But in reality, it actually fits into a series of videos which researchers have linked to the pro-Russian Storm
00:241516 disinformation campaign.
00:27European journalists and news outlets have been impersonated to push fabricated claims about the West and Ukraine.
00:34In this particular clip, 300 men pose in front of a dummy of a French Foreign Legion soldier whose face
00:39has the French flag painted on it.
00:42The men threaten to shed blood on the 14th of July in Paris if the government continues to supply weapons
00:47to the Zionist regime, in an apparent reference to Israel.
00:50The clip first spread on Telegram before moving to X and Facebook, gaining almost one million views across X posts.
00:57In the content we analyze, the men don't make an explicit reference to the group they belong to, but social
01:02media posts refer to them as Hezbollah, a Lebanese militia backed by Iran.
01:07Hezbollah's military wing is classified as a terrorist organization by the EU.
01:11The arm patch on the soldier's uniform also resembles the group's.
01:16Nevertheless, there are multiple clues that the video is fake.
01:19Our Arabic-speaking colleagues told us that the accent resembled Levantine Arabic, but not a Lebanese Arabic accent, and added
01:26that the speaker also made multiple grammatical mistakes.
01:29Additionally, Hezbollah typically incorporates its own logos into videos shared on its channels, but this isn't the case here.
01:36The video bears similarities to others connected to Storm 1516, such as this one, which impersonates an Islamist militant group
01:44threatening to burn down Paris' Notre Dame Cathedral.
01:48This was also linked to the pro-Russian group, which has a track record of fabricating evidence, especially in the
01:54run-up to major events.
01:55B
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