
Vengeance for all: Iran shares video bombing Statue of Liberty with head of baal
India Today
The video seems to piece together a story of long-standing anger, tying together past and present conflicts involving the US. Through different scenes, it shows several countries as having suffered from American military actions, before building up to a final, symbolic act of revenge.
A missile rises through the clouds and within seconds it crashes into the Statue of Liberty -- its head replaced with that of Baal -- shattering the symbol into pieces. This is the final moment of a viral AI-generated video now circulating online centred on retaliation against the Donald Trump administration. On X, news outlet RT citing Fars News posted the clip.
The video seems to piece together a story of long-standing anger, tying together past and present conflicts involving the US. Through different scenes, it shows several countries as having suffered from American military actions, before building up to a final, symbolic act of revenge.
The video begins with scenes linked to indigenous lands in North America before shifting to Hiroshima, Japan, where a child stands among ruins, evoking the US nuclear bombing during World War II.
'ONE VENGEANCE FOR ALL' — Iran 'bombs' the Statue of Liberty WITH THE HEAD OF BAAL pic.twitter.com/6tPH15fqkZ— RT (@RT_com) March 25, 2026
It then moves to Vietnam, showing a man standing in a smoke-filled field, pointing to US attacks during the war. The sequence continues in Yemen, with visuals of destruction and rising smoke, referencing US-backed military involvement.
In Gaza, a young girl stands in a refugee camp under dark skies, reflecting the ongoing conflict in Palestine, where the US remains a key ally of Israel. In each scene, the subjects look up at the sky.

Oil and gas refineries and hubs are up in flames not just in the Middle East, but also in Russia and the US. Crude oil prices have surged over $100 a barrel. With the energy infrastructure in the Middle East likely to take years to be rebuilt, the world could be set for the biggest oil disruption in history.

Speaking at the White House, Trump said the United States was in contact with "the right people" in Iran and suggested that Tehran was eager to reach an agreement to halt hostilities. "We're in negotiations right now," he told reporters, without offering further details on the scope or format of the talks.











