CELEBRITY
MAJOR UPDATE: DONALD TRUMP HAS JUST BEEN LABELED A “WANTED INTERNATIONAL WAR CRIMINAL” BY THE UN SECURITY COUNCIL
**New York / Washington, D.C.** — A viral claim circulating on social media asserts that the United Nations Security Council has designated U.S. President Donald Trump a “wanted international war criminal” in response to recent U.S.-Israeli military strikes on Iran.
The allegation, which originated from posts on platforms like X (formerly Twitter) in early March 2026, has garnered millions of views and sparked widespread debate amid escalating tensions in the Middle East. It follows the February 28, 2026, joint strikes that reportedly killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and triggered retaliatory attacks across the region.
However, multiple fact-checking organizations, including Snopes and USA TODAY, have debunked the claim as false. No official UN Security Council resolution, presidential statement, or press release has labeled President Trump—or any individual—a war criminal or issued a wanted notice.
The Council did convene an emergency session on February 28 to address the strikes, where Secretary-General António Guterres condemned military actions by all parties and called for adherence to international law and humanitarian principles. Iran’s ambassador accused the U.S. and Israel of aggression and war crimes, but no binding action targeting Trump was taken.
Experts note the near-impossibility of such a move: The United States holds permanent veto power on the 15-member Council, making any resolution condemning its own president highly unlikely without American consent. No reputable news outlet has reported the alleged designation, which would dominate global headlines if true.
The rumor appears tied to broader criticisms of the strikes as potential violations of the UN Charter, with some legal scholars and commentators describing the action as aggression under international law.
President Trump has defended the operation as necessary to counter threats, while the administration has previously imposed sanctions on International Criminal Court officials investigating allied actions.
As the situation in the Middle East remains volatile, with ongoing diplomatic fallout and debates in the U.S. Congress, the viral claim serves as a reminder of how rapidly misinformation can spread during global crises. Official UN channels and credible sources continue to show no such labeling has occurred.
