Retired US Vice-Admiral Robert Harward's recent appearance onFox News, in a segment about theUS–Iran standoff broadcastfrom the United States and now circulating widely online, has triggered a wave of speculation among viewers who are convinced the former Navy SEAL was wearing a prosthetic face mask.

Harward was invited on air to analyse Washington's posture towards Tehran as tensions simmer. In the interview, he set out what he described as US President Donald Trump's strategy, arguing that the White House was in no rush to escalate militarily and was instead leaning on economic sanctions, regional allies and what he framed as 'strategic patience'.

According to a descriptionfromFox News, the retired vice-admiral, who previously served as deputy commander of US Central Command (CENTCOM), told the network that Trump 'controls the narrative' and has time to ratchet up pressure on Iran until it capitulates rather than merely negotiate.

Admiral Robert Harward is GOING VIRALHere are BOTH CLIPS UNEDITED of the interview from 5/18 and yesterday 5/21People are saying it is NOT HIM it is someone else WEARING a mask. To me it looks and sounds like two different people, but both are of himWatch and tell me what…https://t.co/o6xDzXdk6xpic.twitter.com/M5u1KaE9rO

The politics, however, were swiftly overshadowed by the pictures. In the short clip spreading rapidly across X, TikTok and other platforms, viewers homed in not on Harward's commentary but on the lower half of his face and neck. Around his collarbone, a patch of skin appears slightly discoloured and raised, sitting at an angle that, to some eyes, looked like the edge of a latex or silicone prosthetic rather than natural skin.

From there, the conspiracies wrote themselves. Social media users began insisting thatFox Newshad put 'a man wearing a mask of Admiral Robert Harward' on screen, claiming the real man was elsewhere. One viewer simply asked what they were supposed to be looking at, reflecting a broader bewilderment that quickly tipped into online detective work.

Others folded the clip straight into pre-existing internet folklore. Long-running claims that actor Jim Carrey had once worn a hyper-realistic mask resurfaced, with users posting side-by-side images and suggesting Harward's 'neck and face' shared the same uncanny quality. No documentary evidence was offered for those links, but the narrative caught on, drawing more people into the thread.

Some of the commentary, to be fair, tried to drag the conversation back to earth. 'People are so dumb man. Yes it's a mask but not for conspiracy... Makeup might not work on their skin so they do silicon with makeup on it,' one user wrote, arguing that what viewers were seeing was likely cosmetic or medical rather than political. That explanation, while unverified, at least attempted a rational frame.

Many others were not satisfied. 'I'm need a rational explanation for this. Like now,' another user posted, apparently unsettled by the visual oddity. A third suggested, without offering proof, that 'They're practising mask technology for when they want us to think various leaders are still alive,' leaning into a familiar blend of sci-fi and political paranoia that tends to flourish during tense news cycles.

One commenter tried to follow the supposed logic through to its conclusion and found it wanting. 'So did he just not feel like going on and decide 'hey why don't we make a mask so you can hop on for me'? I'm so confused as to why this would even be necessary,' they wrote, implicitly puncturing the more extravagant claims simply by asking why any broadcaster would go to those lengths for a routine foreign policy slot.

Source: International Business Times UK