Amid tensions between the United States and Iran, posts on social media have said that Iran has placed a large bounty on President Donald Trump.

"A bounty of $80 MILLION has been placed on President Donald Trump’s head by Iran as tensions between the country and the USA rise," said one representative Instagram post that received more than 380,000 likes as of Jan. 8, two days after it was posted.

The image was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

The post and others like it are based on actual events related to the death of high-ranking Iranian official Qassem Soleimani due to a U.S. drone strike on Jan. 2. However, many of the posts are misleading because they leave out important context.

Reports of an $80 million bounty stem from remarks at Soleimani’s funeral procession in the northeastern city of Mashhad that were aired on Iranian state television. Footage from state TV, including the remarks in the original Farsi, were tweeted by NBC News Tehran correspondent Ali Arouzi.

At the funeral procession, which was a highly choreographed, state-run event with a national audience, a speaker called on Iranians "to donate $1 each in order to gather an $80 million bounty on President Trump’s head," Arouzi wrote.

The population of Iran is a little bit over 80 million, so $1 each would be roughly $80 million.

There’s a caveat, however. The $80 million bounty was a suggestion by a eulogist at the funeral — not official Iranian government policy.

We asked Farhad Souzanchi — a Farsi speaker who founded the Rouhani Meter fact-checking website, which covers Iranian politics — to review the video clip from the funeral. Souzanchi said that Arouzi’s summary of the speaker’s words was accurate.

Souzanchi said the eulogist prefaced his remarks by saying that "this is a voluntary suggestion from the people of Mashhad on behalf of all Iranians."

While the bounty has made a splash on U.S. social media, Souzanchi, who monitors Iranian media, told PolitiFact that the bounty proposal "hasn't made much news" in Iran. He said the speaker, whose identity PolitiFact has been unable to confirm, was not familiar to him either.

Other Iran experts urged not taking the bounty threat too seriously.

"I would not touch it with a 10 foot pole," said Mark J. Gasiorowski, a specialist in Iran and the Middle East at Tulane University.

Arang Keshavarzian, an associate professor of Middle East studies at New York University, said he agrees with Souzanchi that there’s no indication in the Iranian media that the bounty is becoming a serious policy proposal.

Our ruling

Social media posts have said Iran has placed a bounty of $80 million on Trump’s head. A eulogist at Soleimani’s funeral made this proposal, but there is no evidence that it is something being seriously considered by the Iranian government

We rate the statement Mostly False.