WASHINGTON — President Trump insisted Tuesday that a video showing objects being hurled from a second-floor White House window was “probably AI-generated” — despite an aide confirming the bizarre footage was real and the result of a contractor’s work.

“That’s probably AI-generated,” Trump said in response to a question about the footage during an Oval Office event at which he announced the Space Force’s headquarters were moving to Huntsville, Ala.

“Actually you can’t open the windows. You know why? They’re all heavily armored and bulletproof,” the president added.

Mystery objects were recently hurled out of one of the White House’s windows, a bizarre video shows. X

“I know every window up there. The last place I’d be doing it is that, because there’s cameras all over the place, right, including yours.”

Trump went on to claim that his wife, Melania, had recently complained about the lack of natural ventilation.

She said, ‘I’d love to have a little fresh air come in.’ But you can’t. They’re bulletproof, number one. They’re sealed. And number two, each window weighs about 600 pounds. You have to be pretty strong to open them up,” he said.

The footage, which started going viral on social media over the weekend, captured a person repeatedly tossing the items out of a top-floor window to the ground below. X

When Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy approached the president to show him the video on his smartphone, a member of the president’s entourage suggested the window may have been opened due to a renovation project in the Lincoln Bedroom’s bathroom.

But Trump swept aside the renovation theory and doubled down on the AI explanation.

“Yeah, those windows are sealed. Those windows are all — they’re all sealed. You can’t open them,” Trump insisted.

The person behind the mysterious saga was a contractor who had been carrying out regular maintenance while President Trump was away, a White House official said. REUTERS

“One of the problems we have with AI, it’s both good and bad. If something happens really bad, just blame AI. But also they create things. You know, it works both ways. If something happens that’s really bad, maybe I’ll have to just blame AI,” the president said.

“I see so many phony things. I saw something as I was growing up, from the time I was a baby until now. I said, ‘Who did that?’ It was AI generated. So it’s a little bit scary to be honest with you, but, but those windows are all very heavily sealed.”

Hours earlier, an aide verified the footage that started going viral on social media over the Labor Day weekend.

A Secret Service agent stands on the roof of the White House, Saturday, Aug. 9, 2025, in Washington. AP

The person behind the mysterious dumping “was a contractor who was doing regular maintenance while the President was gone,” a White House official told The Post, without specifying when the curious indcident took place.

The video appeared to be filmed from the rooftop of the nearby Hotel Washington or a neighboring building. 

It wasn’t immediately clear what the objects were or why they were being thrown through the window.

President Donald Trump speaks about the relocation of U.S. Space Command headquarters from Colorado to Alabama in the Oval Office of the White House, Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025, in Washington. AP

Sen. Katie Britt speaks as President Trump looks on in the Oval Office at the White House on September 2, 2025 in Washington, DC. Getty Images

Online sleuths speculated they were being lobbed from the White House’s Lincoln Bedroom.

Trump previously revealed that the Lincoln Bedroom’s “terribly” remodeled bathroom was among the rooms he planned to make over since moving back to Washington, DC.

“We’ll be doing the Lincoln bathroom, which was Art Deco,” Trump said last month, adding, “We’re making it actually incredible.”

Separately, Trump also revealed plans to erect a $200 million, privately funded White House ballroom that is expected to be ready for use before the president’s term ends in early 2029.

The 90,000-square-foot “White House State Ballroom” will be situated in the East Wing and be able to fit 650 people.