US Air Force under fire over Afghanistan tweet

AFP  |  Washington 

The drew flak Thursday after it published -- then deleted -- a tweet making light of a offensive that killed up to 25 Afghan forces and at least five civilians.

In an apparent attempt at humor, the linked the debate to this week's assault on city in western Afghanistan, near the border with The tweet refers to the internet meme, and the sound a US ground-attack plane makes when it fires its Gatling gun.

"The Forces in city #would much rather have heard #Yanny or #Laurel than the deafening #BRRRT they got courtesy of our #A10," the tweet read, before linking to a story about the offensive.

was swift, with many users failing to see the joke.

"I have a suggestion. Next time get a perspective from the folks who carried out the missions. Publishing the thoughts of some sadistic jerk-off who is excited by is not a good look," Twitter user @radical6216 wrote.

"Military humor is always THE BEST, isn't it? Nice to take a break from, you know, killing people," @MamanUbu wrote.

Some users came to the tweet's defense and said critics were being too politically correct, but a few hours after the tweet was published, the Air Force took it down.

"We apologize for the earlier tweet regarding the It was made in poor taste and we are addressing it internally. It has since been removed," the Air Force said.

On Wednesday, the had made light of the Yanny/Laurel debate, tweeting a photo of a US Marine Corps instructor berating a recruit: "I said it's #Yanny, recruit, not #Laurel!" US and Afghan aircraft this week bombed Taliban positions in Farah after the insurgents launched a major attempt to capture the provincial capital, with fearful residents seeking shelter from explosions and gunfire.

said 300 Taliban had been killed. Farah said at least five civilians and 25 Afghan forces had been killed.

The Air Force tweet brought brief attention in the US to the nearly 17-year-old war in which despite costing more than $1 trillion still has no end in sight.

"Our Afghan partners' success in places like Farah are a testament to the tremendous improvement in the Afghan national army, Afghan special security forces and the Afghan air force," said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, May 18 2018. 00:35 IST