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US Pacific Fleet Roasted For Tweeting July 4 Graphic With Russian Jets, Ship

In the latest eye-rolling example of government incompetence, the US Navy’s Pacific Fleet tweeted a Fourth of July graphic with the intent of honouring the American military — but accidentally saluted Russia’s instead. 

The since-deleted tweet featured the silhouettes of five military aircraft flying in formation over a surface ship: However, eagle-eyed US service members and vets promptly realized the image featured Russian fighters and a Russian destroyer.  

The graphic also depicted soldiers bowing in front of a fallen comrade. Here, the Pentagon’s diversity-hire graphic designer got lucky and diverted from the heavy Russian theme, properly using the silhouette of an M-16 and not an AK-47. 

Pacific Fleet didn’t respond to questions about the sloppy execution from Stars and Stripes. Then again, the inquiry was made on July 4th, so it’s likely the fleet’s public affairs officers were off somewhere together having a Bud Light blowout.  

Blake Herzinger, a US Navy Reserve Lieutenant Commander and former active-duty intelligence officer, was among the earliest to spot the snafu. Herzinger, who’s been dabbling on a Substack newsletter about the Navy called “Sailor Take Warning,” summarized the mess by tweeting: “US Pacific Fleet Don’t Post Russian Ships and Aircraft on Independence Day Challenge 2023: Failed.” 

In the ensuing reply thread, Herzinger credited a Twitter user — whose bio says he’s a retired Indian Navy commodore — as having identified the silhouetted ship as a Kashin-class destroyer: 

The screw-up comes as the Navy recruiting operation is in full-on crisis mode. With the branch forecasting that it will fall 16% short of its fiscal 2023 recruiting goal, the head of Navy Recruiting Command recently announced he was going to force thousands of recruiters to start working six-day workweeks, characterizing it as “a warfighting imperative.” He was quickly overruled, as the Chief of Navy Personnel said one day later that he was putting the plan on hold.  

Twitter users unleashed a few broadsides…

Pacific Fleet scrambled to delete the tweet and replace it with one that used a photograph of a US aircraft carrier and submarine as the backdrop. However, the replacement tweet was subjected to its own ridicule: 

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Zero Hedge
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