Former Ambassador McFaul's Tweet in Russian Raises a Laugh

© Sputnik / Alexei Filippov / Go to the mediabankU.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul
U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul - Sputnik International
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Former United States Ambassador to Russia Michael Anthony McFaul has once again prompted a lively debate among social network users by his tweet in Russian.

A US soldier stands next to a Patriot surface-to-air missile battery at an army base in Morag, Poland - Sputnik International
McFaul: 'Only a Complete Fool Would Invade Russia'
When a Twitter user asked former United States Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul why he has stopped publishing his tweets in Russian, the diplomat replied laconically "Zabyl" ("I have forgotten") in Russian using English letters.

Since there are a lot of Anglo-Russian transliteration schemes his answer has triggered a lively debate among Russian wits who tried to find out what exactly the former US Ambassador to Russia wanted to say.

Some users suggested that the diplomat not only "zabyl" ("has forgotten"), but also "zabil" — "does not give a damn" about the Russian language. Others offered a hypothesis that McFaul could have apparently misspelled the Ukrainian word "zabuv" that has the same meaning. 

"Zabyl, zabil or zabuv?" one commentator asked.

"Some peculiarities of transliteration or oh, this Russian language — either zabYl or zabIl, anyway it sounds rather piquantly," the user named Davtyan Svetlana noted.

It is not the first time Mr. McFaul found himself in a comical situation due to his usually misspelled tweets in Russian.

Almost a year ago Michael McFaul wrote, ignoring basic rules of the Russian grammar: "If you think I'm a fool, please, please, please #unfollowmcfaul! Only fools read fools."

Needless to say, McFaul's comment sparked a flurry of jokes among Russian-speaking Twitter users.

However, it's not only his Russian-language tweets that make Michael McFaul an object of ridicule in Twitter. The diplomat's stance on the burning issues of Russian politics usually prompts an animated discussion.

"I'm arguing with Russians on Twitter that US didn't cause Maidan and with Ukrainians that US didn't cause Putin intervention!" Michael McFaul wrote on July, 12.

"@McFaul We Believe :-)" a Twitter user named Andrei Komardin noted, sharing a photo that depicted top US diplomat Victoria Nuland and Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt handing out buns and cookies to Ukrainian protesters.

Andrei Komardin also asked the former US Ambassador to Russia whether he can present any evidence of the Russian "invasion" of Ukraine: "@McFaul Russian soldiers? Where? Where is the evidence? :-) And again "social networks"? :-)"

Predictably, however, McFaul evaded the question:

"Yikes! I just realized that I just tweeted to Stalin! Never again. Moving too fast," he wrote, referring to the user's profile picture.

"@McFaul Never say never :-)" the user noted.

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