Donald Trump set Twitter on fire after quoting US Secretary of Defence Mark Esper regarding the ceasefire in northern Syria that was reached after Turkey launched Operation Peace Spring in the area on 9 October, by referring to the secretary as… "Mark Esperanto".
Although the tweet was later deleted and replaced by a corrected version, Trump’s followers managed to take screenshots of his unfortunate mistake, as his post was apparently left unedited for several hours.
"The ceasefire is holding up very nicely. There are some minor skirmishes that have ended quickly. New areas being resettled with Kurds. U.S. soldiers are not in combat or ceasefire zone. We have secured the Oil.” Mark Esper, Secretary of Defense. Ending endless wars!" Trump wrote in a new tweet.
It took you almost two hours to realize you called your Secretary of State "Mark Esperanto". pic.twitter.com/BMckuUYPHv
— SueWho 🌊🏊🎶❄️🔥 (@DonnyDoRight) October 20, 2019
We all saw you call him Esperanto
— Helpmesharpieyourmyonlyhope (@Keanin15) October 20, 2019
Too late, my dear, too late! 🤣😱🤣 #DumbassDonnie #DementiaDon #25thAmendmentNow pic.twitter.com/u0ARL3L7SH
— Humpty Drumpf Had a Great Fall (@DarthBannon1) October 20, 2019
Only took him an hour to figure out who the Sec of Defense is.
— Carrie Gallagher (@lovablemarketer) October 20, 2019
Donald tRumpranto got it right this time...SAD!!
— On Task (@OnTask4) October 20, 2019
🤣🤣🤣🤣
This is not the first time that the US president has been caught making hilarious mistakes on Twitter, as he has previously misspelled the name of his own wife Melania, referring to her as “Melanie”.
Trump also caused a Twitterstorm in May 2017 after he came up with the peculiar word “covfefe”, which left netizens wondering for hours what it could possibly have meant. While it was later uncovered that the US president was referring to “negative press coverage” in his tweet, the post went viral, sparking a wave of memes and jokes.
With over 127k retweets after 6 hours (at time of deletion), #Covfefe is in the Top10 of most retweetet tweets of @realDonaldTrump pic.twitter.com/rjL8WXPM9s
— Hyza (@Hyza87) May 31, 2017
My contribution 😂 #covfefe #toffifee pic.twitter.com/hhBCpUFqgr
— Georgina Kent (@TwinklinPixi3) May 31, 2017
It was recently revealed by the press that the White House staffers who run the US president’s Twitter account often intentionally use poor grammar on Trump’s behalf to resemble his writing style and retain “the common touch”, but apparently do not misspell words or names on purpose.