Video credit: Chris Nooney

Police Commissioner Bill Bratton didn’t say “allegedly” when he revealed photos Tuesday of the seven cop-haters wanted for attacking two lieutenants on the Brooklyn Bridge.

Unlike Mayor Bill de Blasio — who infuriated NYPD cops when he used the word in a statement Saturday night about the mob assault while praising the “peaceful” protesters — Bratton didn’t hold back as he called the suspects “agitators and anarchists.”

“Their world is a very different world oftentimes than the world the rest of us live in. They don’t like government, they don’t like society, they don’t like anything,” Bratton said at Police Headquarters. “So they’re seeking to take advantage of it.”

Bratton, who announced a $12,000 reward for the arrest and conviction of the unidentified suspects, said the images were copied and enhanced from a two-minute video posted on YouTube.

The NYPD also released images of nine witnesses to the gang assault aimed at stopping cops from busting CUNY Professor Eric Linsker, who allegedly tried to toss a heavy metal garbage can onto other officers from the bridge’s elevated walkway. Linsker, who left behind a backpack containing three hammers and a black ski mask, was later tracked down and busted by the Joint Terrorism Task Force.

NYPD Deputy Chief William Aubry said the three female suspects and a man identified as “Male Number 1” were the first to set upon Lt. Patrick Sullivan and Lt. Philip Chan.

“Male Number 2” was later seen pulling Linsker away from Sullivan, then kicking Sullivan as he lay on the ground, Aubry said.

“Male Number 3 is the most disturbing, as well as Male Number 2. In that the latter part of the video, you’ll see him going in and out of the confrontation . . . and pulls the officers down to the ground, and then he proceeds to run away as Linsker got away from the officers,” Aubry said.

“He then goes back into the crowd and you’ll see at the very end of the video, punches Lt. Chan.”

Chan’s nose was broken, and both he and Sullivan sustained cuts and bruises — but both cops were back on the job Tuesday after taking Monday off only reluctantly, sources said.

Two of the witnesses in the images appear to be shooting videos of their own, one with a sophisticated camera, the other with a smartphone.

Bratton urged all the witnesses to come forward and cooperate, saying, “It’s to the benefit of the organizers of these marches, and the participants, to work with us.”

Bratton also said a man who was recorded wearing a bright green baseball cap was believed to have been at the scene as a legal observer for the National Lawyers Guild.

Bratton said he hopes the guild — which offers legal support for civil-rights and anti-war protesters — would assist the NYPD’s investigation of the attack, which he called “anything but a peaceful march that they’re committed to.”

A call to the guild’s New York City chapter wasn’t returned.